We all want to get in on the best wines, whether as an investment or to drink. With Bordeaux, it is a relatively easy question to answer: the five First Growths, plus a handful of other Left Bank ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Whether an easy drinking Pouilly-Fuissé at your neighborhood bistro, or the priceless seductions of Grand Cru Romanée-Conti, ...
Burgundy's iconic wines have become tougher to source as their popularity and demand soar. Here's why they still deserve your attention. Jacy Topps is an award-nominated journalist and editor with ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Cathrine Todd is a New York City-based writer who focuses on wine. As the head winemaker for the legendary Burgundy wine house, ...
You could literally spend your entire life exploring the charming French villages in Burgundy and easily never taste the same wine twice. For such a small slice of France (many of the best wine ...
Besides being a buyer of French wines, ALEXIS LICHINE is the owner of a vineyard in Burgundy, He is the author of the recently published book The Wines of France, a comprehensive and highly readable ...
The real differences between these iconic French wines, according to wine pros. Bordeaux and Burgundy are known for producing complex, age-worthy wines. Beyond the cellar, France’s two most well-known ...
As for To Burgundy and Back, although it breaks little new ground either geographically or philosophically—Lynch and Rosenthal are old-school terroirists, champions of family-owned and operated ...
The white wines of Burgundy’s Côte de Beaune are considered by many to be the greatest whites in the world. The most famous of these come from the villages of Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-­Montrachet ...
Here’s what I discovered on my recent and first trip to the Burgundy region of France: What’s good for the grape is good for the cyclist. Especially if you enjoy climbing some of the many rocky ridges ...
With Burgundy, it is a much harder question to answer. Firstly, vignerons come and go: death, divorce, retirement, family generation succession, family disputes and, in some instances, the outright ...