Description
Gevrey-Chambertin – a village in Burgundy's Côte de Nuits district – produces some of the world's most prestigious and expensive red wines. The village is home to nine grand cru vineyards, comfortably more than any other Burgundy village. Eight of these feature "Chambertin" somewhere in their name, in homage to the most respected among them: Chambertin Grand Cru.
The village was originally called just Gevrey, but in 1847 the parish council added the name of the most prestigious local vineyard, Le Chambertin. This started a trend that ran the length of the Côte d'Or, right down to the "Montrachets" (Puligny and Chassagne) in the south. There are now 11 Côte d'Or villages whose names refer to their most prestigious vineyard site.
The Gevrey-Chambertin appellation covers more than 2 million bottles of wine per vintage. This figure includes all premier cru wines, but not the grand cru wines, which have their own separate appellations. For an explanation of the Burgundy appellation system, and the terms "village", "premier cru", and "grand cru", see Burgundy Wine Labels.
Wine style of Gevrey-Chambertin
Although the grand cru wines attract the most attention, those made under the village's standard Gevrey-Chambertin appellation are held in very high regard. Just like their big grand cru brothers, all Gevrey-Chambertin wines are made almost exclusively from Pinot Noir.
Widely regarded as being Burgundy's most full-bodied and structured, the village's wines have a particular intensity of color, aroma and flavor about them, not to mention impressive longevity. With a firm backbone, well-made examples can develop in the bottle for several decades. A Gevry Pinot Noir has a rustic nature and is not overly sophisticated.
These qualities, combined with the village's solid reputation and relatively large production volumes, have earned Gevrey-Chambertin a reputation as the "king" of Burgundy wines.
Gevrey-Chambertin vineyards
The grand cru vineyards lie just to the south of the village, on the mid-slopes of the Côte d'Or escarpment. These nine distinct climats, each with its own appellation, collectively occupy a 1640ft-wide (500m) belt between the village and its boundary with Morey-Saint-Denis.
The grand cru climats produce the commune's most expensive wines. The premier cru vineyards are located just west of the village, on the higher slopes of the Côte d'Or, at elevations of 820–1150ft (250–350m). The most respected of these are Clos Saint-Jacques and Les Cazetiers, both of which are regularly cited as being of grand cru quality.
To the east and north lie the swathes of village-level vineyards, which produce more wine each year than almost any other Côte d'Or commune.
A single-vineyard wine, this is firmly structured and full of perfumed fruit. New wood aging gives the red berry fruit a smoky, toasty character. It's a rich, concentrated selection to age for five years or more
Origin:Cote De Nuits, Burgundy, France
Type:Red Wine
Grapes:Pinot Noir
Alcohol:13%
Bottle Size:750ml