The Northern Rhône — Where Syrah Works Alone

The Northern Rhône — Where Syrah Works Alone

We left Châteauneuf-du-Pape early on a Friday morning in November — cold, clear, the sun still low over the plain. The drive north took nearly two hours. By the time we reached Tain-l’Hermitage, the light had settled into that particular winter quality the Rhône does: pale, direct, casting long shadows across the terraced hillside that rises steeply above the town.

View from driving North on the highway from CdP to Tain l'Hermitage

The hill of Hermitage is not subtle. It faces due south, which is everything in a northern climate, and it rises sharply enough from the riverbank that standing at the base you can see immediately why the vines here have been farmed by hand for centuries. There is no other way. The slope will not accommodate machinery. Every vine, every harvest, every intervention is a person making a decision on a hillside above the Rhône.

 

This is the Northern Rhône. And it is a fundamentally different experience from the Southern Rhône we explored last week.

 

North and South: The Same River, Different Wines

The contrast between the two Rhônes is one of the most instructive comparisons in wine. Both regions carry the same name. Both grow Syrah — though the South uses it as a supporting grape in blends, while the North builds everything around it. The wines taste almost like they come from different countries.

Wine Map of the Rhone Valley France

What changes is geology and climate. The Northern Rhône is granite — ancient, fractured, mineral. The vineyards are narrow, terraced, and steep. The continental influence is stronger here; winters are colder, summers hotter but with cool nights. Syrah must work harder to ripen, and the result is a wine of greater precision and restraint than anything produced in the warmer, wider South.

Last week’s GSM blends were generous, approachable, warm. Northern Rhône Syrah is none of those things, at least when it is young. It is mineral, structured, sometimes austere. It is a wine that asks for time — and rewards the patience.

 

The Appellations

The Northern Rhône runs roughly from Vienne in the north to Valence in the south — a narrow corridor of river and hillside about 70 kilometers long. Within it, several appellations define the range.

Map displaying the primary wine regions within the Northern Rhone

Hermitage is the prestige benchmark — 136 hectares on that south-facing granite hill above Tain. The wines produced here are among France’s most age-worthy reds: concentrated, structured, mineral, capable of developing over 20 to 30 years. They are not inexpensive, and they are not for drinking young. They are for understanding what Syrah can become.

Crozes-Hermitage is the accessible neighbor — a larger appellation surrounding Hermitage with more varied soils and a wider range of styles. Here you can find Northern Rhône Syrah at a fraction of Hermitage’s prices, and the best producers make wines of genuine character.

Cornas, just south, is Syrah in its most powerful, least compromising form. No white grapes blended in (as is occasionally done in Côte-Rôtie). No concession to approachability. Cornas is Syrah stripped back — dark, tannic, demanding. The wines from Clape and other top producers are as good as anything in the appellation.

Côte-Rôtie, in the north, is the most aromatic Northern Rhône appellation — occasionally blended with a small percentage of Viognier, which lifts the perfume without softening the structure. Floral, complex, and among the most elegant expressions of Syrah in the world.

Saint-Joseph runs along both banks of the river and offers good entry-level Northern Rhône Syrah — more approachable, more affordable, and reliable from the right producers.

 

What Makes Northern Rhône Syrah Distinctive

Granite is the story. This ancient rock imparts a mineral character — something clean and stony, almost iron-edged — that you do not find in Syrah grown on clay or alluvial soils. It also drains exceptionally well, which stresses the vines and concentrates the fruit without overripening.

 

The result in the glass: dark fruit (blackberry, black olive, black plum), black pepper — the signature Syrah note — and beneath it all, a savoury quality that some describe as smoked meat or cured meat, and that others call simply mineral. The tannins are firm. The acidity is present. These are not soft wines. They are wines built for the table — specifically for food with enough presence to meet them.

 

Which brings us to Thursday’s pairing. A peppercorn-crusted ribeye is not a subtle choice. But it is exactly right.

 

Where to Start — Wines at Every Level

Entry ($20–35): Saint-Joseph Rouge or Crozes-Hermitage from a reliable producer. Approachable Northern Rhône character; ready to drink with 2–5 years.

 

Mid-range ($35–60): Better Crozes-Hermitage or entry Cornas. Real depth, more structure, worth 5–10 years of patience.

 

Premium ($60–100+): Hermitage or top-end Cornas. Benchmark wines — educational investments as much as dinner bottles.

