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Wine for sale: Fixed price Chablis

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Chablis vignes

Chablis summarised in figures is one colour of wine (white), one single grape variety (Chardonnay), one exceptional terroir (with a subsoil that is 150 million years old), four levels of AOC classification established in 1938 (Petit Chablis, Chablis, Chablis Premier Cru and Chablis Grand Cru), with 47 crus in all, and around 5,800 hectares of vineyards.

Welcome to Chablis, Burgundy’s most northerly winegrowing area, between Beaune and Paris. Here, the vines grow on hillsides along the banks of the Serein valley in some twenty communes. The Chablis soil is clay and limestone with a rich Kimmeridgian subsoil. The climate is semi-continental and cooler than in the rest of the region. This explains why Chablis is more often affected by spring frosts and results in fresher, more mineral wines. Chablis wines are dry in style and are appreciated for their crystalline quality and good acidity. Traditionally, they are aged in vats or with very little new wood. They enjoy a long-standing reputation worldwide – the Chablis vineyards date back to Gaul and developed considerably in the 12th century, but the wines are still particularly popular with the English and are exported extensively, especially across the Channel. While a few legendary estates rank above the rest (Raveneau and Dauvissat), the appellation also offers fantastic opportunities to cellar top-flight Chardonnays at softer price points, like Louis Moreau, Clotilde Davenne and Gilbert Picq et Fils.

Chablis

Chablis summarised in figures is one colour of wine (white), one single grape variety (Chardonnay), one exceptional terroir (with a subsoil that is 150 million years old), four levels of AOC classification established in 1938 (Petit Chablis, Chablis, Chablis Premier Cru and Chablis Grand Cru), with 47 crus in all, and around 5,800 hectares of vineyards.

Welcome to Chablis, Burgundy’s most northerly winegrowing area, between Beaune and Paris. Here, the vines grow on hillsides along the banks of the Serein valley in some twenty communes. The Chablis soil is clay and limestone with a rich Kimmeridgian subsoil. The climate is semi-continental and cooler than in the rest of the region. This explains why Chablis is more often affected by spring frosts and results in fresher, more mineral wines. Chablis wines are dry in style and are appreciated for their crystalline quality and good acidity. Traditionally, they are aged in vats or with very little new wood. They enjoy a long-standing reputation worldwide – the Chablis vineyards date back to Gaul and developed considerably in the 12th century, but the wines are still particularly popular with the English and are exported extensively, especially across the Channel. While a few legendary estates rank above the rest (Raveneau and Dauvissat), the appellation also offers fantastic opportunities to cellar top-flight Chardonnays at softer price points, like Louis Moreau, Clotilde Davenne and Gilbert Picq et Fils.

2023
90
2024
85
2023
40
2021
A
K
48
2020
90
2021
70
2022
A
60
2023
54
2022
50
2022
50
2021
44
2023
56
2021
55
2024
45
2022
A
42
2021
54
2021
A
K
100
2022
A
28
2020
A
K
75
2021
80
2020
75
2022
550
2020
90
2023
85
2018
1,100
2023
110
2022
A
350
2022
A
170
2024
85
2022
85
2022
70
2021
70
2022
90
2021
86
2024
30
2020
A
45
2023
A
28
2023
40
2023
A
K
50
2023
A
K
84
2023
A
K
39
Available soon
2022
A
37
Availability alert
Available soon
2022
95
Availability alert
Available soon
2021
A
37
Availability alert
Available soon
2005
320
Availability alert
Available soon
2023
26
Availability alert
Available soon
2023
A
48
Availability alert