In the spring of each year on a Saturday morning
two weeks before Easter the Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin organises
at the Château du Clos de Vougeot its Tastevinage session, thus confirming
the role has assumed ever since it was founded: maintaining
the quality of the great Burgundy wines.
What is
the Tastevinage?
It is an examination which grants those bottles of Burgundy
that conform to the characteristics of their vintage and their year,
the right to bear the official stamp of the Confrérie. This
brings to the attention of wine fanciers those bottles which, by their
honesty, their character, and their unquestionable quality, particularly
deserve their distinction.
How did the Tastevinage come into existance?
Five years after World War II, in 1950, the founders and animators
of the Confrérie quickly concluded that their success would be incomplete
if those Burgundy wines whose sales they promoted were not of the
best quality.
The best way would be to award under certain
conditions a seal which would guarantee the sincerity of the enterprise.
The Tastevinage was born: the Tastevin seal would be for Burgundy
wines what the engraver's hall-mark is to jewelers.
What happens at the Tastevinage?
Each succeeding springtime the Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin
brings together at the Château du Clos de Vougeot a jury comprised
of 200 experienced tasters representing all facets of the wine trade
and known for their discriminating taste buds: reputed growers, well-known
shippers, brokers, oenologists, government officials connected with
the French food and drug administration, restaurant owners and chefs,
enlightened wine lovers,.....and reporters acting as informants.
The members of the Grand Conseil of the Confrérie des Chevaliers du
Tastevin organise this official tasting but do not participate as
judges. They remain neutral and limit themselves to recording
the decisions of the jury.
Very strict regulations
All wines presented for the tasting must
have been bottled for no less than six months. The lots to be examined
must be presented as samples in bottles labeled and capped with the
name of the submitter.
Previous to the tasting each sample has been analyzed by an
official laboratory recognized by the Ministry of Agriculture, In
addition to the bottles used for analysis and for tasting, other bottles
are kept in a special cellar for future verification should a buyer
be at variance. This is a further guarantee that the wine which he
has acquired is the wine which was selected, except of course for
the conditions of preservation. The records of analysis for each lot
of wine have the same value as an identity picture on a passport.
The jury only has to answer the following question : do the
appellation and the year on the bottle correspond to what should be
expected of them? , In short, is this a bottle you would be proud
to have in your cellar and happy to offer your guests as being typical
of the best that this vintage has to offer?
For two hours running five to seven jurors at each table are responsible
for passing judgment on fifteen bottles presented anonymously, that
is. without the name of either grower or shipper Only the appellation
and the year are given
The samples are presented in a proposed order of tasting going progressively
from the lightest to the most powerful, and from the youngest to the
oldest.The jurors are free to change the order Their verdict is without
appeal.
It may happen that a good wine is not selected but a poor wine or a
wine that is not up to the standards of the Tastevinage has never been
accepted. Moreover, the percentage of the happy few is a witness to
the severity of the exam: during the last thirty years it has fluctuated
between 60 and 65%, which represents between 35 and 40% of refusals.
The results of the Tasteninage are registered in the "Armorial
des Grands Crus de Bourgogne tastevinés" which is distributed free
of charge by the Confrérie to all its members.
The double goal of the Tastevinage is thus achieved: to reward growers
and shippers for having produced particularly outstanding wines by giving
the consumer an additional guarantee, and to create a link between grower
and consumer to the greatest satisfaction of each one.
The Confrérie, it is well to add, has always remained outside
any commercial transactions concerning wines that have been "tastevinés".
Each lot remains the exclusive property of the grower or shipper
who produced it. As a result they are free to set their prices
and sell them to their regular costomers or to any wine fancier requesting
them.Now that this hall-mark is known to all lovers of Burgundy wines
both in France and worldwide, a bottle bearing this special numbered
label with the seal of the Tastevin is treated with special respect.
So it is only normal that this distinction be more and more in demand
each year by both growers and shippers. They realize that only
by a constant search for quality can the reputation of a vinyard, particularly
Burgandy, be maintained. The "Armorial des Grands Crus de
Bourgogne tastevinés" listing the wines selected and giving the
names and addresses of the producers may be obtained free of charge
by writing to:
Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin,
B.P. 12,
21701 Nuits-St-Georges Cedex,
France.