 

This week’s challenge: Find a Saint-Joseph or Crozes-Hermitage. Taste it alongside a piece of red meat or a plate of aged cheese. Notice the black pepper. Notice the mineral edge. Notice how different it feels from last week’s Côtes du Rhône.

 

That contrast is the education.

 

Share what you find in our community: 👉 Click here → Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time. 

 

Tuesday: Syrah the grape — what it is, where it comes from, and why Australia calls it something different.

Thursday: Peppercorn ribeye — the pairing that makes complete sense once you know what the wine is doing.

 

Mushroom & Tapenade Crostini with GSM — A Pairing Built on Earth

Mushroom & Tapenade Crostini with GSM — A Pairing Built on Earth

Some pairings work because they contrast. A crisp white wine against a rich cream sauce. Champagne against oysters. The wine cuts through the food and both become sharper for it.

This is not one of those pairings.

Mushroom and tapenade crostini with a GSM blend works because they share the same register. Earthy, savoury, umami-forward food meeting a wine with the same qualities built into its DNA. They do not challenge each other. They recognise each other.

 

Why the Pairing Works

GSM blends from the Southern Rhône carry a characteristic earthiness — the garrigue of the landscape, the warmth of the Grenache, the iron quality that Mourvèdre contributes with age. This is not a wine that tastes only of fruit. It tastes of a place.

 

Mushrooms have the same quality. Porcini, cremini, shiitake — they are all umami-forward, earthy, and savoury in a way that mirrors the wine’s deeper registers. When you combine them, neither overpowers the other. Instead, both become more present.

 

Tapenade — black olive, capers, anchovies, olive oil — adds the saline, briny element that sharpens everything. It echoes the olive and earthy notes in the wine. It also provides the contrast the mushrooms alone cannot: a saltiness that makes the Grenache’s fruit lift slightly and the Syrah’s structure feel cleaner.

 

The crostini is the vehicle. Toasted bread carries the components without competing. The crunch creates a textural moment between the soft tapenade and the mushrooms. And it gives you something to do with your hands, which is always useful when you are also trying to pay attention to what is in your glass.

 

How to Make It

This is simple enough for a weeknight and polished enough for a dinner party. Quantities below serve 4 as an appetizer.

 

Royal blue plate with two crostinis of mushroom and olive tapenade with a sprig of parsley on the plate

Mushroom and Olive Tapenade Crostini

Earthy sautéed mushrooms layered over briny olive tapenade on golden garlic crostini — a deeply savory appetizer that pairs beautifully with Grenache-based reds.
No ratings yet
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Course Appetizer
Cuisine French, Mediterranean

Ingredients
  

Ingredients — Sautéed Mushrooms:

  • 1 lb mixed mushrooms cremini, shiitake, or a blend, finely chopped
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
  • 2 tsp fresh thyme leaves
  • 2 tbsp dry red wine or Marsala
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 2 tbsp fresh parsley chopped

Olive Tapenade:

  • 1 cup pitted Kalamata olives
  • 2 tbsp capers drained
  • 2 anchovy fillets optional but highly recommended
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tsp fresh lemon juice
  • ½ tsp fresh thyme

Crostini:

  • 1 baguette sliced ½-inch thick on the diagonal
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 garlic clove halved

Instructions
 

Instructions:

  • Make the tapenade: pulse olives, capers, anchovies, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice, and thyme in a food processor until you reach a coarse, spreadable paste. Do not over-process — it should have texture. Season to taste and set aside.
  • Make crostini: brush baguette slices with olive oil and arrange on a baking sheet. Toast at 400°F for 8–10 minutes until golden and crisp. While still warm, rub lightly with the cut garlic clove.
  • Make mushrooms: heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add mushrooms and cook without stirring for 3–4 minutes until they begin to brown. Stir, add garlic and thyme, and cook another 2–3 minutes. Add wine and cook until evaporated. Season with salt and pepper, stir in parsley. Remove from heat.
  • To assemble: spread a thin layer of tapenade on each crostini, then top with a spoonful of warm sautéed mushrooms. Serve immediately.

