This is not another story about a brash young producer in Burgundy giving the proverbial finger to the traditions of a storied - at times, stagnant - region. No, this is a
testament to two chief tenets of winemaking: respect and understanding of the land, and the awareness, restraint, and confidence needed to communicate the fruit directly from vine to bottle, without getting one's personality in the way. The tremendous depth and precision contained within Dominique Cornin's Bourgogne Blanc, its coiled tension ready to bound out of the bottle, is a Burgundy marked by a sense of place and vineyard character, and not the stamp of the winemaker themself.