Roquemaure
is known as "La Capitale des Amoureux", or "The Capital of
Lovers". In 1868 the relics of St. Valentine arrived after being
purchased from Rome by Maximilian Richard, a local dignitary as
it was believed that the relics would protect the vines from
phylloxera which ravaged the vineyards in 1866. The relics are
kept in the 14th century collegiate church and each year the St
Valentine Festival of the Kiss attracts over 20,000
people.
Reporter
Pierre-Marie Doutrelant revealed that "the growers of Côtes du
Rhône planted mourvèdre and syrah, two low-yield grapes that
give the wine finesse, strictly for the benefit of government
inspectors. Then, when the inspectors left, they grafted cheap
high-yield vines—grenache and carignan—back onto the vines"
(Prial)
At
the generic level, the official AOC Côtes du Rhône region
stretches 200 km from Vienne in the north to Avignon in the south
and from the foothills of the Massif Central in the west to the
fore-slopes of the Vaucluse and Luberon mountains east of the
town of Orange. 171 communes in the French departments of
Ardèche, Bouches du Rhône, Drôme, Gard, Loire, and Vaucluse
are concerned with production from the 83,839 (2008) hectares of
vineyard. The average yield is 52 hectolitres per hectare. Wines
of all three colours must have a minimum alcohol content of 11%.
The average annual production of CDR of around 3.3 million
hectolitres - 419 million bottles - (2005/2006), is assured by
5,292 concerns including 5,202 growers, 875 private producers, 70
co-operative wineries, and 20 merchant/producers and blenders,
making it one of the largest single appellation regions in the
world.
Red
and rosé wines are made from Grenache Noir, Syrah, Cinsault,
Carignane, Counoise and Mourvèdre grapes varieties. A maximum of
20% white varieties may be used in the rosés. With the exception
of Northern wines using a majority of Syrah, all reds must
contain a minimum of 40% Grenache to be blended into the Côtes
du Rhône, and up to 5% of white grapes may be used. The whites
must contain a minimum blend of 80% Clairette, Grenache Blanc,
Marsanne, Roussanne, Bourboulenc, and Viognier. Ugni Blanc and
Picpoul Blanc may be used assecondary
varieties.