Notes

Wine Note: The earthy mushrooms and briny, herbal tapenade create a deeply savory bite that draws out the GSM's garrigue, dark olive, and pepper character in spectacular fashion.
Keyword Burgundy pairing, crostini appetizer, French appetizer, GSM pairing, mushroom tapenade crostini, olive tapenade, party appetizer, sautéed mushrooms, wine pairing appetizer
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What to Notice in the Glass

Open the wine 30 minutes before you eat. Pour a small amount, taste it on its own. Note the fruit — the warmth of the Grenache, the pepper of the Syrah. Then eat a crostini and taste the wine again.

 

What happened to the tannins? They likely softened — the fat in the olive oil and the umami in the mushrooms smooth them. What happened to the fruit? It likely stepped forward, the earthiness of the tapenade bringing out the wine’s fruit register in contrast.

 

This is why pairing matters. Not as a rule to follow, but as an experiment in attention.

 

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The GSM Blend — What Actually Matters About These Three Grapes

The GSM Blend — What Actually Matters About These Three Grapes

Wine blends are relationships. And like most relationships, the interesting ones aren’t about any single participant — they’re about what happens between them.

 

The GSM blend is one of the most elegant examples of this in the wine world. Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre are three grapes that each have distinct personalities, distinct weaknesses, and distinct strengths. Alone, each is incomplete in some way. Together, they produce wines of warmth, structure, and complexity that have been refined over centuries in southern France — and have since been adopted by winemakers from Australia to California who recognized that the logic behind the blend is transferable anywhere the climate is warm enough.

 

Here is what each grape actually brings — and why it matters.

 

Grenache: The Heart

Grenache is the dominant grape in most Southern Rhône blends, typically making up 60–80% of the wine. It is generous, warm, and fruit-forward: red cherry, ripe strawberry, sometimes a note of dried herbs underneath. It has relatively low natural acidity and soft tannins, which makes it approachable young and comfortable with food.

Bunch of Grenache grapes on a vine backlit with sunlight.

Grenache wine grapes ripen in a vineyard in southern Sonoma County, CA, as they near harvest.

What Grenache cannot do on its own is hold its shape for long. It oxidises easily. Left unsupported, it can become flat and featureless — all warmth, no edge. It needs a partner with structure.

 

Syrah: The Spine

Syrah is the structural element. Its contribution is dark fruit — blackberry, black olive — alongside the characteristic pepper note that announces Syrah to anyone who has spent time with Northern Rhône wines. More importantly, it brings tannin and acidity. It is the grape that gives a GSM its architecture.

Photo of Black Syrah grapes hanging in a wineyard underneath a canory of grape leaves

Ripe black or blue syrah wine grapes using for making rose or red wine ready to harvest.

In blending terms, Syrah sharpens what Grenache softens. It pulls the blend toward complexity and longevity. A well-proportioned GSM with enough Syrah will improve over five to ten years in a way that a pure Grenache typically will not.

 

In the Southern Rhône, Syrah is almost always a minority partner — perhaps 10–20% of the blend. The Northern Rhône (Hermitage, Crozes-Hermitage) is where Syrah takes centre stage, unblended, on granite soils. That’s next week.

 

Mourvèdre: The Complexity

Mourvèdre is the most demanding of the three grapes and the most rewarding over time. Young, it can be austere — its tannins grippy, its fruit tightly wound. With age, it develops flavours that have no counterpart in the other two grapes: smoked meat, leather, garrigue, a mineral iron quality that some tasters describe as iron or blood.

It is the grape that makes a GSM interesting at ten years when the Grenache has mellowed and the Syrah has integrated. At lower percentages — 5–15% in many blends — it provides a layer of complexity rather than dominating the wine. Used more extensively (as in Bandol, where Mourvèdre is the required majority grape), it produces wines of striking depth and stubbornness.

 

The Blend in Practice

📝 ⭐ What actually matters is the ratio. A high-Grenache blend (80%+) will be warm, accessible, and fruit-forward — ideal for the dinner table tonight. A higher-Syrah blend will be more structured and age-worthy. A significant Mourvèdre proportion signals a winemaker who is building for time.

 

Most Côtes du Rhône at the entry level leans Grenache-dominant for good reason: it is approachable, generous, and delivers immediate pleasure. As you move up to Gigondas, Vacqueyras, or Châteauneuf-du-Pape, the blends tend to be more complex and the balance more deliberate.

