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Chablis (Wine Region)
Appellation type Appellation d'origine contrôlée
Year established 1938
Country France
Part of Burgundy
Total area 6834
Size of planted vineyards 4820
Varietals produced Chardonnay (Beaunois)
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The Chablis region is the northernmost wine district of Burgundy, France. Appellation d’origine contrôlée ( AOC) which translates as "controlled term of origin" is the French certification granted to certain French This article is about the country For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic France topics. Burgundy wine ( is wine made in the Burgundy region in eastern France. Wine is an Alcoholic beverage made from the fermentation of Grape juice Burgundy wine ( is wine made in the Burgundy region in eastern France. This article is about the country For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic France topics. The grapevines around the town of Chablis are almost all Chardonnay, making a dry white wine renowned for the purity of its aroma and taste. Chablis is a town and commune of the Yonne département in France. Chardonnay is a green-skinned Grape variety used to make white Wine. [1]

Contents

Style

The northern location (48°N) means that Chablis wines have more acidity and less fruit flavours than other Chardonnays, but their pure, minerally style has great elegance. They often have a "flinty" note, sometimes described as "goût de pierre à fusil" (gunflint). Chardonnay is known locally as "Beaunois", "the vine from Beaune". Beaune is a commune in eastern France, a Sub-prefecture of the Côte-d'Or department in the Bourgogne region

History

The story of Chablis and its vineyards is of cycles of slow recoveries after violent setbacks, both human and viticultural.

It is likely that vines came to the region with the Romans, if not before. As elsewhere, the Dark Ages saw monasteries putting great effort into viticulture for communion wine, and the proximity of Auxerre meant that the market in Paris was readily accessible.

There are records in the mid-15th century of Chablis wine being shipped to England, Flanders and Picardy. But in February 1568 the town was razed by the Huguenots, and the region did not really recover until the 18th century. The Huguenots were members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France (or French Calvinists) from the sixteenth to the eighteenth Then came the ravages of the Revolution, the Little Ice Age and Prussian invasions. Just as the vineyards were being built back up, they were hit first by mildew in 1880, and then by phylloxera. This article is about the grape phylloxera For the Genus, see Phylloxera (genus. [2]

Again the region recovered, producing over 160,000 cases per year in the 1930's, but it took a heavy toll in World War II, and barely 5000 cases were produced in 1945. Production recovered to over 100,000 cases by 1949, but the vineyards were devastated by the late frosts of 1957 and 1961. Many were not replanted.

Geography

Chablis lies about 100 miles north of Beaune, as near to Champagne as to the rest of Burgundy. The region covers 15km x 20km across 27 communes, either side of the Serein river. The Serein is a River of eastern France. It is the main waterway of the Chablis wine district in Burgundy

The soil is Kimmeridge Clay with outcrops of the chalk that extends from Sancerre up to the White Cliffs of Dover. The Kimmeridge Clay Formation is arguably the most economically important unit of rocks in the whole of Europe being the major Source rock for oil fields in the North The white cliffs of Dover are Cliffs which form part of the British coastline facing the Strait of Dover and France. The Grand Crus, the best vineyards, all lie in one small area just north of the town.

Appellation

The westernmost Grand Cru vineyards of Bougros and Vaudesir, with Valmur in the distance below the wood. Note the steep slope of Bougros.
The westernmost Grand Cru vineyards of Bougros and Vaudesir, with Valmur in the distance below the wood. Note the steep slope of Bougros.

The main Chablis Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée was designated on 13th January 1938, but the junior appellation of Petit Chablis was not designated until 5th January 1944. Appellation d’origine contrôlée ( AOC) which translates as "controlled term of origin" is the French certification granted to certain French In fact the vineyards are covered by four appellations, reflecting all-important differences in soil and slope in this northerly region:

There are 79 Premier Cru vineyards, including Les Beauregards, Beauroy, Berdiot , Chaume de Talvat , Côte de Cuissy , Côte de Jouan , Côte de Léchet, Côte de Vaubarousse, Fourchaume, Les Fourneaux, Mont de Milieu, Montée de Tonnerre, Montmains, Vaillons, Vau de Vey, Vau Ligneau, Vaucoupin and Vosgros.
The Grand Cru vineyards of Chablis. From left to right - Les Preuses, Vaudésir, Grenouilles (around the house), Valmur, Les Clos, Blanchots and in the far distance across the Vallée de Brechain, the Premier Cru of Montée de Tonnerre.
The Grand Cru vineyards of Chablis. From left to right - Les Preuses, Vaudésir, Grenouilles (around the house), Valmur, Les Clos, Blanchots and in the far distance across the Vallée de Brechain, the Premier Cru of Montée de Tonnerre.



"Chablis" in the New World

Until the 1970's, producers in the New World labelled their wines with names familiar to their customers. New World wines are those Wines produced outside the traditional wine-growing areas of Europe, in particular from Argentina, Australia, Canada Hence the name "Chablis" would be applied to any dry white wine, regardless of where it came from or what grapes it was made from. Pressure from the French government and the rise of varietal labelling means that these semi-generic names are dying out. Varietal describes Wines made primarily from a single named Grape variety. Semi-generic is a legal term used in by the United States Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau to refer to a specific type of Wine designation

References

  1. ^ Robinson, Jancis (1999). Jancis Mary Robinson OBE, MW (born in Cumbria on April 22 1950) is a British Wine Critic, journalist The Oxford Companion to Wine. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 147. ISBN 0-19-866236-X.  
  2. ^ Chablis, terroir of exception. Domaine Louis Moreau. Retrieved on 2007-04-29. Year 2007 ( MMVII) was a Common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar in the 21st century. Events 1429 - Joan of Arc arrives to relieve the Siege of Orleans.
  3. ^ Hanson, Anthony (2003). Anthony Hanson is a senior consultant to Christie's International Wine Department Burgundy, 199.  

See also

Harvest time in the Premier Cru of Fourchaume.
Harvest time in the Premier Cru of Fourchaume.

External links


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