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Search Flickinger Wine Inventory
Inventory updated: Sat, Feb 21, 2026 12:48 PM cst

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Regions: Burgundy Red Vintages: 1980 and earlier
| Producer |
Vint. |
Wine |
Price |
Qty |
Order |
| | Burgundy Red |
| Dom. Comte de Vogue |
1978 |
Musigny Grand Cru Cuvee Vieilles Vignes Very Slightly Raised Cork |
$1,800 |
1 |
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VM 94 (4/2025): The 1978 Musigny Vieilles Vignes Grand Cru is poured from magnum. It has a delectable bouquet with redcurrant, mulberry, wild hedgerow, singed leather and peaty scents. Wonderful lift and vigour. The palate is fresh and lightly spiced on the entry with a twist of sour cherry. Yes, there is a very slight animally element towards the finish, yet there is also a sense of grandeur that you could argue de Vogüé misplaced throughout the following decade. Excellent. Tasted at the 1978 Bouilland horizontal. (Drink between 2025-2040). Neal Martin. BH 92 (11/2024): All but bricked through. A perfumed and remarkably fresh nose includes plenty of sous-bois and spice along with nuances of exotic tea, cinnamon and clove. There is still outstanding intensity to the acceptably dense medium weight flavors that flash good power and ample minerality on the delineated and impressively persistent and well-balanced finish. This is lovely though it doesn't possess the first-class depth of the finest examples. I would add that this magnum is so much more interesting than another I tried in November 2016 that was decidedly disappointing. (Drink starting 2024). WA 92 (4/2014): I have tasted the 1978 Musigny Vieilles Vignes on just two or three occasions, and while it has never been the all-conquering masterpiece it might have been, it has always performed well. Here, tasted against no less than 1978 Petrus and 1978 Hermitage La Chapelle, it surpasses the former but is no match for the latter. In any case, it is certainly testament to the fact that it is no slouch after 36 years. This bottle has a rustic, slightly animally bouquet with what I suspect was evidence of brettanomyces, although that he subsided with age. Allowing the wine to unfurl in the glass, one notices that there is not oxidation, but rather it evolves attractive secondary aromas of rusty iron piping and dried orange rind. The palate is well-balanced and clean. There is curiously a Graves-like personality, partly due to its masculinity and backbone. It is a rather aloof wine – there is little fruit to appease those looking for fleshiness or corpulence, though it has charm and vigor. Well-kept bottles such as this should still be drinking well but, as ever, provenance is key. Drink now. |
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