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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!uknet!mcsun!julienas!chorus!grob
- From: grob@chorus.fr (Lori S. Grob)
- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Subject: Trip to Bourgogne (travelogue LONG)
- Keywords: bourgogne, france, wine, chateaux, short trips from Paris
- Message-ID: <1496@chorus.chorus.fr>
- Date: 21 Dec 92 10:32:55 GMT
- Sender: news@chorus.chorus.fr
- Lines: 257
-
- There have been some postings recently asking for romantic
- things to do in Paris and France for wedding anniversaries,
- etc. So I thought I would post a description of a 3 night
- trip we took at the beginning of November. I guess
- this trip started about 250km from Paris.
-
- At the beginning of November we had houseguests. This
- coincided with my husband's birthday (not a coincidence).
- So we decided to go down to Bourgogne for a few days and
- enjoy the colors of the leaves and find a couple of
- fireplaces to sit in front of and sip some wine.
-
- While we both enjoy winetasting, neither of us likes to spend
- a whole trip doing only that. There is a lot to do and see
- in Bourgogne even for people not interested in wine. What we
- try and do is go to someplace in the morning taste/buy some wine.
- Then we plan the rest of the day to include some chateaux, abbeys
- wandering around old villages or walking around the fields.
-
- We drove down from work on one afternoon. We spent the first
- night in Gevrey Chambertin. Usually when we go down to
- the Cote D'Or, we go south of Beaune. This was not the
- first time we were around Cote de Nuit, but it was the first
- time we had spent the night there. We stayed at a hotel
- called Le Grand Cru. It was about 350FF a night for large
- charming rooms with small balconies overlooking the vineyards
- and the chateau. We got there and it was quite cold
- and there were lot's of beautiful colors in the leaves.
-
- We walked around the village a bit and even in the dark
- it was lovely. When we got back to the hotel there was a
- fire blazing away in the hearth. There were some other people
- drinking wine in front of the fire. This seemed like a such
- a good idea that we did the same thing. Not suprisingly
- the hotel had a nice collection of reasonably priced wines
- from the Cote de Nuit. We had a 1984 Gevrey Chambertin by
- a small producer whom none of us knew but the hotel highly
- recommended. We had a bottle of wine in front of the fire
- and then went out to dinner.
-
- Dinner was in a restuarant called Le Mill'esime that was
- about a 5 minute walk away. Being the off season we
- expected that the restaurant would not be very full. But
- though they had some of the rooms upstairs not being used
- we all ate in what must have originally been built as
- a wine cellar, years ago. The place was full. Dinner was
- delicious and the service was very friendly. During the meal
- the owner came over and we began to talk about wine mentioning
- some people we knew in the area. The next thing we knew we
- were invited to go through the restaurants cellars.
- The cellars were enormous and the wine collection was enough
- to make us all gasp. And then he mentioned that these cellars
- were just for the wine that was ready to drink. The cellars
- for aging were back in the hills somewhere.
-
- We said goodnight and we walked through the clear cold
- night back to the hotel. At that point our visitors
- were already speculating on the possibility of convincing
- their companies in California that they really needed branch
- offices in Gevrey Chambertin.
-
- The next morning we had an appointment in Beaune.
- Beaune is a good place to for the weekend from
- Paris as it is very charming , quite different and
- you can take a train or drive.
-
- Beaune was the old capital city of the Dukes of Bourgogne
- before Dijon. It is a small old charming city with
- still existing walls. The majority of the winding streets
- in the center were built in the 15th century, although
- parts go back to the 12th. The central part is full
- of ancient buildings and is really nice to wander around.
- There are two or 3 main "sights" in Beaune. The Hospice
- de Beaune, and a couple of lovely churches.The Hospice du
- Beaune is a very interesting old structure It was built as a
- hospital. The hospital functioned as a hospital up until
- the 1970s although it was built in the 15th. Some of the best
- wines in Bourgogne are sold with a label from the Hospice de Beaune.
- Some of the wineries received land during the revolution, that
- had belonged to the Hospice before the church lost their land.
- Some of these wineries have donated land back to the hospital.
- They grow the vines and make the wine and the money goes to the
- Hospice, which is a charitable organization.