 

GSM Around the World

The Southern Rhône did not keep the GSM formula to itself. Australia — particularly the Barossa Valley and McLaren Vale — produces Grenache-dominant blends that are warmer and riper than their French counterparts, with more overt fruit and a more generous texture. They label them GSM, making the variety composition explicit.

 

California’s Rhône Rangers — producers who built their reputations on Rhône varieties — make GSM-style blends in Paso Robles, Santa Barbara, and the Sierra Foothills. Spain uses Garnacha (Grenache) in blends across Priorat and Aragón in ways that parallel the Rhône logic.

 

Once you know what GSM tastes like, you can find it everywhere — and you will know what you are looking at.

 

Wines to Try

Entry ($15–25): Côtes du Rhône Rouge — Grenache-dominant, fruit-forward, ready now.

Mid-range ($25–45): Gigondas or Vacqueyras — more structure, longer finish, excellent value.

Premium ($45+): Châteauneuf-du-Pape from a traditional producer — full expression of what this region can do.

Non-French comparison: Australian Barossa GSM — riper, warmer, generous, useful for contrast.

Thursday: Mushroom and tapenade crostini — an earthy, savoury pairing that meets the GSM exactly where it lives.

 

Share your GSM discoveries in our community. 👉 Click here → Expand Your Palate Community 

 

The Rhône Valley — Where Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre Come Home

The Rhône Valley — Where Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre Come Home

There is a castle on a hill above Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Or what remains of one. The tower is partial now — the rest carried off over centuries for building stone — but from the top you can see most of what matters: the Rhône below, pale and wide; the garrigue-covered plains stretching south toward Avignon; and vines in every direction, rooted in the strangest soil you have ever stood on.

Original ruins of Chateauneuf-du-Pape lit up at night.

The soil is the thing people photograph without quite knowing why. Large, smooth, pale stones — galets roulés — cover the ground so completely that you cannot see earth beneath them. They look like a riverbed that forgot to stay wet. They were left by the Rhône glacier roughly twenty million years ago, and they do something specific: they absorb the sun’s heat through the day and release it slowly at night, extending the ripening season and concentrating the grapes in ways that cooler climates cannot.

 

This is the Southern Rhône. And it is a region that rewards the kind of attention you cannot quite pay on a first visit, because there is too much to take in.

 

 

The Shape of the Region

The Rhône Valley is long — roughly 200 kilometers from north to south — and divided by character rather than administration into two distinct parts.

Wine Map of the Rhone Valley France

The Northern Rhône is granite and altitude, cool nights and steep slopes. Syrah is the only red grape permitted here, and it produces wines of extraordinary precision and restraint: Hermitage, Crozes-Hermitage, Cornas, Côte-Rôtie. The vineyards are terraced — ancient walls holding the soil on slopes so steep that machinery cannot reach them. Everything is done by hand. We’ll spend a week there next week.

View of steep terraced Northern Rhone vineyards in Tain l'Hermitage

View of steep terraced Northern Rhone vineyards in Tain l’Hermitage

Southern Rhone Vineyards

The Southern Rhône is wider, warmer, more Mediterranean. The landscape opens up. The garrigue — wild thyme, rosemary, lavender, fennel — scents the air around the vines. Grenache dominates, blended with Syrah and Mourvèdre to create the wines the region is best known for. The range here is vast: from simple, delicious Côtes du Rhône at fifteen dollars to Châteauneuf-du-Pape at sixty or a hundred or considerably more.

The Three Grapes — and Why the Blend Is the Point

Most wine regions build their identity around a single grape. Burgundy has Pinot Noir. Bordeaux has Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot in conversation. The Rhône, particularly the South, builds its identity around a relationship between three.

Grenache brings warmth. It is generous, ripe, fruit-forward — strawberry and red cherry and sometimes a low, earthy note underneath. Left alone it can be a little soft, a little obvious. It is not a grape that thrives on its own.

Bunch of Grenache grapes on a vine backlit with sunlight.

Syrah brings structure and depth. Dark fruit, black pepper, a savouriness that pulls the whole blend into focus. It is the grape that gives a GSM its spine.

Photo of Black Syrah grapes hanging in a wineyard underneath a canory of grape leaves

Mourvèdre brings complexity and patience. Smoked meat, iron, garrigue — it can be difficult when young and revelatory with age. It is the grape that makes a GSM interesting after ten years.

Mouvedre grapes hanging from the vine, fully ripe

Together, they do something none of them can do alone. This is the lesson of the GSM blend — and it’s what we’ll spend Tuesday exploring in detail.

