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    Winery in Meursault, France

    Domaine Henri Boillot

    750pts

    Allocation-Tier Côte de Beaune

    Domaine Henri Boillot, Winery in Meursault

    About Domaine Henri Boillot

    Domaine Henri Boillot operates from the village of Meursault at the heart of the Côte de Beaune, producing wines that sit within Burgundy's most scrutinised tier of white wine production. Awarded a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating in 2025, the domaine represents the concentrated, allocation-driven end of Meursault's producer spectrum, drawing collectors and trade buyers who track the appellation's finest addresses.

    Where Meursault's White Burgundy Tradition Runs Deepest

    The road into Meursault arrives through a range of limestone walls and vine rows that have defined Burgundian viticulture for centuries. At street level, the village gives little away: modest façades, shuttered gates, a quiet that belies the concentration of serious wine being made behind them. Domaine Henri Boillot sits on Impasse du Pré des Taupes, a quiet address that places it within the working fabric of the appellation rather than its tourist periphery. This is a village where the most significant producers rarely announce themselves loudly, and that restraint is itself a signal of where they stand in the hierarchy.

    Meursault occupies a particular position in the global white wine conversation. It is the largest of the Côte de Beaune's premier white wine communes by volume, yet it produces no Grand Cru — an absence that has historically positioned it slightly below Puligny-Montrachet and Chassagne-Montrachet in the formal classification system. In practice, the appellation's leading Premier Cru sites (Perrières, Charmes, Genevrières) and its most respected lieu-dit bottlings trade on quality signals that sit well above their classification would suggest. Domaine Henri Boillot's Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition in 2025 places it within the upper bracket of that peer set.

    The Côte de Beaune's Chardonnay in Cultural Context

    To understand what Domaine Henri Boillot represents, it helps to understand what Meursault Chardonnay means as a category. Côte de Beaune whites are among the most studied, debated, and collected white wines in the world — not because of marketing, but because the combination of Kimmeridgian and Bathonian limestone soils, continental climate variation, and decades of producer-level refinement has produced a template that winemakers in California, Australia, and Burgundy's own lesser appellations continue to reference. The challenge within Meursault specifically is that the appellation supports a wide range of production styles and ambitions: from négociant bottlings aimed at restaurant lists to tightly allocated domaine wines that rarely appear on the secondary market.

    The top tier of Meursault producers operates in a space where allocation matters as much as critical score. Domaine Coche-Dury, Domaine Roulot, and Domaine des Comtes Lafon have all built followings where the bottles are spoken for well before they are bottled. Domaine Henri Boillot sits in this upper register, drawing the kind of attention from collectors and importers that comes with consistent recognition across vintages. The 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige award is the most recent formal signal of that positioning.

    For comparison across the appellation, Domaine Antoine Jobard and Domaine Bernard Bonin represent the serious, domaine-focused end of Meursault production, while Château de Meursault operates at higher volumes with a different distribution model. Domaine Chavy-Chouet and Domaine Jacques Prieur each bring distinct approaches to the appellation's broader range of sites. Within that field, Boillot holds a position defined by prestige recognition and the allocation signals that typically accompany it.

    What the Pearl 3 Star Prestige Rating Signals

    EP Club's Pearl 3 Star Prestige designation in 2025 is a Tier A trust signal that places Domaine Henri Boillot among a small group of producers recognised at the highest level of the platform's ratings framework. Within the context of Meursault and the Côte de Beaune more broadly, this kind of recognition functions as a sorting mechanism for collectors who track multiple appellations simultaneously. It does not replace the work of understanding individual vineyard sites or vintage conditions, but it does indicate that the domaine has met a consistent quality threshold that separates it from the broader field of Meursault producers.

    Burgundy's leading domaines are frequently discussed in terms of allocation access and mailing list placement, and the Pearl 3 Star Prestige tier aligns Boillot with producers for whom that dynamic applies. This matters practically: bottles from recognised addresses at this level require advance planning to acquire, and the secondary market tends to reflect their scarcity accordingly.

    Meursault in the Wider French Wine Frame

    Placing Domaine Henri Boillot within the wider French wine frame helps clarify what kind of producer this is. France's premium wine geography runs from Burgundy's Côte d'Or through Bordeaux's classified châteaux to the northern Rhône's single-vineyard Syrah, and each region has developed its own hierarchy of prestige. Meursault sits within Burgundy's system, where domaine size, site access, and winemaking lineage combine to determine standing. The contrast with Bordeaux , where Château Batailley in Pauillac, Château Branaire Ducru in St-Julien, and Château Bélair-Monange in Saint-Emilion operate within a classified-growth framework , is instructive. Burgundy's system is parcel-based rather than château-based, which means the producer's name and reputation for handling specific sites carries more weight than any formal classification.

    Beyond France, the broader premium wine world represented on EP Club includes producers such as Accendo Cellars in St. Helena and Albert Boxler in Niedermorschwihr, each operating within their own regional hierarchies. What links them to a domaine like Boillot is the allocation-first dynamic: these are producers whose output is finite, whose reputation is built over decades rather than seasons, and whose wines require active effort to acquire rather than passive browsing of retail shelves.

    Planning a Visit to Meursault

    Meursault sits in the southern Côte de Beaune, roughly 7 kilometres south of Beaune, and is accessible by car from Beaune in under 15 minutes. The village is compact and navigable on foot once you arrive, with most domaines located within a short radius of the central square. Domaine Henri Boillot's address at 51 Impasse du Pré des Taupes places it in the quieter residential edges of the village. Given that the domaine holds a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating and operates within Burgundy's allocation-driven model, any visit or purchase inquiry benefits from advance contact rather than drop-in arrival. The region's key tasting season runs broadly from spring through autumn, with harvest months (September to October) bringing heightened activity across the appellation. For those building a Meursault itinerary across multiple producers, our full Meursault guide covers the appellation's range of addresses and styles.

    Collectors sourcing across the Côte d'Or often combine Meursault visits with stops at producers in adjacent communes. Those extending their trip further afield in France might also consider Château Bastor-Lamontagne in Preignac, Château Boyd-Cantenac in Cantenac, or for something outside the wine frame entirely, Chartreuse in Voiron and Aberlour in Aberlour, each representing the premium producer tier in their own categories.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What wines is Domaine Henri Boillot known for?

    Domaine Henri Boillot is associated with Meursault Chardonnay produced at the serious, allocation-driven end of the appellation's spectrum. The domaine's Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition in 2025 aligns it with a peer group that includes Meursault's most scrutinised producers, whose wines span Premier Cru sites alongside village-level bottlings that reflect the commune's limestone-driven character. For context on the appellation's range, Domaine Antoine Jobard and Domaine Bernard Bonin offer points of comparison within the same village.

    Why do people go to Domaine Henri Boillot?

    Collectors and trade buyers visit Meursault's leading domaines because the allocation model requires direct engagement rather than retail access. For Domaine Henri Boillot, the draw is the combination of location at the heart of the Côte de Beaune's white wine production and a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating that confirms its standing within the appellation's upper tier. Meursault as a village offers the density of serious producers , including Château de Meursault and Domaine Chavy-Chouet , that makes a focused visit productive across multiple addresses in a single day.

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