Chardonnay’s Full Range: From Chablis to Côte de Beaune

Chardonnay’s Full Range: From Chablis to Côte de Beaune

Last week, Chablis. Last Sunday, Mâcon. The same grape. The same region, technically. Almost nothing else in common.

 

This is the Chardonnay education — and it is one of the most useful frameworks in wine. Once you understand what makes these two expressions so different, you have a lens for reading any Chardonnay you encounter anywhere in the world. New Zealand, California, Australia, northern Italy — the same forces are at work. Climate, soil, oak, winemaking philosophy. The variables are consistent even when the wines are not.

Today we map the full White Burgundy range. Three points on the compass. One grape.

 

Point One: Chablis — The Cool, Mineral Extreme

Chablis sits at Burgundy's northern limit, on Kimmeridgian limestone studded with ancient fossilised oyster shells. The climate is cool — close to Champagne's latitude — and the growing season is short. Chardonnay here ripens slowly, retaining high acidity and producing restrained fruit: green apple, lemon, chalk. Made without oak, or with very old neutral barrels that contribute nothing to flavour, Chablis expresses the ground rather than the winemaking. The result is austere, mineral, and precisely structured. It does not give itself away immediately. It rewards attention and food.

Jurassic (Kimmeridgian) oolitic limestone, about 155 Mya

Price range: $18–35 for AOP and Village; $30–55 for Premier Cru; $60–120+ for Grand Cru.

Two bottle of Chablis, side by side

Point Two: Mâcon — The Generous, Accessible Middle

Mâcon is two hours south by car and a different climate entirely. The Mâconnais is warmer, sunnier, with longer growing seasons that allow Chardonnay to ripen fully. Stone fruit, ripe apple, sometimes melon. Rounder acidity. A softer, more welcoming texture that does not require the drinker to meet it halfway. Still made without heavy oak — this is Burgundy, not California — but with a fruit-forward generosity that Chablis never aims for. At the Pouilly-Fuissé level, limestone terroir adds a mineral backbone that grounds the ripeness. The best examples here are genuinely complex without being expensive.

 

Price range: $12–18 for Mâcon AOP; $15–25 for Mâcon-Villages; $25–50 for Pouilly-Fuissé; $18–30 for Saint-Véran.

 

Point Three: Côte de Beaune — The Prestigious Pinnacle

Between Chablis and Mâcon, geographically and qualitatively, sit the great white wine villages of the Côte de Beaune: Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet. These are the wines that set the international benchmark for aged, complex, oak-influenced Chardonnay — not the heavy, butter-and-vanilla style of warm-climate New World Chardonnay, but something more precise and architectural: rich texture from oak ageing and malolactic fermentation, deep mineral complexity from limestone soils, and a fruit profile that moves from fresh citrus and stone fruit in youth to hazelnut, cream, and toasted brioche with age.

 

Premier Cru wines from these villages — Meursault Charmes, Puligny-Montrachet Les Combettes, Chassagne-Montrachet Morgeot — are the wines that professionals study and collectors cellar. They age for ten to twenty years. They are Chardonnay at its most serious and most rewarding.

Price range: $45–90 for village level; $80–200+ for Premier Cru; $300–1,000+ for Grand Cru.

 

The Framework This Gives You

When you encounter a Chardonnay anywhere in the world, three questions now have meaning:

 

How warm was the climate? Warm = riper fruit, rounder acidity, more generous. Cool = restrained fruit, high acidity, more mineral.

 

Was oak used, and how much? No oak or old neutral oak = cleaner, more fruit-forward, more terroir-driven. New French oak = added texture, vanilla, toast, creaminess.

 

Was malolactic fermentation used? Yes = softer, creamier, lower perceived acidity. No = sharper, leaner, more citrus-forward.

 

These three variables explain most of what you will taste in any Chardonnay, anywhere. The Burgundy examples are the benchmarks because they are the most studied, the most documented, and the clearest illustrations of each point on the range.

 

Thursday: Mâcon and spring fish — the generous, round White Burgundy and a seasonal pairing that suits it perfectly.

 

Next week: we turn to Pinot Noir and the red side of Burgundy. Share your thoughts in the community. 👉 Click here →  Expand Your Palate Community

 

Mâcon: Where Chardonnay Becomes Generous

Mâcon: Where Chardonnay Becomes Generous

Last week: Chablis. Cool, mineral, unoaked, austere. The kind of wine that asks something of you before it gives anything back.

