Côte de Nuits
The greatest Pinot Noir appellation in the world. Contains 24 of Burgundy’s 33 Grand Crus, including Romanée-Conti, La Tâche, Chambertin, and Musigny.
About Côte
The Côte de Nuits is the northern half of Burgundy’s Côte d’Or escarpment — a thin strip of east-facing limestone hills running about 20 kilometers from Dijon south to Nuits-Saint-Georges. The zone produces nearly entirely Pinot Noir (Chardonnay is minor here), and contains the highest concentration of Grand Cru vineyards in the wine world: 24 of Burgundy’s 33 Grand Crus are in the Côte de Nuits. The vineyard hierarchy is uniquely granular — individual climats (named plots) often only a few hectares in size are classified Grand Cru, Premier Cru, Village, or Regional based on centuries of observed quality patterns. The communes contain the most famous vineyard names in fine wine: Vosne-Romanée (Romanée-Conti, La Tâche, Richebourg, Romanée-Saint-Vivant, Grands Echezeaux, Echezeaux), Gevrey-Chambertin (Chambertin, Chambertin-Clos de Bèze, eight more Grands Crus), Chambolle-Musigny (Musigny, Bonnes-Mares), Morey-Saint-Denis, Vougeot (Clos de Vougeot). Burgundy producers are typically much smaller than their Bordeaux counterparts — a 5-hectare estate is substantial.
Terroir & regulation
Principal producers
- Domaine de la Romanée-Conti
- Domaine Leroy
- Domaine Armand Rousseau
- Domaine Comte Georges de Vogüé
Editorial notes
Burgundy hierarchy: Regional < Village < Premier Cru < Grand Cru. Producer matters as much as vineyard — the same Grand Cru from different producers can vary dramatically. Counterfeit Burgundy is widespread; provenance verification is essential.