For the French wine grape known as Pinot Saint Georges or Pinot St. George, see Négrette.
Nuits-Saint-Georges wine is produced in the communes of Nuits-Saint-Georges and Premeaux-Prissey in the Côte de Nuits subregion of Burgundy. The Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) Nuits-Saint-Georges may be used for red and white wine with respectively Pinot noir and Chardonnay as the main grape variety. The name of the appellation is sometimes written simply as Nuits, without the Saint-Georges part. The word "Nuits" has nothing to do with "nighttime" but comes from the Latin for walnuts, nutium.[1] The production of red wine dominates greatly, with around 97 per cent, and only around three per cent white wine. There are no Grand Cru vineyards within Nuits-Saint-Georges.
In 2008 there were 306.33 hectares (757.0 acres) of vineyard surface in production for Nuits-Saint-Georges wine at village and Premier Cru level, and 12,031 hectoliter of wine was produced, of which 11,703 hectoliter red wine and 328 hectoliter white wine.[2] Some 7.03 hectares (17.4 acres) of this area was used for the white wines in 2007.[3] The total amount produced corresponds to just over 1.6 million bottles, of which just over 1.55 million bottles of red wine and a little over 40,000 bottles of white wine.
The AOC regulations allow up to 15 per cent total of Chardonnay, Pinot blanc and Pinot gris as accessory grapes in the red wines,[4] but this not very often practiced. For white wines, both Chardonnay and Pinot blanc are allowed, but most wines are likely to be 100% Chardonnay. The allowed base yield is 40 hectoliter per hectare of red wine and 45 for white wine. The grapes must reach a maturity of at least 10.5 per cent potential alcohol for village-level red wine, 11.0 per cent for village-level white wine and Premier Cru red wine, and 11.5 per cent for Premier Cru white wine.
The Côte de Nuits subregion of Burgundy has been named after Nuits-Saint-Georges, which is the subregion's largest town, and which used to play an important role in the trading of these wines.
Premiers Crus
There are 41 climats within the Nuits-Saint-Georges AOC classified as Premier Cruvineyards. The wines of these vineyards are designated Nuits-Saint-Georges Premier Cru + vineyard name, or may be labelled just Nuits-Saint-Georges Premier Cru, in which case it is possible to blend wine from several Premier Cru vineyards within the AOC.[3]
In 2007 145.96 hectares (360.7 acres) of the total Nuits-Saint-Georges vineyard surface consisted of Premier Cru vineyards, of which 141.93 hectares (350.7 acres) red and 4.03 hectares (10.0 acres) white Nuits-Saint-Georges Premier Cru. The annual production of Premier Cru wine, as a five-year average, is 5,291 hectoliters of red wine and 215 hectoliters of white wine.[3]
The climats classified as Premiers Crus are:
Aux Champs Perdrix
En la Perrière Noblot
Les Damodes
Aux Boudots
Aux Cras
La Richemone
Aux Murgers
Aux Vignerondes
Aux Chaignots
Aux Thorey
Aux Argillas
Aux Bousselots
Les Perrières
Les Hauts Pruliers
Château Gris
Les Crots
Rue de Chaux
Les Procès
Les Pruliers
Roncière
Les Saint-Georges
Les Cailles
Les Porrets Saint-Georges
Clos des Porrets Saint-Georges
Les Vallerots
Les Poulettes
Les Chaboeufs
Les Vaucrains
Chaînes Carteaux
Clos des Grandes Vignes
Clos de la Maréchale
Clos Arlot
Les Terres Blanches
Les Didiers
Clos des Forêts Saint-Georges
Aux Perdrix
Clos des Corvées
Clos des Corvées Pagets
Clos Saint-Marc
Les Argillières
Clos des Argillières
Other "Nuits" appellations
The name "Nuits" appears in two other AOCs as well. Since the entire subregion Côte de Nuits has been named after Beaune, it also appears in the name of Côte de Nuits-VillagesAOC. This is an appellation for wines from several communes, including some which don't have a specific village appellation of their own. The Hautes-Côtes de Nuits is a subregion covering various smaller valleys immediately to the west of the Côtes de Nuits areas on the main Côte d'Or escarpment, and sold as Bourgogne Hautes-Côtes de Nuits AOC. Both are typically seen as simpler appellations than those named after individual villages.
References
^Wilson, James E. (1998): Terroir, The Role of Geology, Climate, And Culture in the Making of the French Wines University of California Press. ISBN978-1840000337