
Winery Les Collines du BourdicLes Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier
This wine is a blend of 2 varietals which are the Chardonnay and the Viognier.
This wine generally goes well with pork, vegetarian or poultry.

Food and wine pairings with Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier
Pairings that work perfectly with Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier
Original food and wine pairings with Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier
The Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier of Winery Les Collines du Bourdic matches generally quite well with dishes of pork, game (deer, venison) or rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) such as recipes of nanie's diced ham quiche, wild boar with honey or red tuna steak provençal style.
Details and technical informations about Winery Les Collines du Bourdic's Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier.
Discover the grape variety: Chardonnay
Whites with many faces: mineral and taut at Chablis (lemon, green apple, flint), opulent and buttery at Meursault and Puligny-Montrachet (hazelnut, brioche, yellow fruits), tense and chalky in Champagne (Blanc de Blancs). Also vinified sparkling and widely exported (Sonoma, Margaret River, Casablanca). A Burgundian variety, a cross of Pinot Noir × Gouais Blanc, half-sibling of Aligoté.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Les Vignes Chardonnay - Viognier from Winery Les Collines du Bourdic are 2017
Informations about the Winery Les Collines du Bourdic
The Winery Les Collines du Bourdic is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 76 wines for sale in the of Vin de France to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Vin de France
The freest category of French wine, the playground of winemakers working outside the AOC. All styles combined: fruity reds, lively or ambitious whites, everyday rosés, unusual blends, natural wines, atypical grapes (Petit Manseng in Languedoc, Riesling in Provence), experimental winemaking (skin-contact whites, no sulphur). Grape and vintage labelling allowed, no geographic constraint. From the pop, convivial cuvée to the artisan gem: freedom in a bottle.
The word of the wine: Chaptalization
The addition of sugar at the time of fermentation of the must, an ancient practice, but theorized by Jean-Antoine Chaptal at the dawn of the 19th century. The sugar is transformed into alcohol and allows the natural degree of the wine to be raised in a weak or cold year, or - more questionably - when the winegrower has a harvest that is too large to obtain good maturity.














