České vinařství Chrámce, s. r. o. is a family winery managing in an integrated way 75 ha of average thirty-five-year-old vineyards in Chrámce and Most and is the largest producer of wines from its own grapes in the Bohemia wine region. In 1969, winemaker Ivan Váňa and his colleagues planted the first new vineyards in Chrámce on the former State Farm Most, in the 1980s in Most on Špičák Hill, on the Hrabák quarry spoil heap and in 2004 on Hněvín Hill, where medieval basalt terraces are still preserved. White wines are aged in stainless steel tanks, red wines in oak barrels, and around two thousand litres a year are aged in barrique barrels. The winery's speciality is kosher wines (about 10% of production). According to the regulations in force, kosher wine may only be produced by an orthodox Jew. No non-kosher substances may be added to the wine (animal gelatine-based clarifiers, etc.) and no treatments are allowed except sulphurisation and the use of bentonite. Kosher wines are kept in barrel for a long time (red wines for three years or more). For religious reasons, they are pasteurised at 87 °C before bottling. The company has been marketing these wines since 1994 to Jewish communities and other kosher wine lovers from the Czech Republic and abroad. In 2010, the tradition of an Open House at Temples was established on the last Saturday in May and a Burčák Festival is held there in October. The winery has remained a family business despite its expansion (it now has 32 employees).
It is said that Pinot Noir came to us in the 14th century during the reign of Charles IV. However, the authenticity of this information has never been proven. In our country, it is grown in all wine-growing subregions, the most widespread is in the Velkopavlovice and Mikulov regions. Pinot Noir from the vicinity of Mělník, Litoměřice, in Moravia from the Bzenecko and Mutěnice regions are excellent.