Description

Book Synopsis
This introduction to French wine helps demystify the names; places; grape varieties; and wine values, making buying and ordering wine, and even visiting vineyards a pleasure.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

How to Use This Book 2

Part I: Why France is the Home of Great Wines 3

Part II: France’s High-Profile Wine Regions 3

Part III: France’s Other Wine Regions 3

Part IV: The Part of Tens 3

Part V: Appendixes 4

Icons used in this Book 4

Part I: Why France is the Home of Great Wines 5

Chapter 1: France, Superstar 7

In the Beginning 7

Natural Talents 8

Climate ups and downs 10

Old dirt 11

Time passages 12

French Wine-Think 12

Chapter 2: French Wine Today 15

We’re Number One 15

The Variety of French Wine 16

The colors of France 16

Dry, sweet, and bubbly 16

Collectable to highly affordable 17

Regional characters 18

The Grapes of France 18

Chapter 3: Wine Laws and Labels 21

France’s Wine Laws: The Opposite of Laissez-Faire 21

Privileged versus ordinary locales 22

Small is beautiful 23

AOC, VDQS, and Vin de Pays 23

Degrees of pedigree within the AOC ranks 26

The French Wine Label 28

Part II: France’s High-Profile Wine Regions 29

Chapter 4: Elite Red Wines of Bordeaux 31

The Bordeaux Advantage 32

Bordeaux the red 33

Red Bordeaux’s grape varieties 34

The High-Rent Districts 35

The Left Bank style 36

The Villages of the Haut-Médoc 36

The Right Bank style 38

Classified Information 39

The 1855 Classification 40

The Graves/Pessac-Léognan classification 42

The St.-Emilion classification 43

Bordeaux’s Best Reds 45

Our top ten 45

Great Haut-Médoc wines 46

Top Pessac-Léognan wines 47

The Best St.-Emilion Bordeaux 48

A Pomerol ranking (unofficial) 50

Drinking Red Bordeaux 52

Visiting Bordeaux 52

Haut-Médoc and Graves 53

St.-Emilion 54

Chapter 5: Red Bordeaux on a Budget 55

Where the Bargains are 55

Cru Bourgeois wines of the Médoc and Haut-Médoc 56

Petits châteaux and generics 59

Other Bordeaux Districts 62

Fronsac and Canon-Fronsac 63

Côtes de Bourg and Premières Côtes de Blaye 64

Chapter 6: White Bordeaux—Dry or Sweet, and Delectable 67

Dry White Bordeaux Today 67

Where the dry whites are born 68

Two white grapes — and neither is Chardonnay 69

Drinking white Bordeaux 70

Good Producers of White Bordeaux 71

The star performers 71

Where quality and value meet 72

Other notable dry whites 73

Sauternes and Barsac 73

The Sauternes wine district 74

Sauternes’ grape varieties 75

Enjoying sweet Bordeaux 75

Producers of Sweet White Bordeaux 76

Beyond Château d’Yquem: great Sauternes/Barsacs 77

More good Sauternes/Barsacs 77

Bargain dessert wines 78

Chapter 7: Burgundy—Queen of France 79

The Where and Why of Burgundy 80

Soil and climate 81

The two great Burgundy grapes 81

The scale of Burgundy 82

Burgundy’s AOC System 84

Burgundy’s Districts 89

Chablis, from Chablis, France 90

Chablis appellations 91

Good Chablis producers 93

Recent Chablis vintages 94

Burgundy Royalty: Côte d’Or 95

The Côte d’Or wine villages 96

Côte d’Or wines in the market 99

Côte d’Or producers to buy 100

The Côte Chalonnaise: Affordable Burgundies 103

Côte Chalonnaise appellations 104

Chalonnaise producers to buy 105

Everyday Whites: Mâcon 106

Mâcon’s appellations and wines 106

Mâcon producers to buy 108

Serving Burgundy 109

Enjoying white Burgundy 109

Pairing Burgundy with food 110

Chapter 8: Beaujolais, The Fun Red 111

What Makes Beaujolais 111

The Beaujolais terroir 112

The Gamay grape 113

Beaujolais winemaking 113

From Frivolous to Firm 114

Beaujolais and Beaujolais-Villages 114

Beaujolais Nouveau 115

Cru Beaujolais 115

Producers and prices 117

Enjoying Beaujolais 118

Chapter 9: Robust Rhône Reds and Unique Whites 121

Two Regions in One 122

The nature of the North 122

The nature of the South 125

The Northern Rhône, Up Close 126

The reds rule 127

Uncommon whites 132

The Southern Rhône in the Spotlight 136

The major wines of the South 137

Satellite wine zones of the Southern Rhône 144

Enjoying Rhône Wines 146

