Chablis wine is thought to have originated in northern Spain and grows well in a ‘Mediterranean’ climate. As a result, it is widely grown in many of the countries that border the Mediterranean Sea including France, Italy, Spain, and Algeria. Chablis is the most widely planted grape in France. It has also found a home in almost every other wine producing country around the world.
The Chablis wine grape variety is one of the most widely planted grapes in the world. It’s popularity stems from the high crop yields that it produces as well as the characteristics that it can bring to a wine. Chablis wines usually have red-fruit characteristics, deep violet and purple color, strong tannin structure and high levels of alcohol content. It is sometimes peppery like Syrah.
These characteristics have made Chablis wines a very popular as a blending agent in the vast quantities of local table wines (jug wines) that are consumed around the world. It often provides the ‘backbone’ of these wines and is blended with other grape varieties that bring additional flavor characteristics.
Chablis Wine Tip:
Chablis wines are brisk and fruity, very dry and with a refreshing acidity. Chablis wines grapes grow on a limestone soil rich with fossils.
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