Côte-Rôtie
Overview
Côte-Rôtie (“the roasted slope”) is the northernmost and arguably greatest red wine appellation of the Northern Rhône, sited on steep terraced hillsides above the village of Ampuis, south of Lyon. The appellation is split between two distinct zones: the Côte Brune (iron-rich, darker schist soils; more structured, longer-lived wines) and the Côte Blonde (lighter, sandy soils with more limestone; more perfumed, approachable style). Up to 20% Viognier may be co-fermented with Syrah, adding floral lift. The wines are among the most age-worthy reds in France.
Key Producers
- Marie et Pierre Bénetière — natural/biodynamic; Côte Brune specialist
- Domaine Champet — old vines in la Viallière; artisan; “les Fils à Jo” old vine cuvée
- Domaine Julien Barge — multiple lieu-dit cuvées: “Les Côtes”, “Coeur de Combard”, “Côte Blonde”
- Domaine Gilles Barge — traditional, old school; Côte Brune and Côte Blonde cuvées
- Maison E. Guigal — “Château d’Ampuis” blended cuvée; La Mouline, La Turque, La Landonne single vineyards
- Domaine Pierre Gaillard — vines in la Viallière and Côte Rozier/Fongeant
- Vignoble Bryan Deleu — “Anagramme” cuvée; refined, precise style
- Domaine Patrick et Christophe Bonnefond — “Colline de Couzou” and single vineyard cuvées
- Domaine Julien Barge
- Domaine Jean-Michel Stéphan — organic; Coteaux de Bassenon and Tupin parcels
- Domaine Robert Jasmin — old school; 100% whole clusters
Sub-Appellations
No formal sub-appellations, but the classic distinction is:
- Côte Brune — iron-rich schist; Côte Brune, Les Roziers, La Landonne, Côte Rozier, les Rochains
- Côte Blonde — sandy, lighter; more accessible in youth
- Key lieux-dits: La Viallière, La Landonne, Fongeant, Le Combard, Baleyat, Lancement, Boucharey, Côte Rozier
Grape Varieties
- Syrah — the dominant red grape; co-fermentation with up to 20% Viognier permitted and practiced by many producers
Style Notes
Classic Côte-Rôtie is haunting and complex: black raspberry, cassis, olive, pepper, grilled meat, and a distinctive smoky-iron backbone from the schist terroir. Whole-cluster fermentation adds savory stem tones. Wines from the Côte Brune are more tannic and structured; Côte Blonde wines more perfumed and earlier-drinking. All top examples need 15–25+ years to fully blossom. The old school style (Marius Gentaz, Robert Jasmin, Gilles Barge) emphasizes whole clusters and granite extraction; more modern styles (Guigal’s single vineyards) use new oak. Gilman’s preference runs strongly toward the traditional style.
Vintage Notes (from VFTC #119)
- 2023: 12.5% alcohol at Champet’s “la Viallière” — Gilman calls it “an absolute classic in the fullness of time.” Cooler than 2022 in the appellation after the September 18 rains.
- 2022: Big, structured, concentrated. Les Fils à Jo (Champet) scored 94; Barge Coeur de Combard 94, Côte Blonde 92+. Demand extended cellaring.
- 2021: More classical, elegant, approachable sooner than 2022. Champet “Les Fils à Jo” 2021 rated 94.
- 2019: Barge “Les Côtes” drinking very well, scored 94.
- 2018: Classic proportions; Barge “Coeur de Combard” 94, “Côte Blonde” 92+.
- 2017: Exceptional — Barge “Coeur de Combard” 95; “Les Côtes” 94+. Outstanding vintage.
- 2014: Barge “Côte Brune” still youthful at 11 years; scored 94.
- 2013: Barge inaugural “Côte Blonde” — 95 points; exceptional debut.
- 2009: Guigal “Château d’Ampuis” 93; Stéphan 91 (note: slight VA).
- 1988: Jasmin 95 — stunning old-school Côte-Rôtie in full bloom.
My Tastings
(none yet)
Sources
- 119 — Annual Rhône Report (John Gilman, October 2025)