 

What Actually Matters

The Rhône is a master key. Once you understand it, you can read a wine list from southern France, Australia, California, and Spain with confidence. GSM-style blends are made across the wine world because the logic of the blend — warmth balanced by structure balanced by complexity — is universally compelling.

 

You do not need to memorize appellations. You need to understand what the grapes are doing together.

 

This week, we begin there.

 

Where to Start — Wines at Every Level

Entry level ($15–25): Côtes du Rhône Rouge. This is the region’s everyday wine, and the best examples over-deliver significantly at this price point. Look for Grenache-dominant blends with a year or two of age.

Mid-range ($25–45): Gigondas, Vacqueyras, or Lirac. These village appellations offer the full Southern Rhône experience at accessible prices. More structure and complexity than Côtes du Rhône; worth seeking out.

Premium ($45–80): Châteauneuf-du-Pape from a solid producer. Not the trophy wines — the ones that show you what the appellation actually tastes like. Earthy, concentrated, long-finishing.

 

This Week’s Challenge: Find a Côtes du Rhône Rouge or a Gigondas and taste it alongside Thursday’s crostini. Notice what the Grenache is doing — that soft warmth under the structure. Then ask yourself what would be missing without the Syrah.

 

Share what you find in our community: Expand Your Palate: One Sip at a Time

 

Tuesday: The GSM blend explained — what each grape actually contributes and why the relationship matters.

Thursday: Mushroom and tapenade crostini — a pairing built on the same earthy register as the wine.

 

Roast Lamb & Burgundy Pinot Noir: Your Easter Table, Planned

Roast Lamb & Burgundy Pinot Noir: Your Easter Table, Planned

Easter Sunday is in three days.

 

If you are planning a roast lamb, today is the day to think about what goes in the glass alongside it. Not because wine is the point of Easter, but because the right bottle — opened at the right temperature, poured at the right moment — makes the meal feel considered rather than assembled. And this particular pairing is one that has been making sense at spring tables for a very long time.

Roast lamb and Burgundy Pinot Noir. Here is why it works, what to buy, and exactly how to serve it.

 

Why This Pairing Works

The tannin and fat relationship. Lamb is moderately fatty — not as rich as beef, not as lean as veal. It needs a wine with enough structure to cut through the fat and refresh the palate, but not so much tannin that it fights the meat. Pinot Noir’s fine, silky tannins are exactly right. They do the work without the aggression.

 

The acidity and richness balance. Burgundy Pinot Noir’s high acidity — a defining characteristic of the grape and the region — functions as a natural counterpoint to the richness of the roast. Each sip refreshes the palate and makes the next bite of lamb taste more vivid.

 

The earthiness affinity. Good Burgundy Pinot Noir has an earthy, savoury quality — what becomes forest floor and mushroom in aged examples. Lamb, particularly when roasted with rosemary, garlic, and thyme, has a similar savoury depth. The wine and the meat find each other in that register.

 

The weight is right. Pinot Noir is medium-bodied. Roast lamb is medium-weighted as a protein. A full-bodied Cabernet Sauvignon can overwhelm lamb’s relative delicacy. Pinot Noir sits in the right relationship with the meat — substantial enough to hold its own, restrained enough not to dominate.

 

How to Prepare the Lamb

Simple preparations work best with Burgundy Pinot Noir. The wine is doing nuanced work and does not benefit from competing with heavy sauces or very bold spicing.

 

Rack of lamb. More elegant, quicker cooking, appropriate for a smaller table. A herb crust — parsley, thyme, mustard — works beautifully. The Chambolle-Musigny floral character in a good Pinot Noir complements the herb crust particularly well.

 

 

Roast Lamb Loin Chops

A minimalist preparation that lets both the lamb and the wine do the talking — exactly right for Red Burgundy. A simple herb and lemon zest rub, a hard sear for crust, and a quick finish in the oven is all this dish needs. No sauce, no distractions. The lamb's natural richness plays beautifully against Pinot Noir's acidity, while rosemary and thyme echo the earthy, herbal notes that define grea
No ratings yet
Prep Time 40 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Resting Time 10 minutes
Course Entree, Main Course
Cuisine French, Mediterranean

Ingredients
  

  • 8 lamb loin chops 1–1½ inches thick
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 cloves garlic lightly crushed
  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh thyme leaves
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • 1 to 1½ tsp kosher salt
  • 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper

Instructions
 

Prep & Season

  • In a bowl, combine:
  • Olive oil
  • Garlic
  • Rosemary
  • Thyme
  • Lemon zest
  • Salt & pepper
  • Rub evenly over the lamb chops.
  • Let sit at room temperature for 20–30 minutes.

