Growers / France / Burgundy / Côte de Nuits / Hubert Lignier

Hubert Lignier

The estate owns just over 8 ha, principally in Morey, Gevrey, and Chambolle, with recent purchases in Nuits, Pommard, and Saint Romain rounding out its holdings.


The Domaine Hubert Lignier has long had a reputation for its fine wines known for their concentration, depth and structure. We have had the extraordinary good fortune of commencing our relationship as the US importer for this estate with the 1978 vintage. At that time, Hubert Lignier was bottling small amounts of two different cuvées of Morey St. Denis (the village bottling and the 1er Cru “Vieilles Vignes”) as well as the fabled Clos de la Roche. As our relationship progressed, more and more of the secrets of the cellar found their way into bottle rather than being sold off to negociants. All of the domaine’s holdings are now bottled under their own label. Hubert’s son, Laurent, is the next generation of this proud estate and is following his father’s traditional practices to ensure the treasures coming from the family’s impressive vineyard holdings continue to exhibit the best of their respective appellations.

The domaine owns 8.30 hectares principally in the villages of Morey Saint Denis (where their home and the cellars are located), Gevrey Chambertin and Chambolle Musigny. Recently, the Ligniers have expanded their holdings to include parcels in the appellations of Nuits Saint Georges and Pommard. The Ligniers follow the principles of “lutte raisonnée” (sensible combat) in their viticulture: for example, only organic compost is used when necessary and the vineyard is tilled so that no herbicides are used. Yields vary from 20 to 55 hectoliters per hectare depending on the conditions of the growing season and the appellation. The thin, clay and limestone soil on the slopes is not conducive to vigorous growth and limits the crop naturally.

textured background of dirt

After the tragic passing of Romain Lignier in 2004, his elder brother, Laurent, is the next generation of this proud estate.

A “green harvest” is used when necessary to further manage production to ensure perfect maturity. Young vines are trained using the Cordon de Royat (spur training) system, which helps control the vigor and yields as well. Of critical importance, the “sélection massale” system (i.e. replacing missing vines with cuttings from the same vineyard) is the only method used to propagate vines, a tradition that gives an extra touch of complexity and character to the resulting wines. At harvest time, the pickers remove any unhealthy clusters in the field, to avoid contamination of the healthy grapes in the baskets, a practice that is supplemented with a “table de trie” at the cuverie.

Traditional vinification practices are the core of their work: grapes are destemmed and fermentation takes place in open-top cement tanks that allow manual pigéage. Only natural yeasts are used. Laurent uses an extended cold soak maceration period prior to fermentation to allow greater extraction (contrary to his father who believes that the best extraction takes place during the alcoholic fermentation). Fermentation is rather long and generally lasts 15 to 20 days following the cold soak of 5 days. The use of new oak for the élevage is carefully restrained; the norm being approximately 20% to ­ 30% on the village wines and up to 50% for the Premier and Grand Crus. The wines of the village appellations usually spend 18 months in barrel while the Premier and Grand Crus remain in cask for 20 to 24 months before being bottled, all without fining or filtration. All work in the cellar that requires movement of the wine is done by gravity; the wines are never pumped.

Farming

Certified organic since 2016, practicing since 2011

Treatments

Only copper sulfate, no herbicide or insecticide since 1990

Ploughing

Annual ploughing to maintain soil health

Soils

A variety of sites in the Côte de Nuits and Côte de Beaune, all on limestone-clay

Vines

Old vines planted in Guyot, young vines in Cordon de Royat. All vines are replaced via Selection Massale on a plantby-plant basis

Yields

Controlled by a combination of severe pruning, debudding, deleafing, and green harvesting. Yields vary from 20-55 hl/ha depending on appellation and vintage

Harvest

Exclusively manual, early-late September

PURCHASING

Mostly estate fruit, with some cuvées made from purchased fruit (noted on tech sheets for each specific wine)

Fermentation

Following partial destemming (depending on the cuvée and vintage) and a c. 5-day cold soak, wines ferment spontaneously in open-top, concrete vats, with cuvaison lasting c. 20 days

Extraction

A combination of pumpovers and punchdowns, depending on the vintage

Chaptalization

Chaptalization when necessary

Pressing

All wines pressed pneumatically; white wines see direct, whole-cluster pressing

Malolactic Fermentation

Spontaneous, in barrel in the spring

Élevage

All wines racked by gravity and are never pumped during élevage, which lasts 18-24 months, depending on cuvée, with wines seeing mostly 20-30% new oak

LEeS

All wines kept on their fine lees until bottling, with no racking after malolactic

FINING & FILTRATION

No fining, no filtration

SULFUR

Applied at harvest and after malolactic, 15-20 mg/l free sulfur

Farming

Certified organic since 2016, practicing since 2011

Treatments

Only copper sulfate, no herbicide or insecticide since 1990

Ploughing

Annual ploughing to maintain soil health

Soils

A variety of sites in the Côte de Nuits and Côte de Beaune, all on limestone-clay

Vines

Old vines planted in Guyot, young vines in Cordon de Royat. All vines are replaced via Selection Massale on a plantby-plant basis

Yields

Controlled by a combination of severe pruning, debudding, deleafing, and green harvesting. Yields vary from 20-55 hl/ha depending on appellation and vintage

Harvest

Exclusively manual, early-late September

PURCHASING

Mostly estate fruit, with some cuvées made from purchased fruit (noted on tech sheets for each specific wine)

Fermentation

Following partial destemming (depending on the cuvée and vintage) and a c. 5-day cold soak, wines ferment spontaneously in open-top, concrete vats, with cuvaison lasting c. 20 days

Extraction

A combination of pumpovers and punchdowns, depending on the vintage

Chaptalization

Chaptalization when necessary

Pressing

All wines pressed pneumatically; white wines see direct, whole-cluster pressing

Malolactic Fermentation

Spontaneous, in barrel in the spring

Élevage

All wines racked by gravity and are never pumped during élevage, which lasts 18-24 months, depending on cuvée, with wines seeing mostly 20-30% new oak

Lees

All wines kept on their fine lees until bottling, with no racking after malolactic

Fining & Filtration

No fining, no filtration

Sulfur

Applied at harvest and after malolactic, 15-20 mg/l free sulfur

Growers