à côté de l"autre - definizione. Che cos'è à côté de l"autre
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Cosa (chi) è à côté de l"autre - definizione

Cote de Beaune; Cote Beaune; Côte de Beaune-Villages
  • Château of Savigny-lès-Beaune
  • The famous roof of the Hospices de Beaune
  • Chardonnay vines around [[Meursault]]
  • Puligny-Montrachet village wine
  • Wine label from Savigny
  • Harvest time on the Côte de Beaune
  • 250px

Côte de Beaune         
The Côte de Beaune area is the southern part of the Côte d'Or, the limestone ridge that is home to the great names of Burgundy wine. The Côte de Beaune starts between Nuits-Saint-Georges and Beaune, and extends southwards for about 25 km to the river Dheune.
Côte de Nuits         
  • As you travel further up the hillside of the Cote de Nuit, the mixture of soils contain a higher proportion of the light color and well draining limestone that are very favorable for growing wine grapes.
  • Among the many winemaking decisions that Cote de Nuits producers must make is the length of time that the crushed grape skins spent macerating with the juice and whether or not to include stems during this period.
  • Vineyards around the village of Fixin.
  • When Louis XIV's personal physician, Guy-Crescent Fagon ''(pictured)'' recommended that the king only drink the wines from the Nuits St-Georges, merchants from the Cote de Nuits used the royal association as a marketing tool for the area's wine.
  • The Burgundian kingdom (light green) included the Cote de Nuit in the 5th century AD.
  • Vineyards in the Côte de Nuits have very high vine density, usually more than twice the vines planted in the same area as what would be found in New World wine regions.
  • Wine from the Gevrey-Chambertin region of the Cote de Nuits.
  • Village and vineyards around Vosne-Romanee.
CÔTE DE NUITS
Cote de Nuits; Côte de Nuits-villages; Cote de Nuits-villages; Cotes de nuits; Cote de Nuits AOC; Cote de nuit; Côte de Nuits wines
The Côte de Nuits () is a French wine region located in the northern part of the Côte d'Or, the limestone ridge that is at the heart of the Burgundy wine region. It extends from Dijon to just south of Nuits-Saint-Georges, which gives its name to the district and is the regional center.
Grattoir de côté         
  • Grattoir de côté. A carinated steep-scraper with a racloir on one of the sides. Found at Jdeideh II, Lebanon. Brown Cretaceous flint
UPPER PALEOLITHIC STONE TOOL
Grattoirs de côté; Grattoir de cote; Grattoirs de cote; Side scraper
In archaeology, a grattoir de côté (French for side scraper) is a ridged variety of steep-scraper distinguished by a working edge on one side. They were found at various archaeological sites in Lebanon including Ain Cheikh and Jdeideh II and are suggested to date to Upper Paleolithic stages three or four (Levantine Aurignacian).

Wikipedia

Côte de Beaune

The Côte de Beaune area is the southern part of the Côte d'Or, the limestone ridge that is home to the great names of Burgundy wine. The Côte de Beaune starts between Nuits-Saint-Georges and Beaune, and extends southwards for about 25 km to the river Dheune. The trend of producing red wines continues from the Côte de Nuits to the north, down through Beaune, although the wines become lighter and more perfumed. Farther south lie the great names of white Burgundy such as Meursault and Chassagne-Montrachet. The far south of the district sees a return to red wines in Santenay that continues across the Dheune into the Côte Chalonnaise. This mix of Pinot noir and Chardonnay grapes reflects geology in the southern Côte d'Or that is more variable than in the north.