
Domaine Dandelion 'Pet Nat' 2023
The Wine
Harvested from the En Vaucurien parcel in the commune of Volnay, nestled high among pine forests. It's truly a mezmorising site featuring abundant broken limestone. The small stones provide excellent drainage over the red clay. Its north facing and the cool climate, combined with remarkable minerality, produces exceptional pet nat!
Organic & no sulphur used in the fermentation or bottling. No tractors used in the vineyard rows.
Vintage 2022
93 Points Mike Bennie '...Cloudy golden the glass with a pink tinge. Pretty. Vibrant style, crunchy and vigorous in bubbles, lemon verbena, green apple, ripe, pink grapefruit (right through to that skinsy chalkiness and dribbly mouthwatering thing at the finish). Squeaky, refreshing finish. Maybe guava? So aromatic and energetic. Brilliant.'
If you're looking for the purist possible expressions from Burgundy, this is it...
Pick 2: Bottling the Dandelion Pet Nat
Pick 3: Pet Nat Vineyard just over the hill from Volnay
The Details
Variety - Pinot Noir
Country - France
Region - Burgundy
Sub Region - Hautes-Cotes de Beaune
Extra - Crown Seal
Year - 2022
Volume - 750ml
About the Wine Maker 
In the serene village of Mavily-Mandelot, Christian Knott creates wines of remarkable beauty, class, and elegance.
Christian, an Australian, has resided in France for 14 years, serving as the Chef de Cave at the renowned Biodynamic Estate, Domaine Chandon de Brialles in Savigny-les-Beaune until mid-2022. His deep understanding of biodynamics and plant vitality is evident. The wines he crafts, drawing from his intimate knowledge of plant life and locale, are sheer delight, teaching lessons in effortless elegance. Here, one finds nothing but fruit-forward, alluring, yet mineral-rich and refined wines.
Domaine Dandelion spans roughly 2.5 ha in AOC Hautes Cotes de Beaune, primarily featuring old vine Pinot Noir (1940s - 60s plantings), along with a small quantity of ancient vine Gamay (1901 plantings) and Aligoté.
The geology merges two distinct site types. Some vineyards boast the quintessential Cote d’Or structure of clay atop limestone, while others contain a deep basin of fossil-rich Blue Marl (the celebrated Jura geology). Positioned at about 500m altitude, these vineyards are among the highest and last to be harvested in the Cote d’Or, bestowing the wines with an ethereal and refined character, increasingly advantageous in a warming climate.
The vines are worked entirely biodynamically by hand and/or horse, and winch plough. They are using alternative disease treatments to remove all sulphur sprays from the vineyard, and copper is kept to a very bare minimum (usually less than 20% of the authorized maximum spray for Biodynamic certification, which is already very low).
Christian's wine making is extremely deft and intuitive.
He has a solid grounding in the chemistry and mechanics of wine making but his approach also combines a healthy dose of laissez-faire.
This is where the magic is created - he indicates, you have to have a certain element of wildness in the ferment to create intrigue and complexity, otherwise it's just all 'vanilla', safe. The thing is, he can do this because he has UNIQUE raw materials, his precious grapes to start with - from the being, it all starts in the vineyard...