 

This week: Mâcon. The other end of the White Burgundy conversation.

map of Burgundy wine regions - with all five subregions

Mâcon sits in the southernmost white wine district of Burgundy, where the climate is warmer, the growing season longer, and Chardonnay — the same grape, grown less than two hours south of Chablis by car — produces wines of an entirely different character. Generous. Round. Accessible. Immediately welcoming in a way that Chablis is not designed to be.

This contrast is the Chardonnay education. Not one wine, not one style, but a grape capable of expressing almost the full range of what white wine can do — depending on where it is grown, how warm the climate, what the soil holds, and what the winemaker decides to do or not do in the cellar.

Mâcon is where you begin to understand that range without spending a great deal of money. And that is one of the most useful things about it.

 

The Mâcon Appellation Hierarchy

Mâcon operates on a tiered system that is worth understanding before you shop, because the label tells you a great deal about what's in the bottle.

 

Mâcon AOP. The broadest designation. Grapes from across the Mâconnais district. Honest, approachable, light to medium-bodied Chardonnay. Ready to drink immediately. The everyday wine of southern Burgundy. Expect $12–18.

 

Mâcon-Villages AOP. A step up in quality — grapes from one of 27 designated villages known to produce superior wine. The label may simply say 'Mâcon-Villages' or may name the specific village: Mâcon-Lugny, Mâcon-Prissé, Mâcon-Uchizy. More character, more texture, still excellent value. Expect $15–25.

Mâcon + Village Name. When a producer is proud enough of a specific village to name it, that confidence is usually earned. These wines show genuine terroir character and are worth seeking out. Same price range as Mâcon-Villages but often a notch more interesting.

 

Pouilly-Fuissé AOP. The prestige appellation of the Mâconnais. Four villages — Fuissé, Solutré-Pouilly, Vergisson, Chaintré — produce wines of genuine complexity and age-worthiness from some of the most dramatic limestone escarpments in Burgundy. Promoted to its own appellation status in 1936, it received its first Premier Cru classification in 2020. Expect $25–50 for good examples; Premier Cru $45–80.

Saint-Véran AOP. Pouilly-Fuissé's accessible neighbour. Similar limestone terroir, similar style, fraction of the price. One of the best value propositions in all of White Burgundy. $18–30.

 

What Mâcon Tastes Like

Where Chablis is restrained and mineral, Mâcon is generous and fruit-forward. The warmer climate produces riper Chardonnay — stone fruit (peach, nectarine), ripe apple, sometimes a hint of melon — with rounder acidity and a softer, more immediately welcoming texture.

 

Most Mâcon is made without oak, or with very light oak contact, which keeps the wines fresh and clean. At the Pouilly-Fuissé level, some producers use older oak barrels for fermentation or ageing, adding a subtle creaminess and texture without overwhelming the fruit. This is not the butter-and-vanilla California Chardonnay style — it is Burgundian restraint applied to a warmer, riper expression of the grape.

 

The limestone soils of Pouilly-Fuissé and Saint-Véran add a mineral thread that grounds the riper fruit — a reminder that you are still in Burgundy, still in terroir-conscious territory, even if the wine tastes nothing like Chablis.

 

 

A Brief Word on the Côte de Beaune

Mâcon is the accessible, generous face of White Burgundy. To complete the picture, there is a third expression worth naming: the Côte de Beaune, where White Burgundy reaches its most prestigious and complex form.

Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, and Chassagne-Montrachet are the three great white wine villages of the Côte de Beaune. Their Premier Cru and Grand Cru wines — Meursault Perrières, Puligny-Montrachet Les Pucelles, Bâtard-Montrachet — are among the most studied and most expensive white wines in the world. They are Chardonnay grown on limestone and clay slopes of extraordinary precision, often aged in French oak, and capable of evolving in bottle for ten to twenty years.

This is not an everyday wine. It is a destination — the pinnacle of what the grape can achieve in this region. But knowing it exists, and knowing where it sits in relation to Mâcon and Chablis, gives you the complete White Burgundy map. You now have all three points on the compass: the mineral austerity of the north, the generous accessibility of the south, and the prestigious complexity of the Côte d'Or in between.

Thursday: Mâcon with spring fish — a pairing that suits the season and the wine's generous, round character. See you then.

 

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Chardonnay: The Foundation Grape, and Why Chablis Is Only the Beginning

Chardonnay: The Foundation Grape, and Why Chablis Is Only the Beginning

Chardonnay is the most malleable white grape in the world.

This is both its gift and the source of considerable confusion. A Chablis and a Napa Valley Chardonnay can be so different in colour, aroma, texture, and flavour that tasting them side by side without knowing what they are, you might reasonably conclude they are entirely different grapes. They are not. They are the same grape, grown in different climates, in different soils, made by winemakers with different philosophies, and they are expressing entirely different things.

