Joseph Drouhin - Chablis - 1er Cru

Joseph Drouhin - Chablis - 1er Cru - 2018 - 75cl - Onshore Cellars

Joseph Drouhin - Chablis - 1er Cru

Vintage
Size
Precio habitual €40.80
Price on application/
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Más información

Provenance
Type
Country
Appellation
Producer
Style
Premier Cru
Technical
Grapes
ABV
13%
Serving
8° - 12° C
Food Pairings
ShellfishCrabLobsterFishPoultrySaladsGreen VegetablesFresh Herbs and Aromatic DishesWalnutsGoat CheeseCamembert
Key Characteristics
Light-bodiedLight intensityCitrus fruitGreen fruitFloralMineral

La Historia de la Botella

Joseph Drouhin

Joseph Drouhin

Joseph Drouhin is a Burgundy wine producer founded in 1880 in Beaune, with significant holdings throughout the Côte d'Or and Chablis regions. The house operates vineyards across prestigious...

Joseph Drouhin is a Burgundy wine producer founded in 1880 in Beaune, with significant holdings throughout the Côte d'Or and Chablis regions. The house operates vineyards across prestigious appellations including Chablis, Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, and Vosne-Romanée, focusing exclusively on Burgundy's two noble grape varieties: Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.

The producer's wines reflect traditional Burgundian winemaking, emphasizing terroir expression over manipulation. Their Chablis holdings, operated under the Drouhin-Vaudon label, produce mineral-driven Chardonnays that showcase the Kimmeridgian soils of this northernmost Burgundy appellation. The Côte d'Or wines demonstrate the classic characteristics of their respective villages, from the rich, honeyed textures of Meursault to the elegant, perfumed Pinot Noirs of Vosne-Romanée.

Joseph Drouhin's current range spans village-level wines through Premier Cru and Grand Cru bottlings. Their portfolio includes sought-after appellations like Chassagne-Montrachet and Pouilly-Fuissé for white wines, alongside red wines from Givry in the Côte Chalonnaise and prestigious Côte de Nuits villages. The house maintains both estate vineyards and long-term contracts with growers, allowing them to offer wines across Burgundy's hierarchy of appellations.

Joseph Drouhin
Burgundy - Onshore Cellars

Burgundy

La región francesa de vinos de Borgoña (también conocida como "Bourgogne") puede ser pequeña en tamaño, pero su influencia es enorme en el mundo del vino. La...

La región francesa de vinos de Borgoña (también conocida como "Bourgogne") puede ser pequeña en tamaño, pero su influencia es enorme en el mundo del vino. La complejidad de Borgoña puede infundir miedo incluso en el corazón de un profesional del vino experimentado, pero no temas – la región solo necesita ser tan complicada como quieras que sea. Sí, es el hogar de algunos de los vinos más caros del universo conocido, pero también hay vinos sabrosos y asequibles.

Uvas principales:

La Pinot Noir se originó en Borgoña y estas vides cubren el 34% de la región, representando el 29% de la producción total de vino. La uva tinta se desarrolla extremadamente bien en suelos de piedra caliza y arcilla, lo que ayuda a crear su complejidad. Los vinos Pinot Noir de Borgoña varían en color desde cereza hasta ladrillo, son ligeros de cuerpo y típicamente tienen sabores a frutas rojas y especias. Gamay es una uva tinta también cultivada en Borgoña, pero solo representa el 10% de las vides.

Chardonnay es la uva principal para vinos blancos en Borgoña, representando el 48% de las vides y el 68% de la producción. Chardonnay aprecia el suelo de marga de Borgoña, que le da aromas florales delicados, de frutas y minerales y sabores de cuerpo completo. Aligoté es la segunda uva blanca, representando el 6% cultivado. {Lea más sobre la antigua uva Aligoté en Borgoña.}

La región produce un vino espumoso llamado Crémant de Bourgogne. Puede estar hecho de Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris, Aligoté, Gamay, Sacy y Melon. Las variedades incluyen blanc, blanc de blancs, blanc de noirs y rosé.

Explora Burgundy
Chablis

Chablis

Chablis is a small appellation located in the northernmost part of Burgundy, in northwestern France. The region sits about 240 kilometers north of the rest of Burgundy's main...

Chablis is a small appellation located in the northernmost part of Burgundy, in northwestern France. The region sits about 240 kilometers north of the rest of Burgundy's main production areas, positioned closer to Champagne than to the Côte d'Or. This geographic isolation, combined with its cool continental climate, gives Chablis a distinct identity within Burgundy.

The terroir is defined by Kimmeridgian limestone-rich soils, a geological formation that also appears in parts of Champagne. This chalky, fossil-laden soil imparts characteristic minerality to the wines. Chablis produces only white wines from Chardonnay, with a strict classification system: Petit Chablis (the most basic level), Chablis (standard appellation), Premier Cru, and Grand Cru, each with defined vineyard sites. The cool climate means the region's marginal growing conditions create wines with naturally high acidity and modest alcohol levels—traditional winemaking in Chablis often involved aging in stainless steel or neutral vessels rather than new oak, though practices vary among producers.

Chablis whites are renowned for their crisp, mineral-driven character rather than richness or oak influence. The wines typically display citrus, green apple, and flint notes, with Premier Cru and Grand Cru versions showing greater depth and aging potential than basic Chablis. The high acidity provides freshness and food compatibility, particularly with seafood and oysters. The distinction between styles—from lean, unoaked expressions to fuller examples aged in wood—reflects both vintage variation and individual producer philosophy, with many of Chablis' established houses maintaining their own interpretations of the regional character.

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