Domaine Mia
France – 
Borgogna CĂ´te Chalonnaise – 
Nuits-Saint-Georges – 
Nuits-Saint-Georges – 

THE COMPANY

Domaine MIA covers 17 hectares and is one of the largest estates, managed exclusively by organic methods, of the CĂ´te Chalonnaise. It includes 6 Climats distributed in appellations full of surprises such as Mercurey and Rully, with unique climates and geological features, which require specific approaches. They are worked with a “magnifying glass” and are subject to continuous micro-innovations and millimeter adjustments. Vinification and maturation take place instead in the historic cellars of Nuits-Saint-Georges. The history of the Domaine began in 1860, when in the CĂ´te Chalonnaise the Clos La Marche was born, whose heirs ensured its continuity for decades. The turning point in 2019 with the arrival of Mia who picked up from her father, who had purchased the property a few years earlier, the baton of the winery dedicated to her. The young woman wants to write a new chapter in the company by infusing it with her own style, made of passion, commitment and modernity. With Domaine Mia, the earth is married to the feminine, and if experience is a central value, so is the ability to imagine the future, characteristic of an environmentally conscious youth. Mia is the bearer of new impulses, those of her generation, and intends to follow natural estate philosophy by engaging in biodynamic agriculture. If biodynamics is the central direction undertaken by Domaine Mia, in line with a more respectful and global view of nature and the land, co-energy could be the word key to describe the estate in its organization. A synergy of human talents: many different ages, experiences and skills that make its wines, from the very first vintages, stand out for their quality, depth and great finesse.

France - 

Bourgogne

CĂ´te Chalonnaise

The Cote Chalonnaise, once called the RĂ©gion de Mercurey, was so named because of its proximity to Chalon-sur-Saone, which lies to the east. The undulating, bucolic landscape of the hills south of Chagny is in many ways a continuation of that of the Cote de Beaune, although the latter's uniform ridge is replaced here by a clump of limestone slopes on which vineyards appear amid orchards and pastures. The vineyards climb to much higher altitudes than those in the Cote de Beaune, so the harvest is slightly late and the ripening process more precarious.

France - 

Bourgogne

CĂ´te Chalonnaise

The Cote Chalonnaise, once called the RĂ©gion de Mercurey, was so named because of its proximity to Chalon-sur-Saone, which lies to the east. The undulating, bucolic landscape of the hills south of Chagny is in many ways a continuation of that of the Cote de Beaune, although the latter's uniform ridge is replaced here by a clump of limestone slopes on which vineyards appear amid orchards and pastures. The vineyards climb to much higher altitudes than those in the Cote de Beaune, so the harvest is slightly late and the ripening process more precarious.