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Chablis Fine wine
Of all the Burgundy sub-regions, Chablis is arguably the one that is best known among the wider wine-loving public. Which is something of an irony, given that a) it only produces white wine, not red; and b) it sits apart, geographically, from the rest of Burgundy.
Chablis lies on the very northern fringes of Burgundy, so while it is officially part of the famous French region, the style of wine that is made here (all from the Chardonnay grape) is quite different from that found in the Côte d’Or. With the climate generally a little cooler, and the soils defined by their limestone content, the wines veer more towards the steely minerality end of the Chardonnay spectrum, rather than nutty, honeyed renderings. Zesty and zippy in their youth due to their inherent racy acidity, the best Chablis wines – notably those from premier- and grand-cru sites – can nonetheless showcase wonderfully rounded, creamy flavours, particularly as they age.
Chablis: Purity & poise from the white wine heartland
Chablis vintages
Chablis wine FAQs
How is Chablis different to other white Burgundy?
Though grouped as part of Burgundy, Chablis is a separate geographic entity, and sits some way north of the main Burgundian vineyards of the Côte d’Or. As a result, it is quite significantly cooler. The other major difference is the soil, and specifically the chalky Kimmeridgean soil that defines the best sites in the region. The result is that Chablis tends to deliver a leaner, more steely, minerally rendering of Chardonnay compared to the often rounder, fuller versions found further south. The inherent acidity lends further raciness – though in the top, grand-cru wines, this is balanced by a certain richness, often accentuated by the use of oak.
Does Chablis have the same cru system as the rest of Burgundy?
Sort of. There are four main categories, but these are slightly different to the rest of Burgundy. At the base of the pyramid sits Petit Chablis, a category that was introduced in 1943, via 1,500ha of almost entirely new land. Then there is AC Chablis, covering wines blended from unclassified vineyards, and which has also expanded significantly over time and is no longer limited to vineyards sitting only on Kimmeridgean soil. Above that, as in the rest of Burgundy, we have Premier Cru and Grand Cru, for the most well-regarded vineyards in the region. The Grand Cru area covers just 100 hectares (less than the entirety of Château Lafite in Bordeaux) and is responsible for just 2% of Chablis’ total output.