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.

 

Gamay: The Grape That Deserves a Second Look

Gamay: The Grape That Deserves a Second Look

In 1395, Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, issued an edict banning Gamay from the region entirely. He called it “a very bad and disloyal plant.”

 

It was not a bad plant. It was the wrong plant for Burgundy’s Pinot Noir ambitions. Gamay was productive, generous, and easy to like — qualities that made it commercially appealing and artistically unsatisfying to a Duke who wanted Burgundy to be the world’s most prestigious wine region.

So Gamay was banished south, to Beaujolais, where the granite soils and different traditions suited it perfectly. And there it has remained, for six hundred years, producing wines that range from celebratory and simple to genuinely complex — depending on where it grows and who is making it.

 

The Duke was wrong about the grape. He was right that it belonged somewhere else.

 

What Gamay Tastes Like

Gamay is a lighter-bodied, high-acidity, low-tannin red grape — which places it in the same general territory as Pinot Noir, though the two taste quite different in practice.

 

Primary fruit: Fresh red and dark berries — cherry, raspberry, blackberry, sometimes cranberry. The fruit in Gamay is immediate and genuine, not extracted or manufactured. This is a grape that shows its fruit clearly.

 

The floral quality: Good Gamay, particularly from Fleurie and certain Morgon producers, carries a violet or iris note — an aromatic lift that makes the wine feel elegant rather than simply fruity.

 

Earthiness and depth: In the granite-dominant Crus, Gamay develops a mineral, earthy quality — wet stone, iron, sometimes a slight funk — that is entirely different from the fresh, bouncy character of entry-level Beaujolais. This is where the grape stops being easy and starts being interesting.

 

The tannins: Low to medium, soft and fine-grained. This is Gamay’s great practical virtue: it pairs easily with food, works across a wide range of dishes, and never demands the fatty richness required by high-tannin grapes like Cabernet Sauvignon.

 

Acidity: High and lively. This is the structural backbone of Gamay and the reason it works so well at the table. The acidity is refreshing rather than sharp — it carries the wine through a meal without fatigue.

 

Carbonic Maceration: What It Does and Why It Matters

Diagram of the process of Carbonic Maceration when making wine.

Most Beaujolais — particularly Nouveau — is made using carbonic maceration: whole, uncrushed grapes are placed in a sealed, carbon dioxide-filled tank and ferment from the inside out. This process produces wines that are intensely fruity, low in tannin, and ready to drink almost immediately. It also produces, in lesser versions, that characteristic banana or bubblegum note that gave Nouveau its reputation.

 

The Crus are different. Many Cru producers use partial or no carbonic maceration, instead crushing the grapes and fermenting more traditionally — a process that extracts more tannin, more structure, and more of the terroir’s character. The result is a wine that takes longer to show its best and rewards the wait considerably.

 

When you taste a Cru next to a basic Beaujolais-Villages, this difference is immediately legible. The Villages wine is bright and easy. The Cru has something underneath — a density, a grip, a persistence on the palate that the lighter wine simply does not have.

 

Gamay and Pinot Noir: The Useful Comparison

Both grapes are light-bodied, high-acid, and low-tannin. Both are associated with France’s eastern wine corridor. Both thrive in cool climates and express terroir with unusual clarity. The comparison is useful because it helps calibrate expectations.

 

Pinot Noir from Burgundy is more transparent and silky — it shows the place with a precision and delicacy that Gamay does not quite match. Gamay is more generous, more immediately fruity, more approachable young. The top Crus — particularly aged Morgon and Moulin-à-Vent — can develop a Burgundian quality that surprises people who have only known entry-level Beaujolais.

 

The practical takeaway: if you love Pinot Noir but want to spend less money and drink it younger, quality Gamay from the Crus is the most direct path there.

 

How to Choose

Entry level begins around $12 — Beaujolais-Villages AOP, honest and food-friendly. From $18 to $35, the named Crus: Brouilly and Fleurie at the approachable end, Morgon and Moulin-à-Vent with more structure and aging potential. Above $40, single-vineyard Cru expressions — the wines where the Duke of Burgundy’s mistake becomes most apparent.

   

 

Serve cool: 58 to 62°F. A brief rest in the refrigerator before opening significantly improves the experience. If aging a Cru, pull it at 60°F and let it open in the glass.

 

The Practice

Find a Beaujolais Cru and taste it with attention. Look for the fruit first — it will be there immediately. Then look for what is underneath: the mineral quality, the earthy depth, the way the acidity carries through the finish.

 

Then consider that a Duke once banned this grape for being too generous. Sometimes the things that are easiest to enjoy are the hardest to take seriously. That says more about the critic than the wine.

 

Thursday: this wine at the St. Patrick’s Day table — with enough lead time to actually find it before the holiday.

 

Share what you’re tasting in our community: Expand Your Palate

Recipe: Chicken Legs and Thighs in a Red Wine Mushroom Sauce with Almonds and Fresh Herbs

This past week the weather cooled down considerably. I have been tasting several Pinot Noirs for work. I have been craving a dish that would be a break from Easter ham leftovers.

Inspiration

I've been craving white meat but wanted something that could stand up to a comfy red wine in this cooler weather. Since I was writing about the Flavor Savory-Umami last week, I immediately thought about mushrooms. This recipe is an evolution of that inspiration. I started with a basic framework of Chicken in Madiera and then added nuts for texture. This works well because the mushrooms, shallots, almonds and soy sauce together in this recipe have the “oomph” of umami to stand up to red wine - Pinot Noir, in this case. I added Truffle Oil at the end to bring in the richness of flavorful fat and a bit of apple cider vinegar to bring in a little acid and brightness. Finishing with the fresh herbs keeps the dish from getting too heavy.

