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2021 Domaine des Billards Saint-Amour

12 available
Minimum Bid Per Bottle is $15
Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

ITEM 10201362 - Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Bidder Quantity Amount Total
12 $15
Item Sold Amount Date
I10125763 2 $15 May 25, 2025
I10066498 1 $15 May 4, 2025
I10050793 7 $15 Apr 27, 2025
I10008404 4 $15 Apr 6, 2025
I9984366 1 $15 Mar 23, 2025
I9963368 1 $15 Mar 9, 2025
I9915421 1 $15 Feb 2, 2025
2021 Domaine des Billards Saint-Amour

REGION

France, Beaujolais, Saint-Amour

Beaujolais is the Côte d’Or’s big, boisterous neighbor to the south. At 34 miles in length and nine miles across, it is twice the size of Rhode Island. Though it is technically a part of Burgundy, Beaujolais’ wines are quite different from the northern Burgundies. A big reason is that 99% of the grapes grown in Beaujolais are Gamay, a relative of Pinot Noir but with a lighter skin, less tannin, and lower acidity. Gamay is easier to grow and ripens before Pinot Noir, and though it is often dismissed by wine connoisseurs, it can make outstanding wines. Beaujolais is also distinctive in that most winemakers there use a process called carbonic maceration, which means that grapes are not crushed but dumped into large vats where the weight of the grapes eventually crushes those at the bottom. Unbroken grapes begin fermenting inside their skins, helping give the wines of this region their intensely perfumed, fruity character. There are numerous appellations within Beaujolais, but the most prestigious are the ten Cru Beaujolais. Each of those ten Crus has its own village or vineyard appellation. Beaujolais’ reputation suffered in the late 20th century when French wine marketers created a demand for Beaujolais Nouveau, two-month old wine made from the recent harvest and released the third weekend in November. The wines are thin and meant to be drunk immediately, and though made from Gamay, they have little else in common with the more serious Beaujolais wines.

TYPE

Red Wine, Gamay, Cru Beaujolais

The Gamay grape produces a light, versatile and food-friendly wine. It is best known for making Beaujolais Nouveau, but it is also grown in Loire and Tours. Thankfully the 14th C. Duke of Burgundy’s degree to ban the grape did not spread through all of France.