The vineyards of Bourgogne produce some great wines with a historical and international reputation. However, the region is not simply limited to its iconic appellations. In addition to its Village Premier Cru and Grand Cru AOCs, it also produces a range of wonderful Régionale and Village appellations to explore.
You will also find a full list of the Bourgogne’s Climats and lieux-dits on this page.
Check out the complete list of the 84 Bourgogne appellations.
However, your exploration has only just begun. Bourgogne wines have never before offered such high quality. Besides our range of internationally celebrated wines, try some of our lesser-known appellations where there are lots of surprises in store.
And for a fun way to find out more about the wines on offer, try out our “Which Bourgogne wine is right for me?” quiz, or check out Bourgogne Maps to take an interactive tour of the region.
Pouilly-Vinzelles- 2024 Vintage
Official recognition of 3 Climats as Pouilly-Vinzelles Premier Crus
Village appellation
VIGNOBLE DU MÂCONNAIS
27 avril 1940,
Exclusively whites - Chardonnay
Area under production *:
1 hectare (ha) = 10,000 m2 = 24 ouvrées.
52 ha (including 22.71 ha Premier Crus)
Appellation Village of the Mâconnais (Saône-et-Loire).
This appellation includes 3 Premier Cru Climats.
Producing commune: Vinzelles, and Loché (now part of Mâcon)
A great white wine which has all the power and minerality expressed by the Chardonnay grape in this terroir. It exhales a subtle, refined and highly-bred bouquet of honey and acacia. Its colour, a crystalline pale gold, may darken somewhat with age. The aromatic palette is as rich as it is wide - peaches, apricots and grapefruit evolve over time into fresh almond, hazelnut, honey, quince and toast. Its fullness balances natural minerality with the fleshy opulence that is earned by a long elevage in oak barrels.
White: its fruit-citrus aromatic spectrum makes a fine match for fried sea-fish or freshwater fish such as trout or pikeperch. But it also goes marvelously well with the Burgundian specialty of snails with butter, garlic, and parsley (escargots de Bourgogne), dumplings of freshwater pike (quenelles de brochet), tripe sausages, as well as choucroute which is sauerkraut served along with various sausages, bacon, pork, and potatoes. After 3 to 5 years in the bottle it would enhance chicken with wild morel mushrooms and white-meat dishes, matching their richness with its power and fullness.
One might also try drinking it with chicken with a hundred garlic cloves or a breast of fattened duck with turnips. With the cheese-board it forms varied and original partnerships ranging from local or regional specialities to goat cheeses, Époisses, Comté, Camembert and Roquefort.
Serving temperature: 11 to 13°C.
Vinzelles lies in the South of the department of Saône-et-Loire, close to the TGV line and the Mâcon-Sud exit on the A6 autoroute. It shares an East-facing scarp slope with Chaintré (which belongs to the Pouilly-Fuissé appellation). Its castles (12th and 17th centuries) look eastward to the Saône valley, Bresse, the distant Jura, and Mont Blanc. Its name is an etymological reminder that grapes were grown here in Gallo-Roman times, a tradition carried on into our own day first by the monks of Cluny and then by later owners.
Lying next to the archaeological complex of Solutré, the appellation overlies the same Jurassic rocks Bathonien and Bajocien limestones that form the upper slopes of the Monts du Mâconnais. The soils, varying mainly according to whether they lie on the upper or lower slopes, are predominantly claylimestone.
Their colour reflects their iron content. Average altitude 200-250 metres. The easterly exposure perfectly suits the Chardonnay grape, which, in this southerly/ continental climate, yields early harvests of rich and powerful juices, vinified by ambitious young winemakers in the best traditonal style.