Part III: France’s Other Wine Regions 147

Chapter 10: Champagne: The World’s Greatest Sparkling Wine 149

What Champagne is 149

The Champagne Region 151

Champagne’s climate and soil 153

The grape varieties of Champagne 155

The four grape-growing districts 156

Styles of Champagne 158

Non-vintage, vintage, and prestige cuvées 158

Blanc de blanks, blanc de noirs, and rosé Champagnes 163

From dry to sweet: Brut, Extra dry, and Demi-Sec Champagne 165

The Great Champagne Houses 167

“House styles” 168

Grower-producer Champagnes 169

Aging Champagne 170

Champagne with Food 171

Chapter 11: Alsace: White Wine Wonderland 173

Location, Location 173

Mountains’ majesty 174

Forecast: sunny and dry 175

The Grapes of Alsace 176

The Range of Wines 177

The dominant style 178

Legally speaking 179

VT and SGN: Measures of ripeness 182

Riesling, Above All 183

Alsace’s Other Wine Gems 185

Gewurztraminer 185

Pinot Blanc 186

Tokay-Pinot Gris 187

Other Alsace wines 188

Enjoying Alsace Wines 188

Top Alsace Producers 189

Chapter 12: The Loire Valley’s Hidden Gems 191

The Rambling Loire Valley 191

The Loire’s climate and soil 192

The major wine districts 194

The Upper Loire: Sauvignon Blanc’s Spiritual Home 194

Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé 195

Other wines of the Upper Loire 197

Leading Upper Loire producers 198

The Diverse Central Loire 199

Touraine’s (too) many AOCs 199

The many faces of Vouvray 201

The Touraine’s best red wines 204

The dry and the sweet of Anjou-Saumur 205

Muscadet: The Value White 210

Enjoying Loire Valley Wines 212

Chapter 13: The South of France 213

Languedoc-Roussillon: The Mother Vineyard of France 213

The lay of the land 214

The seeds of change 216

Classical wines: better than ever 218

Languedoc fringe dwellers 222

Beautiful Provence 223

Climate and soil 224

The wines of Provence 225

Chapter 14: Other French Wine Regions 229

Southwest France 230

Bergerac 230

Cahors and vicinity 233

Béarn 235

Jura 236

Savoie 239

Corsica 241

Other French Regions 242

Part IV: The Part of Tens 243

Chapter 15: Answers to Ten Common Questions about French Wines 245

Why are French Wines so Expensive? 245

How are French Wines Different from American Wines? 246

Are Rosé Champagnes Really Dry? 247

Are French Wines the Best Wines? 247

Do French Wines Age Long? 248

Are Prestige Cuvée Champagnes Really Better? Or are they Just a Rip-Off? 248

Can I Keep My Wines in the Refrigerator? 249

The French Make a Big Deal about “Terroir.” Isn’t This Concept Overrated? 249

Is AOC (Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée) Status a Guarantee of Quality for French Wines? 250

Are All Burgundy Wines Expensive? 250

Chapter 16: Ten French Wine Myths Exposed 251

Champagne Isn’t For Dinner 251

Red Bordeaux Takes Forever to Mature 252

Sauternes are Delicious Young 252

Chablis is too Dry and Acidic 252

Champagne is too Expensive 253

You Must Drink Beaujolais Nouveau before spring 253

Châteauneuf-du-Pape is Full-Bodied and Long-Lasting 253

All Rieslings are too Sweet 254

Wines of Southern France are Rustic and Mediocre 254

Champagnes Don’t Age Well 254

Part V: Appendixes 255

Appendix A: Pronunciation Guide to French Wine Terms 257

Appendix B: Bordeaux and Burgundy Classifications 265

Appendix C: French Wine Vintage Chart: 1979 to 1998 277

Index 281

French Wine For Dummies

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    A Paperback / softback by Ed McCarthy, Mary Ewing-Mulligan


      View other formats and editions of French Wine For Dummies by Ed McCarthy

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 15/08/2001
      ISBN13: 9780764553547, 978-0764553547
      ISBN10: 0764553542
      Also in:
      Food & Drink Wines

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This introduction to French wine helps demystify the names; places; grape varieties; and wine values, making buying and ordering wine, and even visiting vineyards a pleasure.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      How to Use This Book 2

