JavaScript seems to be disabled in your browser. For the best experience on our site, be sure to turn on Javascript in your browser.
Items 61-75 of 123
Pauillac at its best is deep, intense, full and powerful — the iron fist in a velvet glove. This benchmark example from a well-sited property, with vineyards planted in deep gravel soils, is mainly cabernet sauvignon and has lovely, pure, intense fruit with refined tannins on the finish.
Produced in the heart of the Bordeaux region, La Mouliniere Red offers an intense nose o red beries. Dry, juicy and fruity on the palate, his wine will pair beautifully with cold cuts, grilled meats, cheese or pizza.
Clarendelle Medoc, Inspired by Haut-Brion, is a delicate and elegant red wine. Like the great Medocs, often quite tannic when young, it becomes more balanced with age. Clarendelle Medoc, Inspired by Haut-Brion, is a subtle blend of two traditional grape varieties from Bordeaux: Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon. We find in this wine all the complexity and character of its terroir.
Chateau De Mondespic 2020 is a sophisticated red wine with a rich blend of flavors, showcasing notes of dark fruits, subtle oak, and velvety tannins. This vintage reflects the distinct terroir of its vineyard, offering a well-balanced and elegant drinking experience. Perfect for those who appreciate a refined and complex Bordeaux-style wine.
Wine from the various types of "terroirs" of the Entre Deux Mers cultivated in a reflection of balance of our environment. The technical monitoring of the plots, in the purest respect of the plant allows the grape to make the best of its quality and its typicity.
A very rich and ripe red for this appellation. Full-bodied, round and juicy with ripe and round tannins. Dark-berry, brick and stone undertones.
Medium body and very smooth, it finishes with an herbal flourish that lingers. Well-structured blended red wine, this pleasant Bordeaux is perfumed on the nose, with good up front fruit and just enough spice to make it intriguing.
This is a lovely estate, one of the last remaining properties in the Mérignac gravel area, lying next door to Haut Brion and Pape-Clément. The name Caillou refers to pebbles, reflecting the fact that this was once riverbed, when the river Garonne overflowed millions of years ago. The characteristic elegance and finesse of this wine is attributed to its free-draining, gravelly soil and subsoil. Sadly the quantities of white produced are tiny as the wine is lovely.
Rich aromas of baked apple, yellow plum, citrus rind and hints of fresh herbs. Flavors of crisp golden apple mingle with lemon flowers and smoke.
Tasted at the château, the 2005 Chateau d’Yquem delivers a similar performance as last year. Lucid in colour, the bouquet is detailed with very pure honey, vanilla and almond scents, still a little new oak to be fully assimilated but demonstrating superb focus.