Amazing video and most inspiring. . Loved your detailed presentation and the extra touch on Google earth. I'll certainly be a regular viewer and learn so much more. Thank you for your contribution to the wine industry.
Hello Jimmy, as soon as people are allowed to travel, Chantal and I would be delighted to give you a full vineyard and cellar tour in the Beaujolais region. In it, we would cover the region from south to north, starting with the chapel at Saint Laurent d'OIngt called 'La chapelle de Notre Dame de L’Immaculée Conception' (Beaujolais), the next hilltop chapel in our tour would be Notre Dame des Raisins (Our Lady of the grapes) on magmatic diorite Mont Brouilly. That seam of diorite (with varying amounts of inclusions runs through the younger granite to Côte du Py in the Cru Morgon appellation area and up to Juliénas. Continuing north, we would finalise our vineyard exploration at La Chapelle de la Madonne, surrounded by vines and no churchyard, overlooking the lovely village of Fleurie - Chantal will explain in her own words why some cynical Fleuriatons or inhabitants of Fleurie called it 'Notre Dame de la Pétoche' (our Lady of the brown pants). If you came just after the harvest, we would be able to take you to vatrooms where both carbonic and semi-carbonic maceration methods are used, some with wild yeasts some very definately not, and show you how some winemakers chose rack and return to increase complexty but all the wine undergoes alcoholic fermentation. We look forward to welcoming you. Rosamund & Chantal
hello! I hate to tag along on Jimmy's video here, but would you be willing to open this invitation to any wine students? I am currently living in Belgium and taking my French Wine Scholar certification. Any suggestions on wine tour guides or help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. And thank you Jimmy again for such amazing content.
exelent material thankyou for help...studen to wset3 tomorrow goint to take the exam.3🤞🏽🙏🏾.../something to point here, youtube doing horrendous work in the captions=subtitles 🤷🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️just for you know... thanks again for taking your time to help and teach
Hi Jimmy, isn't there 10 Crus in Beaujolais? Morgon, Brouilly, Moulin à vent, Fleurie that you described, but also St-Amour, Regnié, Chénas, Côte de Brouilly Juliénas and Chiroubles? Thanks. PS: we love your videos :)
Amazing work. I really appreciate how much thought and effort you put into these presentations.
My pleasure!
Amazing video and most inspiring. . Loved your detailed presentation and the extra touch on Google earth. I'll certainly be a regular viewer and learn so much more. Thank you for your contribution to the wine industry.
Thanks so much - many more videos on my e-learning portal on winewithjimmy.com :-)
you deserve credit for doing such an incredible job! you are my biggest support while I am prepareing to get my level 3. Thank you so much!
Ah thanks my friend :-)
This is wonderful, Jimmy! Thanks from Oklahoma, USA. (have visited Beaujolais 2x - love it and its better wines!)
Great to hear! Bojo is very underrated and very much cheaper than Burgundy
Hello Jimmy, as soon as people are allowed to travel, Chantal and I would be delighted to give you a full vineyard and cellar tour in the Beaujolais region. In it, we would cover the region from south to north, starting with the chapel at Saint Laurent d'OIngt called 'La chapelle de Notre Dame de L’Immaculée Conception' (Beaujolais), the next hilltop chapel in our tour would be Notre Dame des Raisins (Our Lady of the grapes) on magmatic diorite Mont Brouilly. That seam of diorite (with varying amounts of inclusions runs through the younger granite to Côte du Py in the Cru Morgon appellation area and up to Juliénas. Continuing north, we would finalise our vineyard exploration at La Chapelle de la Madonne, surrounded by vines and no churchyard, overlooking the lovely village of Fleurie - Chantal will explain in her own words why some cynical Fleuriatons or inhabitants of Fleurie called it 'Notre Dame de la Pétoche' (our Lady of the brown pants). If you came just after the harvest, we would be able to take you to vatrooms where both carbonic and semi-carbonic maceration methods are used, some with wild yeasts some very definately not, and show you how some winemakers chose rack and return to increase complexty but all the wine undergoes alcoholic fermentation. We look forward to welcoming you.
Rosamund & Chantal
hello! I hate to tag along on Jimmy's video here, but would you be willing to open this invitation to any wine students? I am currently living in Belgium and taking my French Wine Scholar certification. Any suggestions on wine tour guides or help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. And thank you Jimmy again for such amazing content.
exelent material thankyou for help...studen to wset3 tomorrow goint to take the exam.3🤞🏽🙏🏾.../something to point here, youtube doing horrendous work in the captions=subtitles 🤷🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️just for you know...
thanks again for taking your time to help and teach
Thanks for the heads-up and good luck in your exam!
Love your work! Cheers from Crete, Greece!
Thank you very much!
Very thorough and really welcome. Thank you for your work
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you 🙏
Very helpful video as always
Thanks for the feedback!
Although Switzerland isn't relevant to the WSET, there still is a Swiss Kirsch on hand ;) I love that. Greets from Switzerland
Hallo!
Nice!!! TY
Thank you for sharing. 🥂
You bet!
Hi Jimmy, isn't there 10 Crus in Beaujolais? Morgon, Brouilly, Moulin à vent, Fleurie that you described, but also St-Amour, Regnié, Chénas, Côte de Brouilly Juliénas and Chiroubles? Thanks. PS: we love your videos :)
Yes of course - there are 10 crus, but the WSET L3 only requires you to know four of them.
Very nice 😊
Thanks 😊
Could have swore they were released on the third tuesday. Thank you!
Partial Written Question at 22:38
Cheers!