      Part I: Why France is the Home of Great Wines 3

      Part II: France’s High-Profile Wine Regions 3

      Part III: France’s Other Wine Regions 3

      Part IV: The Part of Tens 3

      Part V: Appendixes 4

      Icons used in this Book 4

      Part I: Why France is the Home of Great Wines 5

      Chapter 1: France, Superstar 7

      In the Beginning 7

      Natural Talents 8

      Climate ups and downs 10

      Old dirt 11

      Time passages 12

      French Wine-Think 12

      Chapter 2: French Wine Today 15

      We’re Number One 15

      The Variety of French Wine 16

      The colors of France 16

      Dry, sweet, and bubbly 16

      Collectable to highly affordable 17

      Regional characters 18

      The Grapes of France 18

      Chapter 3: Wine Laws and Labels 21

      France’s Wine Laws: The Opposite of Laissez-Faire 21

      Privileged versus ordinary locales 22

      Small is beautiful 23

      AOC, VDQS, and Vin de Pays 23

      Degrees of pedigree within the AOC ranks 26

      The French Wine Label 28

      Part II: France’s High-Profile Wine Regions 29

      Chapter 4: Elite Red Wines of Bordeaux 31

      The Bordeaux Advantage 32

      Bordeaux the red 33

      Red Bordeaux’s grape varieties 34

      The High-Rent Districts 35

      The Left Bank style 36

      The Villages of the Haut-Médoc 36

      The Right Bank style 38

      Classified Information 39

      The 1855 Classification 40

      The Graves/Pessac-Léognan classification 42

      The St.-Emilion classification 43

      Bordeaux’s Best Reds 45

      Our top ten 45

      Great Haut-Médoc wines 46

      Top Pessac-Léognan wines 47

      The Best St.-Emilion Bordeaux 48

      A Pomerol ranking (unofficial) 50

      Drinking Red Bordeaux 52

      Visiting Bordeaux 52

      Haut-Médoc and Graves 53

      St.-Emilion 54

      Chapter 5: Red Bordeaux on a Budget 55

      Where the Bargains are 55

      Cru Bourgeois wines of the Médoc and Haut-Médoc 56

      Petits châteaux and generics 59

      Other Bordeaux Districts 62

      Fronsac and Canon-Fronsac 63

      Côtes de Bourg and Premières Côtes de Blaye 64

      Chapter 6: White Bordeaux—Dry or Sweet, and Delectable 67

      Dry White Bordeaux Today 67

      Where the dry whites are born 68

      Two white grapes — and neither is Chardonnay 69

      Drinking white Bordeaux 70

      Good Producers of White Bordeaux 71

      The star performers 71

      Where quality and value meet 72

      Other notable dry whites 73

      Sauternes and Barsac 73

      The Sauternes wine district 74

      Sauternes’ grape varieties 75

      Enjoying sweet Bordeaux 75

      Producers of Sweet White Bordeaux 76

      Beyond Château d’Yquem: great Sauternes/Barsacs 77

      More good Sauternes/Barsacs 77

      Bargain dessert wines 78

      Chapter 7: Burgundy—Queen of France 79

      The Where and Why of Burgundy 80

      Soil and climate 81

      The two great Burgundy grapes 81

      The scale of Burgundy 82

      Burgundy’s AOC System 84

      Burgundy’s Districts 89

      Chablis, from Chablis, France 90

      Chablis appellations 91

      Good Chablis producers 93

      Recent Chablis vintages 94

      Burgundy Royalty: Côte d’Or 95

      The Côte d’Or wine villages 96

      Côte d’Or wines in the market 99

      Côte d’Or producers to buy 100

      The Côte Chalonnaise: Affordable Burgundies 103

      Côte Chalonnaise appellations 104

      Chalonnaise producers to buy 105

      Everyday Whites: Mâcon 106

      Mâcon’s appellations and wines 106

      Mâcon producers to buy 108

      Serving Burgundy 109

      Enjoying white Burgundy 109

      Pairing Burgundy with food 110

      Chapter 8: Beaujolais, The Fun Red 111

      What Makes Beaujolais 111

      The Beaujolais terroir 112

      The Gamay grape 113

      Beaujolais winemaking 113

      From Frivolous to Firm 114

      Beaujolais and Beaujolais-Villages 114

      Beaujolais Nouveau 115

      Cru Beaujolais 115

      Producers and prices 117

      Enjoying Beaujolais 118

      Chapter 9: Robust Rhône Reds and Unique Whites 121

      Two Regions in One 122

      The nature of the North 122

      The nature of the South 125

