The Frost and the Fire
A late-April freeze decimated yields across northern France, then an unrelenting summer forged the survivors into wines of uncommon intensity. The 2017 vintage is defined by extremes, and the wines that emerged are structured for the long term.
Over more than a week of sub-freezing nights in late April, peaking on the 27th and 28th, temperatures across France’s vineyards collapsed. In Chablis, black frosts stretched across roughly fifteen nights; growers patrolled their vines with smudge pots and wind machines, watching the buds blacken as frost candles ran out across Europe. In Burgundy, Champagne, and Bordeaux, the damage was catastrophic—Bordeaux’s trade called it the worst frost disaster in a quarter century, cutting yields by 30 to 80 percent in the hardest-hit zones. The 2017 vintage was already written off before a single grape had ripened.
The Fire That Followed the Frost
What followed rewrote the narrative entirely. A long, hot, dry summer, the kind that punishes lesser terroirs but rewards those with deep roots and well-drained soils, concentrated the surviving fruit to concentrated levels. Where vines had lost half their crop to frost, the remaining clusters channeled the full energy of each plant. The result was a vintage defined not by abundance but by intensity: small yields, exceptional concentration, and wines built for the long term.
Burgundy, Tuscany, and the Douro, each devastated or strained by heat in different ways, emerged with some of the strongest wines of the decade. Burgundy’s surviving fruit produced Pinot Noir of uncommon structural precision. Tuscany’s deep-rooted Sangiovese thrived under the heat dome. The Douro’s ancient schist soils stored just enough moisture to carry old-vine Touriga Nacional through to a magnificent harvest in a declared Port vintage year.
Where the Value Lies
The buying landscape rewards the patient and the curious. The headline regions carry premium prices that reflect their deserved reputation, but selectivity unlocks real value: not every producer handled the difficult conditions equally, and the gap between the best and average within each appellation is wider than most years. Meanwhile, Rioja, frost-touched but with central and eastern parcels largely spared, and the Barossa Valley, on a southern-hemisphere calendar that ran ahead of Europe’s frost, offer some of the strongest value-to-quality ratios in the vintage for buyers willing to be selective.
Napa Valley, where the October wildfires created a buyer hesitation the wines themselves don’t warrant, remains a quiet opportunity. Roughly 90% of the crop was already in when the October 8 fires ignited—the late-hanging balance was mostly thick-skinned mountain Cabernet, and winemakers lab-tested rigorously before bottling. Below, TERROIR covers each featured region’s performance, with the climate data, market intelligence, and buying recommendations that help you act on what you read.
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