Domaine des Baumard: under screwcap since 2005


Florent Baumard makes gorgeous, beautifully precise wines from Savennieres, Coteaux du Layon and Quarts de Chaume, among other appellations. His family has been making wine there since 1634. But since 2005, in a move somewhat at odds with the region and age-worthy wines, he’s been putting the wines all under screw cap.

The experiment first started in 2003. Frustrated by the different evolution of wines under cork, Baumard started with the Clos du Papillon bottling from Savennieres: Half the production went under cork, half under screw cap (aka Stelvin closure). Within two years all the still wines were under screwcap. I tasted the 2007 Clos du Papillon Savennieres and didn’t find it reduced but it was tight, presumably from youth. I also had a 1999 Clos de Saint Yves Savennieres, bottled under cork, that wasn’t showing too much evolution; instead it was rich, layered and deliciously complex as chenin blanc can be. So is it the right call? Who knows. One day in the future, it would be fascinating to taste some of those ’03s bottled under different closures.

I tweeted about the screw caps–not exactly breaking news, but interesting nonetheless–and someone joked if Florent wasn’t just a little bit Australian. No, he replied, but after his saga with verdelho, he admitted he admires their freedoms.

7 Responses to “Domaine des Baumard: under screwcap since 2005”


  1. […] This post was mentioned on Twitter by WineBlogFeed, Wine Club and Wine Lover, Susan Rice. Susan Rice said: Domaine des Baumard: under screwcap since 2005: Florent Baumard makes gorgeous, beautifully precise wines from S… http://bit.ly/gV634Q […]


  2. I think that the data base showing the superiority for screw caps as the closure of choice for aromatic white wines is there. I hope that Alsace producers also jump on the bandwagon en masse!


  3. Tasted 02 v 05 recently and the 02 was much more advanced. Not sure that I would use “reductive” on the 05, though I’ve done it before. 02 was next to beautifully mature.


  4. I do think it was the right call given the enormous variation in quality among wines bottled under cork, and am happy to know a few non-Australian producers are catching onto this trend.

    Do report back with your findings if you get a chance to taste the ’03.

    Paul Kalemkiarian
    President, Wine of the Month Club
    http://www.wineofthemonthclub.com


  5. Had a ’95 Quarts de Chaume a couple of months, yum town!


  6. Coincidentally, I had the ’05 last night before reading this. I found it rich, with an almost creamy texture. It also had a bit of a smoky component. We had this with a
    Ceviche appetizer and it was a good,but not great match. savannierres is my favorite with sushi.


  7. Surely is an interesting revolution in the wine world today… so many screw caps and hopefully someday soon all consumers will cease from making the presumption that screw cap implies cheap.


winepoliticsamz

Wine Maps


Monthly Archives

Categories


Blog posts via email

@drvino on Instagram

@drvino on Twitter




winesearcher

quotes

One of the “fresh voices taking wine journalism in new and important directions.” -World of Fine Wine

“His reporting over the past six months has had seismic consequences, which is a hell of an accomplishment for a blog.” -Forbes.com

"News of such activities, reported last month on a wine blog called Dr. Vino, have captivated wine enthusiasts and triggered a fierce online debate…" The Wall Street Journal

"...well-written, well-researched, calm and, dare we use the word, sober." -Dorothy Gaiter & John Brecher, WSJ

jbf07James Beard Foundation awards

Saveur, best drinks blog, finalist 2012.

Winner, Best Wine Blog

One of the "seven best wine blogs." Food & Wine,

One of the three best wine blogs, Fast Company

See more media...

ayow150buy

Wine books on Amazon: