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Côte-d'Or
Côte-d'Or (IPA: [kot dɔʁ]; literally, "Golden Slope") is a department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of Northeastern France. In 2016, it had a population of 533,213. Its prefecture is Dijon and subprefectures are Beaune and Montbard.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%B4te-d%27Or
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
published: 30 Mar 2022
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Wine 101: The ABCs of Burgundy
Burgundy is one of France's most prestigious wine regions, producing some of the world's finest Pinot Noirs and Chardonnays. But Burgundy doesn't have to be complicated. Senior editor Bruce Sanderson and assistant editor Julie Harans break down the terroir, the grapes, the geography and the classification system.
Explore Wine Spectator's free newsletters: https://winesp.ec/3kKt9gG
Introductory offer: Subscribe to Wine Spectator for just $12! https://winesp.ec/2JTLzy1
published: 15 Sep 2020
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MKE Somms present Burgundy Cote d'Or part 2.
Certified Sommelier Joe Kane takes a deeper dive into Burgundy, getting into further detail on AOPs, vineyards, producers, and vintages.
published: 07 Oct 2020
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Discover The Red Wines of Burgundy
Burgundy's influence in the world of wine far outreaches its geographic footprint. It is the home of pinot noir, a grape that has captured the imagination of winemakers around the globe. Join Michael Fagan on an exploration of Burgundy's historic vineyards and cellars and learn why these wines represent the benchmark for pinot noir production.
Jim Fitzpatrick
published: 12 Mar 2014
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Ep 446: Côte de Beaune of Bourgogne (Burgundy), Part 2
This week’s show covers the southern part of the Côte de Beaune, south of Meursault. In this part of the Côte de Beaune you will find some of the most famed, stunning Chardonnay on earth. We start with a recap of episode 455 to tie these two shows together. Then we work our way through the southern half of the Côte de Beaune and the most famed Chardonnays in the world from the Montrachet family of vineyards. Like the first show, this is quite a download and we try to provide a structure for understanding this study in terroir, which sets us up well to do deeper dives on other parts of Bourgogne so we can understand the villages even better.
As in the first show, we don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few thing...
published: 18 Oct 2022
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Cote de Nuits
Our weekly dive into a different wine region of the world takes us to Burgundies Cote de Nuits. Here we look at the history, soil, climate, producers, and regulations that help make Burgundy some of the most sought after wines in the world.
published: 26 Jan 2020
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Ep 445: Côte de Beaune of Bourgogne (Burgundy), Part 1
We don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap (Notes to come...)
published: 11 Oct 2022
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Discover The White Wines of Burgundy
Chardonnay is the white grape of Burgundy and this moderate growing region of France is where you find some of it's greatest expressions. Names like Montrachet, Chablis and Pouilly-Fuissé. This is the region where the chardonnay grape developed and today it's made in a range of styles. From bone-dry wines with minerality and acidity to full-bodied wines with complex tropical fruit, citrus and spice. In this program, discover the white wines of Burgundy.
published: 02 Apr 2014
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The Escarpment - Episode #464
In this episode of 1337 Wine TV, Mark reviews the 2017 M. Chapoutier Côtes du Roussillon Villages Domaine de Bila-Haut L'Esquerda. This wine was a free sample from his friends at Creative Palate.
Link for the show:
Domaine de Bila-Haut - https://www.chapoutier.com/en/our-wines/our-domains-and-maisons/bila-haut/ - Direct page to the wine.
published: 12 Aug 2019
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Escarpment walk - Côte Kapiti - 45min
published: 13 Nov 2022
4:37
Côte-d'Or
Côte-d'Or (IPA: [kot dɔʁ]; literally, "Golden Slope") is a department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of Northeastern France. In 2016, it had a population...
Côte-d'Or (IPA: [kot dɔʁ]; literally, "Golden Slope") is a department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of Northeastern France. In 2016, it had a population of 533,213. Its prefecture is Dijon and subprefectures are Beaune and Montbard.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%B4te-d%27Or
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
https://wn.com/Côte_D'Or
Côte-d'Or (IPA: [kot dɔʁ]; literally, "Golden Slope") is a department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of Northeastern France. In 2016, it had a population of 533,213. Its prefecture is Dijon and subprefectures are Beaune and Montbard.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%B4te-d%27Or
Created with WikipediaReaderReborn (c) WikipediaReader
- published: 30 Mar 2022
- views: 1
4:51
Wine 101: The ABCs of Burgundy
Burgundy is one of France's most prestigious wine regions, producing some of the world's finest Pinot Noirs and Chardonnays. But Burgundy doesn't have to be com...
Burgundy is one of France's most prestigious wine regions, producing some of the world's finest Pinot Noirs and Chardonnays. But Burgundy doesn't have to be complicated. Senior editor Bruce Sanderson and assistant editor Julie Harans break down the terroir, the grapes, the geography and the classification system.
Explore Wine Spectator's free newsletters: https://winesp.ec/3kKt9gG
Introductory offer: Subscribe to Wine Spectator for just $12! https://winesp.ec/2JTLzy1
https://wn.com/Wine_101_The_Abcs_Of_Burgundy
Burgundy is one of France's most prestigious wine regions, producing some of the world's finest Pinot Noirs and Chardonnays. But Burgundy doesn't have to be complicated. Senior editor Bruce Sanderson and assistant editor Julie Harans break down the terroir, the grapes, the geography and the classification system.
Explore Wine Spectator's free newsletters: https://winesp.ec/3kKt9gG
Introductory offer: Subscribe to Wine Spectator for just $12! https://winesp.ec/2JTLzy1
- published: 15 Sep 2020
- views: 8875
49:54
MKE Somms present Burgundy Cote d'Or part 2.
Certified Sommelier Joe Kane takes a deeper dive into Burgundy, getting into further detail on AOPs, vineyards, producers, and vintages.
Certified Sommelier Joe Kane takes a deeper dive into Burgundy, getting into further detail on AOPs, vineyards, producers, and vintages.
https://wn.com/Mke_Somms_Present_Burgundy_Cote_D'Or_Part_2.
Certified Sommelier Joe Kane takes a deeper dive into Burgundy, getting into further detail on AOPs, vineyards, producers, and vintages.
- published: 07 Oct 2020
- views: 410
17:46
Discover The Red Wines of Burgundy
Burgundy's influence in the world of wine far outreaches its geographic footprint. It is the home of pinot noir, a grape that has captured the imagination of wi...
Burgundy's influence in the world of wine far outreaches its geographic footprint. It is the home of pinot noir, a grape that has captured the imagination of winemakers around the globe. Join Michael Fagan on an exploration of Burgundy's historic vineyards and cellars and learn why these wines represent the benchmark for pinot noir production.
Jim Fitzpatrick
https://wn.com/Discover_The_Red_Wines_Of_Burgundy
Burgundy's influence in the world of wine far outreaches its geographic footprint. It is the home of pinot noir, a grape that has captured the imagination of winemakers around the globe. Join Michael Fagan on an exploration of Burgundy's historic vineyards and cellars and learn why these wines represent the benchmark for pinot noir production.
Jim Fitzpatrick
- published: 12 Mar 2014
- views: 348354
59:25
Ep 446: Côte de Beaune of Bourgogne (Burgundy), Part 2
This week’s show covers the southern part of the Côte de Beaune, south of Meursault. In this part of the Côte de Beaune you will find some of the most famed, st...
This week’s show covers the southern part of the Côte de Beaune, south of Meursault. In this part of the Côte de Beaune you will find some of the most famed, stunning Chardonnay on earth. We start with a recap of episode 455 to tie these two shows together. Then we work our way through the southern half of the Côte de Beaune and the most famed Chardonnays in the world from the Montrachet family of vineyards. Like the first show, this is quite a download and we try to provide a structure for understanding this study in terroir, which sets us up well to do deeper dives on other parts of Bourgogne so we can understand the villages even better.
As in the first show, we don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap.
Here are the show notes:
We discuss the pricing of Burgundy and why wines are so expensive. We talk about the difference between Burgundy and Napa that was sparked by a conversation on Patreon. Here is the podcast I talk about with Laurent Delaunaywhere we address some of the pricing issues. We talk a bit about the negociant system and the secondary market before moving to the communes.
_____________________________
This show covers the southern communes of the Côte de Beaune only, from Blagny to Marange
Blagny (Blaeh-NE -- Pinot Noir)
Between Puligny-Montrachet and Meursault, Blagny is a small village appellation with red wines exclusively of Pinot Noir. The majority of wine is classified as Premier Cru. Whites are permitted to be Meursault or Puligny-Montrachet, but not Blagny – since white is often better here, Blagny is not well-known because the name is only for red Blagny has steeper vineyards than most spots in Burgundy and they are at higher altitudes 340- 400 metres/1,116 -1,312 ft vineyards. In the past, vignerons didn’t want to make wine in the village because it was too cool, but with climate change it is becoming more popular Blagny’s Pinot is like red fruit, black fruit, sandalwood, and spice. With age which it needs because tannins can be strong, leather, pepper, cocoa, licorice, earthy, gamy notes appear.
St. Aubin: (Pinot Noir and Chardonnay)
Aubin is between Chassagne-Montrachet and Puligny-Montrachet, but it does not lie on the main Côte d’Or escarpment, but rather in a valley west of Chassagne. In warmer years, this cooler climate area does well, especially the top Premier cru En Remilly, Murgers des Dents de Chien (means teeth of the dog -due to the sharp stones there) and La Chatenière Aubin grows a majority of white (Chardonnay), and the best sites arecloser to Puligny and Chassagne. Common notes are white flowers, lime, flint, chalk, mineral, almond, hazelnut, orange, mineral, and cinnamon. St. Aubin blanc can be sharp in youth or can be full – depending on vintage, terroir and producer. With age the wine is more like beeswax and honey and marzipan. Whites can age up to 10 years. The Pinot Noir is has black fruit with spice and cocoa notes. The wine can be tannic in youth but becomes softer and more herbal with 5-8 years.
Puligny-Montrachet & Chassagne-Montrachet (with Meursault, termed the "Côte des blancs" or “the slope of the "whites"
Puligny-Montrachet (Chardonnay and Pinot Noir)
A very small vineyard area (95 ha/235 acres) of nearly all Chardonnay –the terroir is complex in Puligny. The hillside has many different limestone, marl, and alluvial soils. The slopes face east and southeast. Four Grands Crus of Montrachet are located in the borders of Puligny. Top Premiers Crus: Le Cailleret, Les Pucelles, Les Demoiselles, Les Combettes, Folatières The Chardonnay is known for floral, mineral, marzipan, hazelnut, lemongrass, croissant, honey, lemon curd, limeade, peach, and green apple aromas and flavors. Producers traditionally use oak fermentation and aging but the flavors are restrained. We discuss the Grands Crus, all in the southern part of the appellation: Bâtard-Montrachet (10.27 ha/25.38 acres, shared with Chassagne) and Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet (3.43 ha/8.48 acres, all in Puligny) are lower down the hill from Montrachet. The wines are honeyed and minerally, but less rich than Le Montrachet and Chevalier-Montrachet Le Montrachet (9.59 ha/ 23.7 acres, shared with Chassagne) is considered the best white wine on earth. The Grand Cru is from the ideal mid-slope. The wines are (apparently) elegant with powerful fruit, minerality, smoke, toasty aromas and flavors. Bottles start at about US$600/bottle Chevalier-Montrachet (7.48 ha/18.48 acres, only in Puligny) is nearly as good as Le Montrachet, lying at a higher elevation, with less clay Photo Credit: BIVB
Chassagne (Chardonnay and Pinot Noir)
Chassagne is one of the largest communes in the Cote d’Or with 761 acres/308 ha – Chardonnay is 70% of production and Pinot Noir is 30%. With...
https://wn.com/Ep_446_Côte_De_Beaune_Of_Bourgogne_(Burgundy),_Part_2
This week’s show covers the southern part of the Côte de Beaune, south of Meursault. In this part of the Côte de Beaune you will find some of the most famed, stunning Chardonnay on earth. We start with a recap of episode 455 to tie these two shows together. Then we work our way through the southern half of the Côte de Beaune and the most famed Chardonnays in the world from the Montrachet family of vineyards. Like the first show, this is quite a download and we try to provide a structure for understanding this study in terroir, which sets us up well to do deeper dives on other parts of Bourgogne so we can understand the villages even better.
As in the first show, we don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap.
Here are the show notes:
We discuss the pricing of Burgundy and why wines are so expensive. We talk about the difference between Burgundy and Napa that was sparked by a conversation on Patreon. Here is the podcast I talk about with Laurent Delaunaywhere we address some of the pricing issues. We talk a bit about the negociant system and the secondary market before moving to the communes.
_____________________________
This show covers the southern communes of the Côte de Beaune only, from Blagny to Marange
Blagny (Blaeh-NE -- Pinot Noir)
Between Puligny-Montrachet and Meursault, Blagny is a small village appellation with red wines exclusively of Pinot Noir. The majority of wine is classified as Premier Cru. Whites are permitted to be Meursault or Puligny-Montrachet, but not Blagny – since white is often better here, Blagny is not well-known because the name is only for red Blagny has steeper vineyards than most spots in Burgundy and they are at higher altitudes 340- 400 metres/1,116 -1,312 ft vineyards. In the past, vignerons didn’t want to make wine in the village because it was too cool, but with climate change it is becoming more popular Blagny’s Pinot is like red fruit, black fruit, sandalwood, and spice. With age which it needs because tannins can be strong, leather, pepper, cocoa, licorice, earthy, gamy notes appear.
St. Aubin: (Pinot Noir and Chardonnay)
Aubin is between Chassagne-Montrachet and Puligny-Montrachet, but it does not lie on the main Côte d’Or escarpment, but rather in a valley west of Chassagne. In warmer years, this cooler climate area does well, especially the top Premier cru En Remilly, Murgers des Dents de Chien (means teeth of the dog -due to the sharp stones there) and La Chatenière Aubin grows a majority of white (Chardonnay), and the best sites arecloser to Puligny and Chassagne. Common notes are white flowers, lime, flint, chalk, mineral, almond, hazelnut, orange, mineral, and cinnamon. St. Aubin blanc can be sharp in youth or can be full – depending on vintage, terroir and producer. With age the wine is more like beeswax and honey and marzipan. Whites can age up to 10 years. The Pinot Noir is has black fruit with spice and cocoa notes. The wine can be tannic in youth but becomes softer and more herbal with 5-8 years.
Puligny-Montrachet & Chassagne-Montrachet (with Meursault, termed the "Côte des blancs" or “the slope of the "whites"
Puligny-Montrachet (Chardonnay and Pinot Noir)
A very small vineyard area (95 ha/235 acres) of nearly all Chardonnay –the terroir is complex in Puligny. The hillside has many different limestone, marl, and alluvial soils. The slopes face east and southeast. Four Grands Crus of Montrachet are located in the borders of Puligny. Top Premiers Crus: Le Cailleret, Les Pucelles, Les Demoiselles, Les Combettes, Folatières The Chardonnay is known for floral, mineral, marzipan, hazelnut, lemongrass, croissant, honey, lemon curd, limeade, peach, and green apple aromas and flavors. Producers traditionally use oak fermentation and aging but the flavors are restrained. We discuss the Grands Crus, all in the southern part of the appellation: Bâtard-Montrachet (10.27 ha/25.38 acres, shared with Chassagne) and Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet (3.43 ha/8.48 acres, all in Puligny) are lower down the hill from Montrachet. The wines are honeyed and minerally, but less rich than Le Montrachet and Chevalier-Montrachet Le Montrachet (9.59 ha/ 23.7 acres, shared with Chassagne) is considered the best white wine on earth. The Grand Cru is from the ideal mid-slope. The wines are (apparently) elegant with powerful fruit, minerality, smoke, toasty aromas and flavors. Bottles start at about US$600/bottle Chevalier-Montrachet (7.48 ha/18.48 acres, only in Puligny) is nearly as good as Le Montrachet, lying at a higher elevation, with less clay Photo Credit: BIVB
Chassagne (Chardonnay and Pinot Noir)
Chassagne is one of the largest communes in the Cote d’Or with 761 acres/308 ha – Chardonnay is 70% of production and Pinot Noir is 30%. With...
- published: 18 Oct 2022
- views: 331
33:41
Cote de Nuits
Our weekly dive into a different wine region of the world takes us to Burgundies Cote de Nuits. Here we look at the history, soil, climate, producers, and regul...
Our weekly dive into a different wine region of the world takes us to Burgundies Cote de Nuits. Here we look at the history, soil, climate, producers, and regulations that help make Burgundy some of the most sought after wines in the world.
https://wn.com/Cote_De_Nuits
Our weekly dive into a different wine region of the world takes us to Burgundies Cote de Nuits. Here we look at the history, soil, climate, producers, and regulations that help make Burgundy some of the most sought after wines in the world.
- published: 26 Jan 2020
- views: 2506
1:01:35
Ep 445: Côte de Beaune of Bourgogne (Burgundy), Part 1
We don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap (Notes to come...
We don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap (Notes to come...)
https://wn.com/Ep_445_Côte_De_Beaune_Of_Bourgogne_(Burgundy),_Part_1
We don't need much in the notes besides this wonderful map from the Vins de Bourgogne site, but I'll throw a few things down here just for recap (Notes to come...)
- published: 11 Oct 2022
- views: 608
19:05
Discover The White Wines of Burgundy
Chardonnay is the white grape of Burgundy and this moderate growing region of France is where you find some of it's greatest expressions. Names like Montrachet...
Chardonnay is the white grape of Burgundy and this moderate growing region of France is where you find some of it's greatest expressions. Names like Montrachet, Chablis and Pouilly-Fuissé. This is the region where the chardonnay grape developed and today it's made in a range of styles. From bone-dry wines with minerality and acidity to full-bodied wines with complex tropical fruit, citrus and spice. In this program, discover the white wines of Burgundy.
https://wn.com/Discover_The_White_Wines_Of_Burgundy
Chardonnay is the white grape of Burgundy and this moderate growing region of France is where you find some of it's greatest expressions. Names like Montrachet, Chablis and Pouilly-Fuissé. This is the region where the chardonnay grape developed and today it's made in a range of styles. From bone-dry wines with minerality and acidity to full-bodied wines with complex tropical fruit, citrus and spice. In this program, discover the white wines of Burgundy.
- published: 02 Apr 2014
- views: 279949
11:24
The Escarpment - Episode #464
In this episode of 1337 Wine TV, Mark reviews the 2017 M. Chapoutier Côtes du Roussillon Villages Domaine de Bila-Haut L'Esquerda. This wine was a free sample f...
In this episode of 1337 Wine TV, Mark reviews the 2017 M. Chapoutier Côtes du Roussillon Villages Domaine de Bila-Haut L'Esquerda. This wine was a free sample from his friends at Creative Palate.
Link for the show:
Domaine de Bila-Haut - https://www.chapoutier.com/en/our-wines/our-domains-and-maisons/bila-haut/ - Direct page to the wine.
https://wn.com/The_Escarpment_Episode_464
In this episode of 1337 Wine TV, Mark reviews the 2017 M. Chapoutier Côtes du Roussillon Villages Domaine de Bila-Haut L'Esquerda. This wine was a free sample from his friends at Creative Palate.
Link for the show:
Domaine de Bila-Haut - https://www.chapoutier.com/en/our-wines/our-domains-and-maisons/bila-haut/ - Direct page to the wine.
- published: 12 Aug 2019
- views: 26