Your wine bottle could be a mere vin de pays, (wine of a country), vine de France, wine from France. Or it could be a regional brand, whose name is only permitted by copanies in the country or region, using specified ingredients, so that buyers know what they are getting from a group of producers, and get the same drink, more or less, year after year.
The UK term is PDO which stands for Protected Designation of Origin.
Think of it as the district where your wine originates.
The European area uses the term AOP, French for Appelation 'D'Origin Protegee.
However the French themselves have an extra abbreviation, ADC using the word for controlled.
The Italians and Spanish use another set of letters, DOC, denominazione origin control ....
When you see these three letters, look for the coutnry, region or area your wine comes from.
It helps to know which names are places and which are grapes.
Confusingly Prosecco for a long time was both a place name and a grape from that area of Italy.
Also the same grape has different names in different countries.
I like sweet wines and know to look for doux, literally soft, which means sweet, to avoid brut, like brutal, is dry.
Myfavourite grapes and regions for sweet wine are muscat from any country, Gewurttraminer (German for spicy), Sauternes (slightly sweet) from France, and Beaunes de Venise, but I have an older one.
Most lovers of French red wines go for burgundy, which is dark red, burgundy colour, or Bordeaux, from western France's coast, whose name means border of the water. Eau is water, as in Eau de Cologne, water from Cologne, the German city, toilet water, not water from a toilet but a less expensive and less aromatic kind of mild perfume, for your skin, not to drink. The place name has an x, like the English s, for plural. Eaux is waters.
Champagne
We have done wine tasting trips around Rheims, near Paris, the Champagne region. The big houses usually have orgnaised timed tours with a guide in your chosen language and make a charge which includes a tasting and or disocunt on bottles at the end.
Languedoc
We recently did a tour of the southern France region around Montpellier and Beziers. Websites tell you whether you are visiting a shop which is open to people who drop in, or a windery, where you have to book a visit to be sure somebody will be there, and to get directions. (Sometimes a gale blows down the sign or a rival winery will remove a street sign.)
We went around the Languedoc area in January 2024. Languedoc means the land of the language oc, ocitaine.
Languedoc region of southern France.You can book wine tours around a region, for a half day, a whole day, or a week, which allows you to drink and leave the driving to somebody else.
Useful Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_designation_of_origin
https://www.bordeaux-tourism.co.uk/
https://www.bordeaux-tourism.co.uk/bordeaux-vineyards-and-wines
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. For more about wine tasting in southern France, see my next post.
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