Meet Gérard Quivy – Viticulteur (Wine Grower) Extraordinaire

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This is the first in a series of posts about my trip to the Burgundy region.

As usual, my jaunts outside Paris seem to revolve around wine. The side-trip to Dijon was no exception. I contacted a knowledgeable guide named Emmanuel with Authentica Tours to show us around for the day into the Grand Cru region of Burgundy. Emmanuel had some great connections; one of them being award-winning Viticulteur Gérard Quivy. His 2009 vintage wines have a two out of three stars rating with The Hachette Guide. The Hachette Guide is THE reference in France for wine. And while winter was not the ideal photo op time of year, it sure seemed the best to beat the crowds and enjoy a small private wine tasting.

Very common in the French wine regions, wine makers cellars and production facilities are attached to their homesteads. Gérard Quivy, a modest, distinguished, accomplished, and typically good-looking Frenchmen invited us into his home to taste three levels of Gevrey-Chambertin Red Burgundy wines. We entered the clearly centuries old wine tasting room and were mesmerized by both the architecture and incredible antique furnishings in use that are older than the United States. Europeans do not bat and eyelash about historical homes such as these, however, I could not help but admire the fact that one family has been living and working here for generations.

While Mr. Quivy is a traditional man and winemaker, he clearly has vision and modern ideas about how to expose new generations to his wine. Gérard speaks English very well, is well traveled and has modernized a part of his home to showcase his product. Part of the original floor to this room has a cut-a-way replaced with glass that enables visitors who are tasting to peek at the oak barrels down below in the caves without actually having to let groups down inside. You see the more the door opens to the caves where the wine is stored, the greater the risk of a temperature change no matter how slight. Consistency is crucial to a vintage wine being stored so he limits those who go down into the cellar, but smartly, he wants to connect his visitors to the process.

Mr. Quivy is a smart marketer, but more importantly he is an intelligent wine maker. He owns some of the best vines in the Burgundy region and produces both Village wines and Grand Cru variations. Préau, a Village appellation from de la Côte de Nuits is a tasty wine that one can open immediately. Next we tasted two different Les Journeaux, Gevrey-Chambertin fabulous wines. One was a 2008 and the other 2009. Lisa purchased a 2009 Les Journeaux; a wine I found to be fruity yet weighty and dry enough to please my fussy palette.

We were, of course, dying to taste the vintage 2009 Grand Cru Charmes-Chambertin bottle sitting nearby, but were told that not only was this the last bottle on display, but it was award winning and sadly not for sale. Never satisfied with being told, “No.” I insisted that I must have a bottle to take home to my husband. Mr. Quivy eventually agreed and I am happy to report that the bottle made it back safely to the States and it is lying in my wine cooler awaiting optimal time to open which Emmanuel told me is between 2017-2019. Emmanuel says that the Charmes-Chambertin “…will be perfect with an haunch (piece) of venison or even with a good Burgundy Epoisses cheese. Just open it 1 – 1 1/2 hours before you drink it. No decanter is required.”

2017 seems like forever from now. You know there is no way I will make it till 2019 before I open my Grand Cru!

 

 

A Day in Champagne – Guest post by Virtual Gal Pal Margo Waite

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Although we never tire of Paris, this past November we (two American couples) ventured further afield, taking a day trip to Champagne. After reading copious reviews and websites of a number of companies, we selected parischampagnetours.com. They use small vehicles, 7 passengers maximum, and since they collect you at your hotel (or apartment) it eliminates an early morning cab or metro ride to a departure location. It was the right decision. Trong, our guide/driver, arrived at 7:10 AM, right on schedule. A short drive brought us to another hotel where a nice couple from California joined us. The van held six passengers comfortably.

It was an extremely foggy morning and we couldn’t see much on the two hour drive to Champagne, but Trong gave a fascinating discourse on Paris and environs. And he proffered coffee, orange juice and pastries as well as English newspapers, making it a pleasant if viewless trip.

Once in Champagne, we toured the vineyards. Trong educated us on pruning, trellising, and the minutia of viniculture, as he is also not only a grower of grapes but he makes his own wine as well. He is the real deal. At 10:30–as he promised–the fog lifted. Among his many talents is weather prognostication, or so it seemed.

From the fields we drove to a small Champagne producer in Verzenay. The proprietor/owner Madame Mouzon gave us a complete tour; the entire operation from pressing to ageing to bottling to cellaring takes place in this location which is also the family’s home. We were able to sample a great variety of bubbly and there was no pressure to buy, although we were pleased to secure a magnum of Champagne at a very reasonable price for our Thanksgiving celebration a few days hence.

For lunch, Trong took us to the lovely old Brassiere du Boulingrin in Reims. For us, the generous multi-course meal sufficed for dinner. The place was busy, mostly with business people enjoying their midday break. The service was friendly and prompt, and the food was delicious, capped off by a dessert that included a specialty of the area, Biscuits Rose de Reims, crunchy pink meringue-like cookies. Later I brought packages of this local sweet at a little shop near the Cathedral de Notre Dame, our next stop. This 13th century French Gothic edifice is massive—and breathtaking. Trong’s comprehensive knowledge (including the statuary and their symbolism, the carvings, the restored 13th century stained glass windows depicting the wine making process juxtaposed with modern windows designed by Marc Chagall) greatly enhanced our experience. Trong brought the Cathedral to life for us!

Our tour ended at Taittinger, a very commercial but yet very interesting operation where we watched an informative film of the winemaking process and then toured the extensive cellars. Thousands upon thousands of Champagne bottles are stored in endless limestone caves and our knowledgeable guide let us roam the cavernous spaces, surprisingly losing no one. At their modern tasting room we enjoyed a Taittinger sampling, much less generous than the morning tasting but delicious.

Unlike our drive to Champagne, on the return to Paris the van was strangely quiet, except for the occasional snore. True to his word, Trong dropped us off at 7:30 PM.

If you go: be sure that Trong will be your guide. Note that it’s chilly in the cellars and in the fields, at least in November. (Paris seemed downright tropical by comparison.) To visit caves and cellars, notwithstanding the gorgeous 3 inch heels our stylish guide at Taittinger wore, sturdy shoes are a must; the caves are deep underground and the stone floors and stairs are uneven.

Margo is an Independent Publishing Professional based out of Newport, Rhode Island. She is an avid traveler, foodie and lover of all things French.

All photos property of Margo Waite. Must obtain permission before use.