Domaine Lous Chenu
DOMAINE LOUIS CHENU

Savigny-lès-Beaune wines anchored in limestone, finesse, and classical Burgundian balance.

snapshot

Region: Savigny-lès-Beaune, Côte de Beaune, Burgundy, France
Style: Classical Burgundy defined by finesse, purity, and restrained oak
Vineyard: Estate parcels across Savigny-lès-Beaune premiers crus and village sites on limestone-rich slopes
Farming: Certified organic viticulture with meticulous manual work
Winemaking: Indigenous fermentations, gentle extraction, aging in mostly neutral French oak
Signature: Perfumed, finely structured Burgundy rooted in limestone tension and balance

"The vineyard speaks in limestone and clay — we simply learn to listen."

DOMAINE LOUIS CHENU

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  • Domaine Louis Chenu - Boirgogne Aligoté 2023

    Domaine Louis Chenu - Boirgogne Aligoté 2023

HOW THEY GOT HERE

Domaine Louis Chenu is a historic Savigny-lès-Beaune estate now led by sisters Juliette and Caroline Chenu, representing a new generation deeply committed to the family’s Burgundian heritage. Taking responsibility for the domaine meant both preserving tradition and refining it with greater precision.

Rather than modernizing through heavy extraction or new oak influence, the sisters focused on vineyard health and clarity of expression. Organic certification marked an important step, reinforcing their belief that vineyard work determines the final character of the wine. Their approach emphasizes patience, moderate extraction, and measured élevage — allowing each climat to articulate itself rather than imposing a house style.

The wines are neither austere nor opulent; they are shaped by balance. Red fruit remains bright, tannins remain fine-grained, and oak frames rather than dominates. The objective is longevity through equilibrium.

Where The Wine Is Born

Savigny-lès-Beaune lies at the northern edge of the Côte de Beaune, where a small valley opens westward into limestone hills. The appellation contains a complex mosaic of Premier Cru climats spread across two main hillsides: one facing south/southeast, the other more east-facing.

The soils are predominantly limestone with varying proportions of marl and clay, often thin and well-drained on higher slopes. These geological conditions tend to produce Pinot Noir with brightness, red-fruited aromatics, and structured but refined tannins. Compared to neighboring Beaune, Savigny wines often show a slightly firmer frame in youth, but with remarkable aging capacity.

Elevations range between 220 and 360 meters, with hillside exposure moderating ripening and preserving acidity — a defining feature of the domaine’s wines.

SAVIGNY
LES BEAUNE

How the wine feels

Elegant Precision

Delicate aromatics and linear structure give the wines a sense of clarity rather than weight.

Textural Balance

Fine tannins and measured acidity create a seamless thread through the palate.

Limestone Tension

Mineral drive shapes the wine’s backbone, keeping focus from attack to finish.

FOR THE NERDS

Savigny-lès-Beaune sits on Jurassic limestone formations with notable marl intrusions, producing soils that are both calcareous and moderately clay-rich. This balance influences vine vigor and water retention, particularly important in warmer vintages.

Organic farming has improved soil life and microbial activity, enhancing root penetration into calcareous bedrock. This contributes to mineral tension and precision in the finished wines.

Pinot Noir is typically destemmed partially or fully depending on vintage character, with fermentations carried out using indigenous yeasts. Extraction remains gentle — pump-overs are measured, and punch-downs are moderate to avoid harsh phenolics. Maceration times are calibrated to each parcel and vintage rather than fixed.

Aging occurs in French oak barrels with a restrained percentage of new wood, often between 10–25% depending on the cru and vintage. The aim is slow oxygen exchange and tannin refinement, not flavor imprint. Wines generally rest 12–18 months before bottling.

The sisters prioritize clarity over manipulation: limited sulfur, light filtration when necessary, and minimal intervention beyond careful observation.

The resulting wines emphasize:
Aromatic lift over density
Texture over volume
Structure built on limestone-driven acidity

A distinctly Savigny identity anchored in equilibrium.

"Burgundy is not made in the cellar — it is revealed through patient vineyard work."