Understanding this malleability is not just an interesting wine fact. It is one of the most useful frameworks in wine education. Once you understand what shapes Chardonnay — climate, soil, oak, winemaking technique — you can apply that same framework to almost any white wine you encounter.

 

 

What Chardonnay Actually Is

Chardonnay is a thin-skinned, early-ripening white grape of French origin, almost certainly descended from Pinot Noir through a natural crossing with Gouais Blanc. It is now the most widely planted white wine grape in the world, grown in virtually every wine-producing country. It makes still wines, sparkling wines (it is one of Champagne’s three permitted grapes), and everything in between.

Close-up ripe bunch of white Grapes on Vine for wine making. Autumn grapes harvest, fresh fruits. Chardonnay, Chenin Blanc, Muscat, Pinot Blanc, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc grape sort

Its intrinsic character is relatively neutral. This is the key to understanding Chardonnay. Unlike Sauvignon Blanc, which announces itself clearly with herbal and citrus aromatics, or Riesling, which carries a distinctive floral and mineral signature, Chardonnay is a quiet grape. It does not have a loud voice of its own. What it has is extraordinary responsiveness — to soil, to climate, to winemaking decisions. It reflects its environment with unusual fidelity.

 

This is why Burgundy chose it. In a region built on the philosophy that place is what matters, a grape that expresses place faithfully is the ideal instrument.

 

The Two Forces That Shape Chardonnay

Climate and soil. In cool climates — Chablis, Champagne, Chablis’s near-neighbour regions — Chardonnay ripens slowly, retains high acidity, and produces wines that are lean, mineral, and tightly structured. The fruit is understated: green apple, lemon, sometimes a chalky or flinty mineral note that seems to come from the ground rather than the grape. In warm climates — California, Australia, Mâcon on a warm year — Chardonnay ripens fully, develops richer, rounder fruit (peach, melon, tropical notes), and can feel generous and immediate in a way that cool-climate expressions do not.

Glass of golden Chardonnay sitting in front of Chardonnay leaves and behind a Chardonnay grape bunch. Chardonnay 

 

Oak and winemaking. Chardonnay is one of the few white grapes that takes well to oak ageing — it has the body and structure to absorb the flavours (vanilla, toast, spice) and textural influence (creaminess, weight) that oak imparts. When fermented or aged in new French oak barrels and put through malolactic fermentation — a secondary process that converts tart malic acid into softer lactic acid, giving the wine a buttery, creamy texture — Chardonnay becomes a completely different sensory experience from the same grape made in stainless steel with no oak contact.

 

Chablis: The Unoaked, Mineral Extreme

Chablis is made without oak, or with very light, old oak that contributes texture without flavour. It is fermented and aged in stainless steel or neutral vessels, which means the winemaking gets almost entirely out of the way. What you taste in a good Chablis is the grape and the ground: the Kimmeridgian limestone and fossilised oyster shells of the Chablis appellation expressing themselves through Chardonnay’s quiet voice.

 

The result is a wine that can initially seem austere. There is no butter, no vanilla, no tropical fruit. There is instead a flinty, almost saline mineral quality, high acidity, restrained citrus and green apple fruit, and a finish that is clean and long. It is a wine that rewards attention and food — it is not designed to be enjoyed alone as a sipping wine. It is designed to be at a table.

 

Chablis is technically White Burgundy. It is Chardonnay grown in Burgundy’s northernmost appellation. But it tastes so different from the richer, rounder, sometimes oak-influenced white Burgundies of the Côte de Beaune — Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet — that it occupies its own category in most wine lovers’ minds. The classification is accurate. The flavour profile is its own.

map of Burgundy wine regions - with all five subregions

 

What’s Coming Next Week

Next week we go to Mâcon — the southernmost white wine district of Burgundy, where the climate is warmer, the wines are riper and rounder, and Chardonnay shows a completely different face. Mâcon is where Chardonnay becomes accessible and generous rather than austere and mineral. It is also where it becomes exceptional value — some of the most honest and enjoyable white Burgundy available at $15 to $25.

 

Chablis and Mâcon are bookends. Same grape, same region in name, almost entirely different wines. By the time you have tasted both, you will understand what Chardonnay is actually capable of — and you will have a framework for evaluating any Chardonnay you encounter anywhere in the world.

 

This is where noticing begins. Taste a Chablis this week alongside Thursday’s crab legs. Notice what the wine does at the table that it does not do alone. Share what you find in our community. [LINK]