Domaine Hugo
WINEMAKERS
Hugo Stewart & Daniel Ham
TYPE OF AGRICULTURE
Biodynamic
VINEYARD AREA
Three hectares
COUNTRY, REGION, SUBREGION
WINES
From a delightfully easeful vintage, nice rain, no disease, good yields! Tasting beside the vines - it’s viscerally apparent that this is a wine that sings of it’s origins, more so than much autolysis-leaning Champagne. One feels the chalk, 2019 in particular is profoundly direct and on-target.
Hugo & Daniel joke that sparking the second fermentation for Botley's using an actively fermenting must during harvest is like "jumping between two moving trains" - fortunately they've stuck the landing again. A triumph.
A canny way of using the final pressings off the field blend for the traditional method, saved in a small tank and sparked at bottling with a little active must after the 2022 harvest.
Another year of fairly ideal growing conditions with a warmer summer. A particularly special vintage, being the first to be made adjacent to the vines in the new winery. A little softer than previous releases, delightfully complex and invigorating.
As delicious as ever, a thrilling exercise in clever, zero-waste sparkling wine production from beautifully farmed fruit. This year's edition has its base wine from the sun-kissed 2022 vintage, bottled and sparked with the freshly fermenting juice of the 2023 vintage.
Two barrels of the 2020 field blend, tucked aside for 24 months under flor, half of each assembled together to be bottled as this very limited release, the other halves combined as reserve for a future blend.
Rare as they come.
Hugo Stewart's farming story doesn't begin with fruit, but with pigs. The family farm; Botley's, had belonged to his grandmother and uncle, before the responsibility fell to him. So pigs it was, until twenty years ago. Needing a change of scenery he rented the farm out to a neighbour so he could spend a year in France. Or so he thought.
When a friend; Paul Old, visited Hugo in the Corbieres he fell hard for the area, insisting he & Hugo should make wine. A bolt from the blue that became Les Clos Perdus, an esteemed biodynamic domaine, ran collaboratively between the two for over a decade, with Hugo responsible for farming their plots of old vines.
Starting out on his viticulture journey and visiting other growers, Hugo had a handful of eye-opening experiences of conventional farming, deciding early on that it would not be the way they operated. Beginning with organics and quickly proceeding to biodynamics at the recommendation of a neighbour, Hugo's viticulture even caught the attention of biodynamic pioneer Nicolas Joly, who became a great advocate for Hugo & Paul's wines.
Returning back to Wiltshire for his family in 2015, Hugo was confident that the windswept chalk soils of the family farm could make great vineyards, deciding to plant a handful of traditional Champagne varietals. Fifteen years of careful biodynamic farming in France had given Hugo the strongest footing for beginning the journey from scratch back in the UK.
In 2018 he took the fruit of his first home-grown vintage to the nearby Langham estate to be vinified by the young head winemaker there: Daniel Ham. So excited by the quality of fruit and the story of Hugo's biodynamic farming, Daniel had soon talked himself into a new job: "have you ever considered building a winery?"
From that chance encounter, the second winemaking collaboration of Hugo's life was born. Building the winery together at Botley's, Dan heads up the winemaking, with Hugo concentrating on the biodynamic viticulture.
Domaine Hugo is a shining example of how the future of wine should look in the UK: Hugo's attention to detail in the vineyards and Daniel's commitment to terroir driven wines are a special combination. It's a thrill to be able to play a part in sharing their wines.
For any UK wholesale and stock enquiries, please contact hello@winesutb.com
More on Domaine Hugo:
A beautiful day in Stockport celebrating the growing community of cutting-edge producers working in the UK today.
Open to all, join us on March 3rd to celebrate the growing community of UK growers, winemakers and passionate champions of their work. A gathering for the ages!
We're so thrilled to have Hugo Stewart of Domaine Hugo over at the beautiful Leo's on Saturday November 25 for a very special winemaker's lunch to celebrate the release of his latest vintage.
We're thrilled to announce the first in a series of collaborations between some of this country’s finest restaurants and our UK growers. Over two dates, Domaine Hugo and Spring will be collaborating: for a Grower’s Dinner with Fern Verrow in the restaurant, and an event in the biodynamic Wiltshire vines later this summer.
Al is spending October getting stuck in: picking and processing fruit destined to become the wines of Domaine Hugo, Offbeat and Hamstreet among others. Here’s how he’s getting on.
Speaking with Hugo is always inspiring: retaining his sense of curiosity, experimentation and wonder after 20 years of growing vines is no mean feat. In advance of Harvest 2022, we catch up with Hugo to see how things are looking.
Eagerly anticipated, we can finally release two new vintages from the chalk slope at Domaine Hugo.
The debut tasting of Domaine Hugo on Monday 23rd August. We'll be at Elliots and Antidote with Hugo pouring to give as many of you as possible a chance to taste the first wines from these biodynamically farmed Wiltshire vineyards.
Hugo Stewart's farming story doesn't begin with fruit, but with pigs. The family farm; Botley's, had belonged to his grandmother and uncle, before the responsibility fell to him. So pigs it was, until twenty years ago. Needing a change of scenery he rented the farm out to a neighbour so he could spend a year in France. Or so he thought.
The first wine of their collaboration, before Hugo and Dan built the winery together at Botley's. First pick off the farm in 2018 and made as a traditional method sparkling.