-
- Nowdays the Hospice is the beneficiary of the annual wine auction
- in Bourgogne. Every year in November (on the 3rd sunday I think)
- there is a wine auction in Beaune. This is the culmination of about 3 days
- of ceremony. The auction proceeds go to the Hospice and the prices
- in the auction serve as an indicator of prices for wine from Bourgogne
- for the coming year. Happily for consumers, after years of the prices
- going up, they have gone down the last few years.
-
- The center of the town is honeycombed with caves, which were used
- by the Duke's of Bourgogne and the church to store wine. The oldest
- of these cellars belongs to Maison Drouhin a negociant and
- winemaker. These are not open to the public and they don't
- sell to individuals. But it is possible to arrange a tour.
- This we had done and we had an appointment.
-
- Before heading off for Beaune we went to visit the winemaker
- who had made the wine we had enjoyed the evening before, in front
- of the fire. There was some danger in this, as many wines taste
- wonderful sitting in front of a fire, on a cold night in the country
- or sitting on a sunny terrace in the summer, but when you get them
- back to Paris and are serving them to your friends the "magic" is gone.
- This was a small winery in Gevrey Chambertin and the hotel people doubted
- that there would be much left to sell.
-
- Many of the wineries in Bourgogne and the Rhone are very small and
- unlike wineries in Napa there is no back stock to sell. The assumption
- is that either you have a place to age it yourself or you buy from
- a winestore. So of course we couldn't have what we had the evening before.
- But for a few minutes it looked like we couldn't have anything. All
- the previous years were sold out and the current stock fully reserved.
- "So how does one ever become a customer?", I asked. "If you sell out
- under reserve every year?" Well there was some discussion about how
- our friends had come all the way from the USA and couldn't come back
- in the early spring, if we wanted to reserve some of the next vintage now.
-
- We mentioned that we had an appointment at Drouhin, hoping
- to establish that we were serious people who appreciated finding
- a small little known place and not just people who didn't care what
- we drank as long as it was wet. Well perhaps they could find something
- to sell us but we had to understand we could only have a few bottles
- each and we shouldn't even think of opening it before 7 years. We nodded
- (trying to look serious) and descended into the cellar.
-
- On our way out the winemakers wife said that we should really go over
- and see Mr. X. They had a much bigger operation in a chateau and we would
- get to see an interesting range of Pommards, Chambolle Musigny etc. Well
- we had this appointment in Beaune in an hour and 15 minutes. But they
- all said no problem it would take 15 minutes to drive to Beaune (wrong!).
- So we call Mr X. who was out in the fields and he says, if Mme Y sends
- you over, no problem. So we drive off to this chateau in Gevrey
- Chambertin where we are met by the grandson of the founder.
- He tells us that he has some clients coming to pick up some wine
- but he will just be 5 minutes with them. We are beginning to worry
- about the time but he assures us it is no problem. He gives us
- a very interesting lecture about the weather conditions at various
- times in the life of these particular wines, with me translating
- into english. We will just taste one or two. (Famous last words)
- An hour later, now late for our appointment we leave.
- We have successfully held down the number of wines that we tasted
- and been given a bottle of 1987 Grand Cru as gift with the assurances
- that we really wouldn't like it much. Its not nearly as good as the
- wine we tasted and next time call earlier and we can spend some more
- time.
-
- At this point we race to Beaune and begin to apologize abjectly for
- being late for our appointment. (We did call from the last place and warn
- them). The tour of the cellars was a great success and our guests appreciated
- the oldest ones dug in the 12th century for the church which have an
- arched top like in the church itself.
-
- We spent the early afternoon wandering around Beaune and then
- decide to drive off onto the back roads and see some of the smaller
- villages. So we spend the afternoon driving, walking and climbing
- around in the backcountry around Beaune. It was a wonderful autumn
- day. At one point we were parked high on a hill near an old ruined
- chateau. We looked down across the valley and saw the fields
- people on horses and the beautiful woods. Our method consisted
- of picking a small village that looked like it might be old and
- interesting and taking the smallest possible roads to get there.
