Terroirs Unveiled: The Quiet Saga of a Not-So-Famous Grape that Shaped Global Palates Wine is a language spoken worldwide, yet its vocabulary often unfolds from the quiet corners of history: forgotten grape varieties, modest regions, and traditions that have quietly sculpted our glass as much as the blockbuster regions we toast to in festival atmospheres. In this post for Wine in the World, we embark on a journey through renowned realms and overlooked corners, tracing how a not-so-famous grape can ripple across continents, shaping taste, technique, and temperament in tasting rooms and kitchens alike. The most famous regions, their iconic grapes, and the echoes of a humble cousin France, Italy, Spain, and beyond often define our global palate by the pedigreed lines from Bordeaux blends, Burgundy’s Pinot Noir, Rioja’s Tempranillo, and Chianti’s Sangiovese. Yet beneath the marquee varietals lies a quieter story: a grape that, in small plots and late-night experiments, nudged winemak...
The Velvet History of Burgundy: A Tasting Tour Through Time and Terroir Few wine regions in the world conjure a sense of velvet as vividly as Burgundy. Its history unfurls like a fine ribbon—a tapestry woven from monastic sips, royal indulgence, and the patient patience of vine and soil. To taste Burgundy is to trace centuries of cultivation, climate, and culture, where every bottle is a compact chronicle of time and terroir. Begin with the heart of the story: the terroir. Burgundy’s famed terroir is not a single thing but a dialogue between soil types, slope, exposition, and microclimate. The Côte d’Or, translating roughly to the “golden slope,” is a masterclass in how geography shapes character. The limestone-rich soils of the Côte de Nuits give red wines with palpable minerality and structure, while the chalky limestone and marne of the Côte de Beaune cradle Chardonnay in a fashion that glimmers with finesse and precision. The villages, each with its own distinct fingerprint—Gev...