Preheat

  • Preheat oven to 400°F (205°C)
  • Heat a heavy skillet (cast iron preferred) over medium-high heat

Sear the Lamb

  • Add chops to hot pan
  • Sear 2–3 minutes per side until a deep golden crust forms

Finish in Oven

  • Transfer skillet to oven
  • Roast for 5–8 minutes
  • Target doneness:
  • Medium-rare: 130–135°F (54–57°C)
  • Medium: 135–140°F (57–60°C)

Rest

  • Remove from oven
  • Rest 5–10 minutes before serving

Notes

🔥 Pro Tips (Simple but critical)

  • Pat lamb dry before searing → better crust
  • Don’t overcrowd the pan → you want sear, not steam
  • Use fresh herbs only → dried will flatten the dish
  • Slice against the grain if serving carved → better texture

 

🍷 Why This Works with Burgundy Pinot Noir

This stripped-down version is actually ideal:
  • Lamb’s natural richness → complements Pinot’s acidity
  • Rosemary & thyme → echo earthy, herbal Burgundy notes
  • Garlic (lightly used) → adds depth without dominating
  • Lemon zest → lifts the dish and highlights the wine’s brightness
No heavy sauce = the wine stays the star.
Keyword lamb loin chops, roasted lamb, rosemary thyme lamb, minimalist lamb, Red Burgundy pairing, Pinot Noir pairing, gluten-free, dairy-free, elegant entertaining, date night, oven finish, cast iron
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Leg of lamb, bone-in, roasted. The classic. Stud with garlic, coat with rosemary and olive oil, roast to a pink centre. The herbs — rosemary especially — have an herbal quality that resonates with Pinot Noir’s subtle vegetal notes. Rest thoroughly before carving.

 

Slow-roasted shoulder. More forgiving, more rustic, extraordinary depth of flavour from long cooking. This richness calls for a slightly more structured Pinot Noir — a Mercurey or a Nuits-Saint-Georges rather than a lighter Givry.

 

Accompaniments that work: Roasted root vegetables, white beans, spring peas, flageolet beans (the classic French accompaniment to lamb), gratin dauphinois. Spring herbs throughout.

 

Avoid: Very heavily spiced preparations (North African-style with a lot of warm spice), mint sauce in large quantities, or very acidic sauces. These will work against the wine’s delicate character.

 

What to Buy — Today

For most Easter tables, a Mercurey or Givry in the $25–40 range is exactly right. These are honest Burgundy Pinot Noirs with enough character to be interesting and enough approachability to be drunk young, tonight, without ceremony. A village-level Côte de Nuits — Nuits-Saint-Georges, Chambolle-Musigny — at $45–70 is worth the investment if the occasion calls for something more considered.

 

What to avoid: very young Côte de Nuits Premier Cru or Grand Cru wines that need time to open. If you have access to something aged five to ten years, that is a different and wonderful conversation. If you are buying new, stay with Chalonnaise or village-level Côte de Nuits.

 

How to Serve It

Serve at 60–65°F — slightly below room temperature in most homes. Burgundy Pinot Noir served too warm becomes flat and loses its defining freshness; served too cold, the fruit closes and the tannins seem harsh. Fifteen minutes in the refrigerator from a normal room temperature is usually sufficient.

 

Decant for thirty minutes. Even a young, accessible Mercurey opens significantly with air — the fruit becomes more expressive, the earthiness more apparent, the texture smoother. A simple decanter or even a jug will do.

 

Open a second bottle without guilt. Pinot Noir at the Easter table is meant to be poured generously.

 

From everyone at the Food Wine and Flavor table: joyeuses Pâques. Happy Easter.

 

Share your Easter table in our community. 👉 Click here → Expand Your Palate Community

 

Coming next week: the Rhône Valley. A completely different world from Burgundy — bigger, warmer, more dramatic. The amazing and affordable wines the French buy and enjoy. We spent four days in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and drove the full valley. That story begins Sunday.