For many years, Muscadet was an underperforming appellation, plagued by high yields, industrial-chemical production, and weakened demand. This led to a downward spiral toward mediocrity. However, in the 1990s, pioneers like Jo Landron and Bruno Cormerais began to focus on terroir, and to employ lower yields and organic farming to demonstrate the true potential of Muscadet wines. More recently, newer stars like Jérôme Bretaudeau have further elevated the region’s acclaim.
This renaissance in Muscadet has inspired a group of passionate and dedicated young winemakers, including Benjamin Cormerais (q.v.), to return to refine and redirect their family vineyards. They employ innovative and sustainable techniques to create distinctive, age-worthy wines that express their unique sense of place.
Most prominent in this new generation is jean-Baptiste Hardy. After completing his formal education in viticulture at the prestigious Lycée Viticole de la Loire, he sharpened his skills with apprenticeships at places like Domaine Roulot in Burgundy. From 2018, and into 2022, he took over 14 hectares of family vineyards, including old vines from massale selections dating back to the 1960’s.
Jean-Baptiste Hardy’s estate is located in the heart of the Muscadet Sèvre et Maine appellation, covering approximately 14 hectares of prime vineyard land. His vineyards are predominantly planted with Melon de Bourgogne, the grape variety used to produce Muscadet. The estate’s parcels are strategically situated to take full advantage of the region’s diverse terroirs, which include a mix of granite, gabbro, schist, and gneiss soils.
Hardy practices organic viticulture and implements many biodynamic principles. He avoids synthetic chemicals and focuses on natural solutions for pest and disease control. He carefully tends the trellising to promote better vine management and fuller fruit maturity. He employs cover cropping to enhance soil fertility and structure, and he practices green harvesting and leaf thinning to manage yields and improve grape quality and phenolic maturity.
In the cellar, the hand-harvested fruit is gently pressed, fermented over ambient yeasts and aged for twelve months sur-lie in 450L barrels and concrete diamond vats. There is light batonage to allow the fine lees to guard freshness and impart richness. All wines experience full malolactic conversion. The wines are then racked into glass-lined tanks for six months of blending. All bottling is done without fining, filtration, or added sulfites. Free SO2 is less than 5 mg/L.