Saving Time

I used grocery store baked thigh/leg chicken parts. You could easily bake or grill your own chicken parts if you prefer. You could also utilize other parts, such as a chicken breast, if you like. I fried these off to improve their texture, get a few meaty bits for the sauce and then reheated the chicken pieces in a warm oven. You’ll notice this added almost no time and the chicken is reheated while everything else is happening. I believe in simplicity and time-saving wherever I can find it.

Let's Get Cooking!

Assemble Ingredients

In the Medium Nonstick Pan, toast the slivered almonds over medium heat until golden brown, stirring often. Move toasted almonds to a paper towel or bowl.
Meanwhile, place cooked chicken parts in the Large Nonstick pan over Medium High heat for 3 minutes each side. Move parts into Medium Nonstick pan and place into cold oven. Set oven to 350 degrees. (Do not Preheat)
Add 1 tbsp Butter to Large Nonstick Pan. Add Shallots and saute over Medium heat for 1-2 minutes until softened and golden.
Remove Large pan from heat. Add Red Wine. Reapply heat and bring wine to a simmer. Reduce for 3 minutes.
Add Mushrooms to the Large pan. Cook over Medium heat until mushrooms have soaked up the sauce and have reduced and softened.
Turn off the oven. Allow chicken to remain in warrm oven.
Add Vinegar and Soy Sauce to Mushroom sauce. Season to taste. Cook for another 1-2 minutes.
Remove pan from heat. Stir in chilled butter, one piece at a time until incorporated into the sauce. The color will soften and the sauce will become silkier.

Plating

  • Remove chicken from the oven and place each chicken piece (2) on a plate or shallow bowl.
  • Top each piece of Chicken with half of the Mushroom Sauce
Garnish with Toasted Almonds, Parsley and Rosemary. Drizzle the Truffle Oil over the top of the Chicken and Mushrooms. Season to taste.

Chicken with Red Wine Mushroom Sauce

Anne Kjellgren @ Food Wine and Flavor
No ratings yet
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Plating 5 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Servings 2
Calories 487 kcal

Equipment

  • Large Nonstick Saute Pan
  • Medium Nonstick Saute Pan

Ingredients
  

  • 2 Chicken parts, leg and thigh sections
  • 6 oz White Button Mushrooms Sliced into 1/2 inch wide sticks
  • 1/4 cup Slivered Almonds
  • 1 tbsp Butter
  • 1 Shallot minced
  • 1/2 cup Red Wine use more for more sauce
  • 1 tbsp Soy Sauce
  • 1/2 tbsp Apple Cider Vinegar
  • 1/2 tbsp Truffle Oil
  • 1 tbsp Rosemary chopped
  • 1 tbsp Parsley chopped
  • 2 tbsp Butter cut into 4 parts and chilled
  • Salt & Pepper

Instructions
 

  • Assemble Ingredients
  • In the Medium Nonstick Pan, toast the slivered almonds over medium heat until golden brown, stirring often. Move toasted almonds to a paper towel or bowl.
    1/4 cup Slivered Almonds
  • Meanwhile, place cooked chicken parts in the Large Nonstick pan over Medium High heat for 3 minutes each side. Move parts into Medium Nonstick pan and place into cold oven. Set oven to 350 degrees. (Do not Preheat)
    2 Chicken parts, leg and thigh sections
  • Add 1 tbsp Butter to Large Nonstick Pan. Add Shallots and saute over Medium heat for 1-2 minutes until softened and golden.
    1 tbsp Butter, 1 Shallot
  • Remove Large pan from heat. Add Red Wine. Reapply heat and bring wine to a simmer. Reduce for 3 minutes.
    1/2 cup Red Wine
  • Add Mushrooms to the Large pan. Cook over Medium heat until mushrooms have soaked up the sauce and have reduced and softened.
    6 oz White Button Mushrooms
  • Turn off the oven. Allow chicken to remain in warrm oven.
  • Add Vinegar and Soy Sauce to Mushroom sauce. Season to taste. Cook for another 1-2 minutes.
    1/2 tbsp Apple Cider Vinegar, 1 tbsp Soy Sauce
  • Remove pan from heat. Stir in chilled butter, one piece at a time until incorporated into the sauce. The color will soften and the sauce will become silkier.
    2 tbsp Butter

Plating

  • Remove chicken from the oven and place each chicken piece (2) on a plate or shallow bowl.
  • Top each piece of Chicken with half of the Mushroom Sauce
  • Garnish with Toasted Almonds, Parsley and Rosemary. Drizzle the Truffle Oil over the top of the Chicken and Mushrooms. Season to taste.
    1/2 tbsp Truffle Oil, 1 tbsp Rosemary, 1 tbsp Parsley, Salt & Pepper

Nutrition

Calories: 487kcalCarbohydrates: 28gProtein: 26gFat: 30gSaturated Fat: 7gPolyunsaturated Fat: 6gMonounsaturated Fat: 15gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 111mgSodium: 764mgPotassium: 719mgFiber: 4gSugar: 13gVitamin A: 289IUVitamin C: 6mgCalcium: 121mgIron: 3mg
Keyword Chicken, Mushrooms, Red Wine Sauce
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