
Burgundy vs Great Southern Chardonnay: Old World to New
Each year, Chardonnay Day - celebrated globally on the third Thursday of May - offers an opportunity to reflect on one of the world's most compelling grape varieties. Chardonnay is capable of a remarkable breadth of styles, and perhaps more than any other variety, it is uniquely defined by place. Few grapes translate terroir with such clarity: from taut mineral expressions to rich, textural styles, chardonnay reflects climate, soil and winemaking philosophy with extraordinary precision.
Burgundy is the spiritual home of chardonnay and the enduring benchmark against which all others are measured. Yet increasingly, conversations around the best chardonnay in Australia include examples from the country's cooler regions - wines of comparable restraint, elegance and complexity. Among them, the Great Southern in Western Australia has quietly emerged as one of the most exciting cool climate chardonnay regions in the Southern Hemisphere.

Why Burgundy Remains the Benchmark for Chardonnay
Burgundy's significance to chardonnay can hardly be overstated. It was in this narrow band of eastern France that centuries of careful observation shaped an intricate understanding of vineyard sites, where even neighbouring slopes produced remarkably distinct expressions. This gave rise to the concept of terroir as early as the Middle Ages, forming the foundation of France's Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée (AOC) system - a model that has since influenced wine region classifications around the world.
The region's continental climate, with cold winters, warm summers and rainfall distributed throughout the year, allows fruit to ripen slowly and evenly, preserving freshness while encouraging complexity. Burgundy chardonnay is rarely defined by overt power. Instead, it is admired for composure, vibrant acidity and minerality. Oak and malolactic fermentation are used judiciously - contributing depth and structure while allowing fruit purity and site character to speak first.
These principles - restraint, precision, site expression - have become the reference point for premium chardonnay production globally.

Great Southern Chardonnay: A Distinctly Western Australian Expression
In Western Australia, Margaret River chardonnay has long held benchmark status. Yet a few hours south-east, the Great Southern has steadily established its own identity, shaped by cooler temperatures and maritime influence across five diverse subregions: Albany, Denmark, Frankland River, Mount Barker and Porongurup.
Spanning Western Australia's south coast, the Great Southern is Australia's largest wine region by area. Long growing seasons and cool evenings allow chardonnay to develop slowly, preserving aromatic detail and freshness while achieving flavour ripeness with restraint. Citrus, white peach and subtle stone fruit notes sit alongside a fine mineral line and saline edge - wines of finesse and clear varietal expression.
At Singlefile, our focus is on crafting chardonnay styles which prioritise balance, led by our Great Southern Chardonnay and Family Reserve Chardonnay, which have become hallmarks of our collection. We utilise high-quality French oak with moderation, supporting texture and structure without obscuring fruit or the character of the site. The resulting wines offer what many now seek in premium Chardonnay Australia-wide: energy, detail and genuine drinkability.
For those seeking Margaret River chardonnay alternatives, the Great Southern offers a compelling, distinctly cooler-climate direction - one worth exploring across multiple producers and subregions.
How Climate and Geography Shape Each Style
|
Burgundy |
Great Southern |
|
|
Climate |
Continental - cold winters, warm summers |
Cool maritime - long, mild growing season |
|
Key subregions |
Chablis, Côte de Beaune, Mâconnais |
Mount Barker, Denmark, Albany |
|
Soil |
Limestone, clay, Kimmeridgian marl |
Granite, loam, ancient karri soils |
|
Style |
Mineral, taut, structured |
Fresh, citrus-driven, saline mineral edge |
|
Oak use |
Moderate - Burgundian barrels |
Moderate - French oak, restrained |
|
Acidity |
High, vibrant |
High, preserved through cool ripening |
|
Cellaring |
5–20+ years for premier cru |
3–10+ years for premium examples |
Shared Philosophies, Different Accents
Despite the distance between Burgundy and the Great Southern, the philosophies shaping chardonnay in both regions share significant common ground.
Winemakers in both places favour picking decisions that preserve natural acidity and freshness. Heavy-handed oak and overt richness are largely avoided in favour of restrained approaches focused on balance and site expression. Precision and purity are the governing considerations of contemporary chardonnay - in both hemispheres.
This shift has helped redefine perceptions of Australian chardonnay internationally. Where richer, more 'buttery' examples once dominated export markets, premium chardonnay from Australia now typically reflects restraint - a product of growing winemaking sophistication and a clearer understanding of what cool climate regions can produce.
The wines remain unmistakably shaped by their landscapes. Burgundy chardonnay and Great Southern chardonnay both prioritise elegance and precision, yet each speaks with its own regional accent.

Is Great Southern Chardonnay Worth Cellaring?
Yes - particularly in more premium examples, where the optimal drinking window often falls between three and seven years. The Great Southern's subregions - from Mount Barker to Denmark - are known for their vibrant natural acidity and structural precision, qualities that form the basis for the region's age-worthiness. Our Family Reserve Chardonnay is a strong example of this, retaining freshness and vitality as it gradually develops richer, nuttier secondary complexity over time. Burgundy's longevity is legendary for good reason, and the structural parallels with the Great Southern suggest the region's top examples are built to age.
Chardonnay and the Language of Place
The story of cool climate chardonnay from Burgundy to the Great Southern is not one of imitation. It is an account of how a single grape variety articulates a sense of place in profoundly different ways - and how a region, given time and intention, develops its own voice.
While Burgundy may remain chardonnay's prevailing benchmark, regions like the Great Southern are shaping its contemporary future. For those exploring premium chardonnay in Australia, the Great Southern is no longer a footnote - it is a destination.
Explore our current Singlefile chardonnay releases, or join the Singlefile Wine Club to receive them as part of your next shipment.

