Sud de France

Occitanie, the administrative region in France that covers a good portion of the country’s southwest, from the right bank of the Rhône River to the east, to the eastern edge of Aquitaine to the west, contains several wine-producing zones that remain relatively unknown.  It’s hard to put a finger on

Roussillon is one of those places in which one realizes that France is not just France.  That is, that France, one of the oldest coherent nation states in Europe – or possibly, in the world, in fact, contains several different cultures within it.   Within modern memory, say the past century,

Cahors was one of the first French wine regions – other than Bordeaux, Burgundy, or Champagne – that I came to know by name. If memory serves, my acquaintance came courtesy of Kermit Lynch in the late 1980s. I had heard of Cahors and was fascinated by the moniker some

Hello everyone! Taking advantage of all the out-of-the-office time we have been given, I am conducting a series of short (15-20 minute) Instagram live broadcasts on Wednesdays and Fridays, at 1pm EST (that’s 19h in France, 10am in California) on the wines of the Occitanie region in the south of

Cote Corbieres

During the past month, wine shops and restaurants throughout the city have been plastered by colorful posters announcing the Sud de Franc festival, part of the Languedoc-Roussillon region’s campaign to promote its wines and products. During the festival, I have taught two classes at the Maison de La Région Languedoc-Roussillon