Beaujolais—produced from the Gamay grape in the hills between Lyon and Mâcon—plays a culinary role distinct from Burgundy’s Pinot Noir, owing to its lighter body, lower tannins, bright cherry-raspberry fruit, and the lively acidity that makes it France’s most food-friendly everyday red wine. Where Pinot Noir demands long reduction to tame its structure, Beaujolais can be used more liberally and with shorter cooking times—its easy-going character integrates quickly. The canonical Lyonnais applications include: Poulet au Beaujolais (chicken braised with lardons, mushrooms, and a full bottle of Morgon or Fleurie for 90 minutes—a lighter, brighter alternative to Coq au Vin), Oeufs en Beaujolais (poached eggs in a Beaujolais reduction, the Lyonnais variation on Oeufs en Meurette), saucisses au Beaujolais (pork sausages poached and then simmered in Beaujolais with shallots), and the Lyonnais practice of using Beaujolais in the court-bouillon for poaching cervelas sausages. The most distinctive application is the Beaujolais Nouveau tradition each November, when the year’s first wine—fruity, barely fermented, with a characteristic banana-bubblegum note from carbonic maceration—is poured into cooking as freely as it is poured into glasses. The Cru Beaujolais (Morgon, Moulin-à-Vent, Fleurie, Juliénas, and the other six designated villages) provide more structured wines suitable for longer cooking. The principle that unites all Beaujolais cooking is lightness: where Burgundian wine cookery produces dark, intense sauces, Beaujolais cookery produces bright, fruity, immediately accessible results.
Use Cru Beaujolais (Morgon, Fleurie, Moulin-à-Vent) for dishes requiring longer cooking. Use Beaujolais-Villages for quick sauces and short braises. Reduce less aggressively than Pinot Noir—Beaujolais’s lighter structure doesn’t need the same concentration. The wine should make the dish brighter and fruitier, not darker and heavier. Serve the same Cru you cooked with alongside the finished dish.
For the ultimate Poulet au Beaujolais, use a Morgon that is 2-3 years old—it has developed enough earthy complexity to add depth while retaining the bright fruit that defines Beaujolais cooking. Make a Beaujolais mignonette (shallot-wine vinegar for oysters) by reducing 200ml Beaujolais to 50ml, adding minced shallots and cracked pepper—the wine’s acidity and fruit create a mignonette vastly superior to the standard vinegar version. At Lyonnais bouchons, the pot of Beaujolais on the table serves double duty—for drinking and for the kitchen, a unity of glass and pot that defines the Lyonnais approach.
Using Beaujolais Nouveau for serious cooking—it lacks the structure to withstand reduction (use it only for quick sauces or celebrations). Reducing as aggressively as Pinot Noir, which strips Beaujolais of its defining fruit character. Substituting Beaujolais for Pinot Noir in classic Burgundian recipes (Boeuf Bourguignon) where the deeper wine is needed. Using basic Beaujolais (not Cru) for long braises, where it loses its fruit and becomes flat. Serving a heavy, tannic wine alongside a Beaujolais-sauced dish—stay in the same register.
Beaujolais: Nouveau et Grand Cru — Kermit Lynch