Vedrenne Creme de Chataigne (Chestnut Liqueur)

Vedrenne

Vedrenne Creme de Chataigne (Chestnut Liqueur)

Style Fruit Liqueur
Producer Vedrenne
Origin Burgundy (Nuits-Saint-Georges)
Bottle 700ml
Caravan buyer note

Nose: Roast chestnut, soft caramelised sugar. Palate: Round, sweet chestnut with a nut-meat richness. Finish: Warm, lingering nut.

C Caravan teamBottle shop notes
$68 / btl
6 pack mixed six eligible

Build a mixed six around the bottle. Free Australia-wide delivery from $250.

18 left Ships from Brisbane
Open this first

What it tastes like.

Nose: Roast chestnut, soft caramelised sugar. Palate: Round, sweet chestnut with a nut-meat richness. Finish: Warm, lingering nut.

Nose

Roast chestnut, soft caramelised sugar

Palate

Round, sweet chestnut with a nut-meat richness

The house

About Vedrenne.

Burgundy (Nuits-Saint-Georges) ·Est. 1923

Founded in 1923 by engineer Joseph Védrenne in Nuits-Saint-Georges, Vedrenne sits in the heart of Burgundy at the edge of the Côte-d'Or blackcurrant fields that originally drew it there. The house is best known for its Supercassis, a 20% crème de cassis sitting at the upmarket end of the category alongside the standard 16% reference, and now ships a range of more than thirty fruit liqueurs and cocktail bases. Owned since 1997 by the Renaud-Cointreau family, alongside Pagès, Vedrenne was awarded Entreprise du Patrimoine Vivant status in 2017 — France's "living heritage" designation for craftsmanship continuity.

View 109 bottles from Vedrenne →
At the table

How to pour it.

  • Temperature

    12°C. Cooler kills the fruit aromatics.

  • Glassware

    Small tulip. Riedel Brand & Spirits is purpose-built.

What to eat with it

Pairing notes.

Pours over vanilla ice cream and into autumn-cocktail specs with whisky, cognac or calvados; works in chestnut-and-cream desserts and Mont Blanc-style plating.

Mixology

3 cocktails use this bottle.

  • Burgundy Alexander
    Burgundy Alexander
  • Chestnut Blazer
    Chestnut Blazer
  • Chesty Sour
    Chesty Sour
Bottle questions

Before you open it.

A few practical answers for storage, delivery, and choosing the right bottle.

How should I store it before opening?

Keep it somewhere cool, dark, and steady. Wine prefers cellar temperature; spirits are happier away from heat and direct sunlight.

How long will it keep once opened?

Wine changes quickly after opening; spirits and liqueurs generally hold longer if capped tightly and kept out of heat. If it is a special bottle, ask before opening and the team can give product-specific guidance.

Can I ask for a similar bottle?

Yes. Contact Caravan with this bottle name and the occasion; the team can suggest a close match, a safer gift, or a step up or down in price.

How is it packed for delivery?

Orders are packed in bottle-safe cartons. If anything arrives damaged or looks wrong, contact the team with your order number and a photo so they can sort the next step.

What about hot weather shipping?

The team avoids making one-size-fits-all promises around heat and carrier timing. For heat-sensitive or cellar bottles, contact Caravan before ordering and they can advise the safest dispatch window.

Flavour map

How the bottle moves.

Chestnut
Vedrenne Creme de Chataigne (Chestnut Liqueur)
Producer visit

Why Caravan backs Vedrenne

Burgundy (Nuits-Saint-Georges)

Joseph Védrenne, a trained engineer, founded Vedrenne in 1923 with a deliberate decision: he set the distillery in Nuits-Saint-Georges, where the slopes above the famous Burgundy vineyards were planted with the dense-skinned Noir de Bourgogne blackcurrant — and where he could process fruit hours after picking, before any aromatic loss. That fruit-to-still proximity remains the house's defining advantage a century later.

The early business specialised in maceration of single fruits in neutral spirit: blackcurrants, raspberries, peaches, sloe, cherry. The headline Supercassis, a 20% concentration crème de cassis, sits at the upmarket end of the category alongside the standard 16% reference. The house's range expanded over the twentieth century into violet, chestnut, peach-de-vigne, mirabelle, and a number of two-fruit cocktail bases.

Vedrenne was acquired by Marie Brizard in 1987, then by the Renaud-Cointreau family in 1997, who merged it with verveine specialist Pagès. The two houses now operate from the original Nuits-Saint-Georges site plus a secondary distillery in Dordogne. In 2017, Vedrenne was awarded Entreprise du Patrimoine Vivant status by the French Ministry for the Economy, recognising continuity of artisanal production methods.

Shop this producer