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The Arblaster & Clarke Wine Tours World > Europe > France

France


A South American winemaker told me the story of his wine touring experience in France a few years ago. He arranged a tour of a French chateau. The ‘visit girl’ showed him round the cellars and then ushered him to a door. He thought “aha, now the wine tasting!” and stepped through the door, which shut behind him. He was back in the street.

Of course not all wine chateaux are like that, and although this story could be apocryphal, the unfortunate thing is, that the story is actually true. And it is also true that after the New World and compared to other parts of Europe, wine touring in France can be perfunctory and the wine producers who are easy to visit are often not the ones that you would like to visit. Also when they are, you need to be sure that you are going to be well looked after, after all it is your wine holiday!

How things are done does vary considerably region by region. Most importantly, if you are a known buyer, have a good introduction, meet a vigneron who decides he likes you, stumble on a great event, or if you are on a proper escorted wine tour, wine touring in France can more than live up to expectations.

France produces many of the greatest wines on the planet. Take small villages like Sancerre in the Loire or Morey-St Denis in Burgundy, and think of the wealth of fantastic small producers, of the wine-makers with an enormous understanding of their terroir, their vines and their grapes and with the talent to express this in superb wine. Of those wines that completely took your breath away, left you stunned and amazed or just occasionally made your body shimmer, how many were French? – The answer is probably a reasonably high proportion.

If it was none at all, I’m sorry but you need to spend more! (Or drink the wine at the right time with the right food). Actually, away from the upper end of the market, France doesn’t perform that well. And what is more it never did; French Vin de Table was dreadful, and those Country wines that have largely disappeared from international markets, did so because they just couldn’t compete with Australia, California, Chile and South Africa or even with Spain and Italy.

So does that mean that it’s only worth wine touring in the great appellations of Bordeaux, Burgundy and the Rhone and then visiting only the top producers? Well, if you are on an A&C wine tour you won’t go wrong if you do. You might get to taste wines that completely take your breath away, or leave you stunned and amazed. However but you would miss out; what about Alsace? Bandol? Gigondas? St Bris and the other Chablis satellites? Vouvray? Fronsac? Minervois?

Sometimes it is these bourgeois appellations that are the most fun to visit. It is in them that we have stumbled on great hospitality and wines that positively shriek of their place. Provencal, southern Rhone wines like Gigondas that seem to smell of the maquis herbs or an Alsace Gewurz that just couldn’t come from anywhere else.

Another of France’s glories is the cuisine, which remains intensely regional. Pairing wine with food is not treated as scientifically as it is in the New World nor is it treated as an art as it is by the Italians, except by a handful of great chefs. Pairin happens systemically. The regional food is what you get in each region with the regional wines. The two have evolved together, so mostly the marriages are good and quite often they are really sensational: – Sauternes with Fois Gras, dry Alsace Riesling with river trout, a great Bordeaux with duck, a top Rhone with a Daube Provençal, a white Rhone or Bandol with Bouillabaise and Champagne or Chablis with Oysters….. Well, they do ship them in fresh daily, and that’s the thing, these regional dishes and combinations really are the daily fare, and that, is awesome.

So please do look at our whole French programme. – The Reserve Collection Bordeaux tours that stay at great chateaux or in Burgundy visit the great estates; the Champagne Weekends; the short wine breaks to give you a bite at the Rhone, Chablis or Bordeaux; the longer ‘Classic’ tours by coach or train. Finally the Walking Tours in the vineyards – Alsace, Chablis, Burgundy and Beaujolais crus where you immerse yourself in the French countryside. We hope that you find a tour that suits your style and we look forward to you wine touring with us.

Please see our NEW video about the Beaujolais 2009 vintage with Steven Spurrier:

Explore the destinations below or Types of tours.

Partly Cloudy, 18C, Bordeaux


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Anniversary Champagne Festival

6 - 8 July 2007

Arblaster & Clarke began escorting wine tours to Champagne in May 1987 and have returned 10 – 15 times every year since, so we’ve built up many great friendships here. To mark the 20th Anniversary we are staging a Champagn…
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Private Guests at Chateau Suduiraut

30 October - 3 November 2006

This is a rare opportunity indeed! An invitation to stay at the glorious 17th Château Suduiraut, deep in Sauternes. This is not a hotel, but a private wine estate which has in the last couple of years had some of the outbuildi…
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Lyons: A Gourmet Weekend for Food & Wine Lovers

Contact us for dates.

Our base for this special reward trip is the beautiful city of Lyons. Lyons is so often by-passed by those rushing south to the sun on the “autoroutes de soleil” that it is not as well known as it should be, so it is likely…
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Northern Rhone & Beaujolais Crus Walk

Contact us for dates.

There is something iconic about walking whole Beaujolais Crus, Brouilly, Côte de Brouilly, Régnié, Morgon, Chiroubles, Fleurie, Moulin-à-Vent, Chénas, Juliénas and St Amour, and tasting each in turn! The walk starts in…
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Champagne Wine Break, Special early booking offer

Departures throughout the year.

This two night Champagne break gives you a concentrated snap-shot of the region in the company of a Champagne vigneronne who has been a friend since the early days of our visits to the Champagne region. A chauffeur will join h…