Bordeaux
Bordeaux wines are among the most celebrated and long-standing expressions of winemaking worldwide. Originating on the banks of the Gironde, in the heart of south-western France, these wines owe their extraordinary identity to a mosaic of unique terroirs: from the clays and limestones of Saint-Émilion and Pomerol on the Right Bank, to the deep gravels of Médoc and Graves on the Left Bank.
A territory divided among great appellations — Margaux, Pauillac, Saint-Julien, Pomerol, Côtes de Francs — each with its own voice, but all united by a vocation for complexity and longevity that few places in the world can offer. The main grape varieties are Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Cabernet Franc, often blended to create wines of great depth and structure.
Elegant and long-lived reds, capable of aging for decades in the cellar and evolving in the glass with rare grace: Bordeaux wines never cease to surprise.
Bordeaux wines are among the most celebrated and long-standing expressions of winemaking worldwide. Originating on the banks of the Gironde, in the heart of south-western France, these wines owe their extraordinary identity to a mosaic of unique terroirs: from the clays and limestones of Saint-Émilion and Pomerol on the Right Bank, to the deep gravels of Médoc and Graves on the Left Bank.
A territory divided among great appellations — Margaux, Pauillac, Saint-Julien, Pomerol, Côtes de Francs — each with its own voice, but all united by a vocation for complexity and longevity that few places in the world can offer. The main grape varieties are Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Cabernet Franc, often blended to create wines of great depth and structure.
Elegant and long-lived reds, capable of aging for decades in the cellar and evolving in the glass with rare grace: Bordeaux wines never cease to surprise.