Challenge your palate this week with France’s best-known Gamay-based wine: Beaujolais. You’ll learn that even the highest quality wine of a region can balance complexity with accessibility and fun.

What is the Tasting Challenge? The challenge is a way to improve your wine palate each week with 34 wines from 12 countries — The Wine Tasting Challenge.

wine-tasting-challenge-cru-chiroublesWeek 2 we taste a Chiroubles from Maison Jambon

Tasting Challenge: The Most Famous Gamay – Beaujolais

Potting soil might seem like an odd thing to appreciate in your wine glass, but for anyone who has dug up their back garden on a mild summer day and fallen in love with the fresh, earthy aroma filling your senses, this wine is for you.

To get a real sense of the quality and character of French Gamay, we chose a Cru from Chiroubles, where some of the best Beaujolais in the country is made.

Jambon-Chiroubles-Tasting-Notes-winefollyUsing the wine journal helps keep tasting notes consistent.

Maison Jambon Chiroubles

Look: Deep Garnet. Side Note: garnet is an odd color for Beaujolais which could suggest oxidation (they’re usually a more ruby-purple color), but the wine tasted okay, so we rolled with it!

Aromas: Macerated strawberries, tilled soil, crushed granite, violets, pomegranate, brown sugar.

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On The Palate: Very similar to the nose, with a big helping of red fruit and potting soil. It was like eating a fruit tree from the top down: first, lots of fruit, then onward to some herbaceousness, and finally a slightly dirty soil quality.

Food Pairing: Would go really well with some sweet, tangy BBQ wings. Salmon (depending on the sauce it’s served with), and darker fowl like roasted duck.

What We Learned About Beaujolais

Directly south of their more famous cousin, the Beaujolais region is an extension of Burgundy.

Like all of France’s most well-respected wine regions, Beaujolais is divided into classes of quality. However, unlike many of those regions, even the best Beaujolais is affordable if you know what to look for.

  • Beaujolais Nouveau: Not technically a Beaujolais classification, but still important to know, as this wine has gained a lot of popularity and even has a holiday named for it. This wine is harvested, fermented, and sold all within the same month and a half.
  • Beaujolais: Basic Beaujolais
  • Beaujolais-Villages: Wine from one of 39 specific villages and communes in Beaujolais.
  • Cru Beaujolais: The highest form of Beaujolais from the region’s 10 most highly regarded wine-growing areas. It isn’t uncommon for the word “Beaujolais” to be missing entirely from the label (to avoid being lumped in with lesser quality Beaujolais Nouveau).

Given that your goal is to keep price tags under $30, you can imagine how exciting it is to try the highest quality of a region for $25. And it did…

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