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2018 Christian Moreau Chablis

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

April 9, 2023 - $35

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RATINGS

92James Suckling

Real Chablis with apples, stone,s straw and white peaches...pretty lees undertones. Medium-to full-bodied, layered and succulent.

90Wine Spectator

...rich white, evoking yellow plum, melon and honeysuckle notes, with good underlying acidity...long finish.

90Wine Enthusiast

Chalk, hazelnut, green apple, ripe yellow plum and lemon...lovely touch of smokiness. The palate is more rounded with ripeness than the nose suggests but still echoes with flinty smoke. This wine is generous but also fresh.

88-90Vinous / IWC

Rich and textured, with lovely up-front fruit and a racy, exuberant personality... Light tropical notes, almond, lemon confit and chamomile are some of the many notes that grace this exquisite, inviting Chablis.

16Jancis Robinson

...lovely cooked-lemon scent. Note-perfect on the palate, with rounded, fresh acidity, moderate length, and a light dose of oyster-shell flavour. Conventional, classic Chablis.

PRODUCER

Christian Moreau

Domaine Christian Moreau Pere et Fils traces its roots to the early 19th century, when Jean Joseph Moreau founded a wine merchant company in Chablis. In the 1980s the family sold the business, but in 2002 the family bought it back. Today Fabien Moreau, who earned a degree in winemaking in Dijon and worked in winemaking in New Zealand before returning to Burgundy, is Managing Director and head winemaker at the Domaine. The domaine has 30 acres in Chablis, including Grand Crus in Les Clos des Hospices, a monopole, Les Clos, Valmur, Vaudesir and Blanchot. Wine Advocate has complimented the domaine and called it a Chablis “success story.” Wine Advocate calls the domaine “the poster children for a new Chablis quality consciousness…”

REGION

France, Burgundy, Chablis

Chablis is the northernmost region of Burgundy, located just 110 miles southeast of Paris. It is also one of the region’s most historic, and by some measures most under-rated, appellations. In the 19th century Chablis included 100,000 acres of vineyards and supplied Paris with much of its red and white wine. Today Chablis has just 7,000 acres of AOC vineyards, having lost many to the 19th century phylloxera scourge. Chablis is admired by white wine cognoscenti, however, for its Chardonnays, which are notably different from the Chardonnays produced further south. Chardonnay is the only grape grown for the Chablis appellation – there are no red wines. Chablis has seven Grand Cru vineyards and twenty-two Premier Crus. Given its northern location, harvests are not dependable in Chablis. But in good years the wines are generally described as “flinty,” meaning more acidic, steely, austere and mineral tasting than the fuller, fruitier Chardonnays of the Côte d’ Or. In the 20th century, Chablis’ wider recognition as a venerable wine-producing region suffered from the fact that bulk wine producers in California and Australia made unappealing white jug wine blends of various white grapes, rarely including Chardonnay, which they marketed as “Chablis.”

TYPE

White Wine, Chardonnay

This white variety originated in Burgundy, but is now grown around the world. Its flexibility to thrive in many regions translates to wide flavor profile in the market. Chardonnay is commonly used in making Champagne and sparkling wines.