- The idea was to spend as much time as possible going through
- little interesting places especially if it meant taking an indirect
- route. We stopped frequently and turned off in alternate directions
- on any possible provocation. We probably spent 2 or 3 hours
- convering 10 or 12 kilometers. Then as it began to get dark we headed
- off for the hotel. It being November many things were closed. But
- we had a lot of fun walking around the grounds and the woods.
-
- The hotel that night was an old favorite that I had deliberately
- avoided describing to our guests. It is a small castle with 2 towers
- that belonged to the Knights of Malta in the 12th century although
- the majority of the hotel was built in the 17th century.
- It is very pretty and we had the rooms in the towers. It is called
- Hotellerie de Bellecroix and is near Chagny. It was more
- expensive then the hotel the previous night and the rooms
- were on the order of 550FF.
-
- As we drove off the rather uninteresting national route
- we came upon the hotel covered with vines and ivy and lit
- up, looking like a miniature castle. We checked in,
- assuring the people working there that we were not in fact
- several weeks early and that they must have written our
- reservations on the wrong day, yes we were sure.
-
- The grounds of the hotel are not very large but there are some
- interesting out buildings and the remains of what looks like a chapel.
-
- The restaurant in the hotel was nice and friendly. The food was
- excellent although it wasn't in the class of the meal the
- night before. This was alright with us as there is a limit
- to the number of meals like that you can eat on consecutive
- days and still be able to climb around the next day.
-
-
- The next morning we went off through the fog to drive around
- the Cote de Beaune. There was a heavy fog and so we crawled
- along through Chassagne Montrachet, Mersault and Pouligny Montrachet.
- We visited some interesting wineries which I had called from
- Paris and the hotel. In the afternoon the fog had lifted and
- we went off toward Bussy Rabutin, Flavigny-sur-Ozerain
- and to Chateauneuf.
-
- Bussy Rabutin is an interesting chateau. It belonged to a cousin
- of Mme de Sevigne, Roger Rabutin. In his youth he attended an
- orgy where he made up some rude rhymes about the young Louis XIV
- and his sweetheart. For this he was banished from Paris to Bourgogne.
- While he was there he wrote a book called the Amourous History of
- the Galles, to entertain his mistress who came down from Paris
- to share his exile. Under the cover of being a historical book,
- this was a satirical rendition of the many love affairs going
- on in the court. (Some people never learn). He was then jailed
- in the Bastille for a year and then exiled to Bourgogne for the
- rest of his life. I think that he was allowed only once to
- come up to Paris to go to the dentist. So he had a great deal
- of spare time to spend decorating the chateau, all alone as his
- mistress drew the line when he was sent to the Bastille. The whole
- place was pretty quiet that time of year.
-
- Flavigny is on a hill with a lovely view.
- This town was a bustling center of commerce in the 8th century
- because of the abbey and the castle there. If you lived in that
- area at that time this was where the action was. Now there is a
- population of ~400 and it looks like an illustration of the word
- sleepy. So that was pretty interesting.
-
-
- Finally as darkness began to fall we headed toward north Bourgogne
- and Avallon were we were spending the night. In Avallon we were
- staying at a place that we had only stayed at in the summer,
- when we were on our way down to the South of France. It is in
- an old mill, now a hotel. The hotel is on a stream in the woods.
- We ate in the glass enclosed dining room. Dinner was wonderful.
- In the morning we all explored the garden and the stream.
- The leaves of the trees which hung over the stream were brightly
- colored and the whole effect was just beautiful. Our guests began
- to question the wisdom of leaving at all.
-
- In Avallon we went to the Saturday market. That part of Bourgogne is known
- for the terrific smelly cheeses. So we bought some cheeses we
- couldn't find easily in Paris. It was a real struggle not to
- load up on cheese. We wandered around Avallon which has some interesting
- winding streets and its original walls.
-
-
- Finally after a wonderful, romantic 4 days in the country
- we headed back to Paris.
-
- --
- L.S. Grob
- Chorus syste`mes phone +33-1-30-64-82-17
- 6 avenue Gustave Eiffel fax +33-1-30-57-00-66
- F78182 Saint Quentin-en-Yvelines email grob@chorus.fr
- FRANCE
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