Provence’s Vin Cuit: Wine cooked in a cauldron, aged in oak and steeped in tradition.

Sometime in early October, after the harvest, winemakers—mostly located in a small area of Provence at the base of Mont Sainte Victoire, between Aix-en-Provence and Trets—begin the annual tradition of making “vin cuit” or “cooked wine.” They each build a big fire of oak wood and fill a huge cauldron with the juice from the pressed grapes from the year’s harvest.  

At Mas de Cadenet, an estate located in Trets, in the heart of the area where vin cuit originated, the grape varieties from which the juice has come are Rolle, Grenache, Cinsault, and Syrah.

The juice is cooked for about ten days, during which time the liquid is constantly stirred with a long tree branch and carefully monitored so that it does not boil. Heat from the fire causes the natural water in the grape juice to evaporate, reducing the liquid (by as much as half) and leaving a high concentration of sugar in the juice. The juice is then allowed to ferment but, with its high concentration of sugar, not all of it converts to alcohol so the end product is sweet (and high in alcohol at about 14%). Finally, this sweet wine is aged in old oak barrels for two years.

I don’t know how far back the making of vin cuit goes, but I did read that when Thomas Jefferson traveled to Provence (around 200 years ago), he apparently developed a special affinity for vin cuit. On his January 7, 1822 record of “Stock of Wines on Hand,” 17 vin cuits de Provence were listed.

Vin cuit production is very small, as you might imagine, and many of the estates that make it, do so for their own consumption with the rest sold locally. I tried vin cuit when we were in Provence for Christmas one year and I thought it was more fun, as part of a regional holiday tradition, than it was appealing. Then, last March at a tasting hosted by David Bowler Wine, a New York based importer and distributor, I tasted the vin cuitmade by Mas de Cadenet. I was immediately smitten.

Guy Négrel, from the 6th generation of Négrel family members, who held the reins until he recently passed them on to his son Matthieu Négrel and daughter Maud Négrel, said, “I wanted this wine to be elegant. I wished to avoid the heaviness and to favor the lightness which sometimes misses in sweet wines.” Mas de Cadenet has certainly accomplished that goal.

I am thrilled that this Vin Cuit de Provence from Mas de Cadenet is available for the first time in the United States. It just arrived in New York in early December-–in time for Christmas, as it is an integral part of the old Provençal Christmas traditions but it is a wonderful addition to any dinner this winter. (I suppose it would work well on a chilly early spring day but don’t count on having any left by then!).

Mas de Cadenet’s vin cuit is an elegant dessert wine with a gorgeous, deep golden amber color; intense and complex flavors from the first wave of aromas to the lingering, faintly smokey finish; and a silky mouthfeel. It is incredibly interesting and very smooth. (I can’t say the same for other vin cuits I have tasted!).

On Christmas Eve in Provence, vin cuit plays a central role in the “Cacho-Fio” tradition before Le Gros Souper (The Big Supper) and, later, with Les Treize Desserts de Noël (The Thirteen Desserts).

For the Cacho-Fio (translated as “to set alight”), the family gathers around the fireplace where the youngest family member and oldest family member—representing the transition from the old year to the new one—carry a log from a fruit tree, walk three times around the table that has been prepared for dinner (with the three white tablecloths representing the Holy Trinity), and place it in the fireplace (creating a new fire, representing the new year). The oldest member holds up a glass of vin cuit and, just before tossing the wine in the fire, leads the others in a traditional toast that goes something like this:

“Alléluia, Alléluia My dear children, God bless us! When Christmas comes, everything goes well, God give us enough strength to see the New Year, And if we are no more, don’t be less.”

“Alègre! Alègre Mis bèus enfant Diéu nous alègre ! Emé calendo tout bèn vèn, Diéu nous fague la graci de veire l’an que vèn, E se noun sian pas mai, que noun fuguen pas mens. »

From paper entitled  “Le Vin Cuit de Provence”  provided by Mas de Cadenet.

Although I have never seen this ritual, it certainly sounds festive and even fanciful. I can hear those Provençal accents as I write this!  Many years ago, according to one source, the log was kept until the Epiphany (January 6) at which time the remnants of it were placed under the master bed to “protect the house against thunderbolts and fire.”

After dinner, when the Thirteen Desserts (symbolizing Christ and his twelve apostles) are presented, the vin cuit is served again. It is a perfect accompaniment to the usual nuts, fruit (especially the oranges and tangerines), candied fruit, calissonscroquantspain d’epices (spice cake), nougat, pompe à l’huile (sweet olive oil bread) and even the relatively new additions, chocolates and bûche de Noël. Our Panna Cotta aux Calissons married perfectly with the vin cuit!

If you are lucky enough to have some vin cuit left over—or if you don’t receive your bottle until after Christmas—no need to fret. It is an excellent match for Roquefort and Pierre Robert cheeses, a superb wine with which to deglaze a pan after cooking meat, and, I am told, a perfect match for foie gras. I have never tried it with foie gras…perhaps that’s another article!

Susan Manfull is an accidental wine journalist. She learned the delights of tasting wine from her grandfather, who nurtured his love for wine and for France through a career of importing cork. One year, she accompanied him to the Portuguese cork forests and his beloved France—a watershed event for a 17-year-old from California’s Central Valley, where, in those days, a grape’s most likely fate was a raisin box. Years later, after a serendipitous sojourn in Provence, she left my career as a psychologist, launched The Modern Trobadors blog about “all things Provence,” and, later, Provence WineZineProvence WineZine, an award-winning blog about wine and winemakers.

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