      The Northern Rhône, Up Close 126

      The reds rule 127

      Uncommon whites 132

      The Southern Rhône in the Spotlight 136

      The major wines of the South 137

      Satellite wine zones of the Southern Rhône 144

      Enjoying Rhône Wines 146

      Part III: France’s Other Wine Regions 147

      Chapter 10: Champagne: The World’s Greatest Sparkling Wine 149

      What Champagne is 149

      The Champagne Region 151

      Champagne’s climate and soil 153

      The grape varieties of Champagne 155

      The four grape-growing districts 156

      Styles of Champagne 158

      Non-vintage, vintage, and prestige cuvées 158

      Blanc de blanks, blanc de noirs, and rosé Champagnes 163

      From dry to sweet: Brut, Extra dry, and Demi-Sec Champagne 165

      The Great Champagne Houses 167

      “House styles” 168

      Grower-producer Champagnes 169

      Aging Champagne 170

      Champagne with Food 171

      Chapter 11: Alsace: White Wine Wonderland 173

      Location, Location 173

      Mountains’ majesty 174

      Forecast: sunny and dry 175

      The Grapes of Alsace 176

      The Range of Wines 177

      The dominant style 178

      Legally speaking 179

      VT and SGN: Measures of ripeness 182

      Riesling, Above All 183

      Alsace’s Other Wine Gems 185

      Gewurztraminer 185

      Pinot Blanc 186

      Tokay-Pinot Gris 187

      Other Alsace wines 188

      Enjoying Alsace Wines 188

      Top Alsace Producers 189

      Chapter 12: The Loire Valley’s Hidden Gems 191

      The Rambling Loire Valley 191

      The Loire’s climate and soil 192

      The major wine districts 194

      The Upper Loire: Sauvignon Blanc’s Spiritual Home 194

      Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé 195

      Other wines of the Upper Loire 197

      Leading Upper Loire producers 198

      The Diverse Central Loire 199

      Touraine’s (too) many AOCs 199

      The many faces of Vouvray 201

      The Touraine’s best red wines 204

      The dry and the sweet of Anjou-Saumur 205

      Muscadet: The Value White 210

      Enjoying Loire Valley Wines 212

      Chapter 13: The South of France 213

      Languedoc-Roussillon: The Mother Vineyard of France 213

      The lay of the land 214

      The seeds of change 216

      Classical wines: better than ever 218

      Languedoc fringe dwellers 222

      Beautiful Provence 223

      Climate and soil 224

      The wines of Provence 225

      Chapter 14: Other French Wine Regions 229

      Southwest France 230

      Bergerac 230

      Cahors and vicinity 233

      Béarn 235

      Jura 236

      Savoie 239

      Corsica 241

      Other French Regions 242

      Part IV: The Part of Tens 243

      Chapter 15: Answers to Ten Common Questions about French Wines 245

      Why are French Wines so Expensive? 245

      How are French Wines Different from American Wines? 246

      Are Rosé Champagnes Really Dry? 247

      Are French Wines the Best Wines? 247

      Do French Wines Age Long? 248

      Are Prestige Cuvée Champagnes Really Better? Or are they Just a Rip-Off? 248

      Can I Keep My Wines in the Refrigerator? 249

      The French Make a Big Deal about “Terroir.” Isn’t This Concept Overrated? 249

      Is AOC (Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée) Status a Guarantee of Quality for French Wines? 250

      Are All Burgundy Wines Expensive? 250

      Chapter 16: Ten French Wine Myths Exposed 251

      Champagne Isn’t For Dinner 251

      Red Bordeaux Takes Forever to Mature 252

      Sauternes are Delicious Young 252

      Chablis is too Dry and Acidic 252

      Champagne is too Expensive 253

      You Must Drink Beaujolais Nouveau before spring 253

      Châteauneuf-du-Pape is Full-Bodied and Long-Lasting 253

      All Rieslings are too Sweet 254

      Wines of Southern France are Rustic and Mediocre 254

      Champagnes Don’t Age Well 254

      Part V: Appendixes 255

      Appendix A: Pronunciation Guide to French Wine Terms 257

      Appendix B: Bordeaux and Burgundy Classifications 265

      Appendix C: French Wine Vintage Chart: 1979 to 1998 277

      Index 281

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