Bourgogne Aligote AOCAligoteEUR 13-17 retail
A bracing, high-acid Aligote from one of Beaune's historic houses. Lemon, green apple and a mineral snap, the original base of a kir and a sharp aperitif white for well under twenty euros.
Tip: Aligote is the traditional base for kir with creme de cassis; on its own it shines with shellfish and fresh cheese.
Cremant de Bourgogne AOCChardonnay, Pinot NoirEUR 16-22 retail
Traditional-method Burgundian sparkling built on Chardonnay with Pinot Noir, made the same way as Champagne. Fine bubbles, brioche and citrus, a serious fizz for under twenty-five euros.
Tip: Cremant de Bourgogne is the value alternative to Champagne for a celebration; chill well and pour as an aperitif.
Macon-Lugny AOCChardonnayEUR 18-23 retail
A single-named Macon-Lugny lieu-dit, Les Genievres, with a little more depth and breadth than the basic village wine. Ripe orchard fruit and a creamy edge, dependable value just inside twenty-five euros.
Tip: The step from basic Macon-Lugny to Les Genievres is worth it for a dinner-party white; it carries richer dishes like roast pork or creamy pasta.
Bourgogne AOCChardonnayEUR 14-18 retail
A regional Bourgogne Blanc that is the easiest entry to white Burgundy. Unoaked, crisp green-apple and citrus Chardonnay from across the region, a reliable house benchmark under twenty euros.
Tip: The plain Bourgogne Chardonnay is the value play; trade up to the Macon-Lugny only when you want a touch more flesh from the southern fruit.
Macon-Lugny AOCChardonnayEUR 16-20 retail
Chardonnay from the warm limestone slopes around Lugny in the southern Maconnais. Rounder and riper than basic Bourgogne Blanc, with orchard fruit and a soft finish, dependable value for the table.
Tip: A safe house white in any French wine shop; serve lightly chilled with roast chicken or a goat-cheese salad.
Macon-Villages AOCChardonnayEUR 10-15 retail
The cooperative that makes roughly a third of all Macon-Villages turns out a clean, fruit-forward Chardonnay at supermarket prices. The everyday white Burgundy benchmark for under fifteen euros.
Tip: Look for the single-vineyard La Cote Blanche bottling for a small step up that still stays comfortably under twenty euros.