free UK delivery
On orders over £200
Get 20% off when you mix any six full-price 75cl bottles of wine (including Champagne and sparkling)!
Produced by Not Specified
free UK delivery
On orders over £200
protected Delivery
Packed with care
NEXT DAY DELIVERY
Available with this product
Undoubtedly the most well-known fine wine region on the planet, the French wine region of Bordeaux spans 120,000 hectares of vineyard and is demarcated by the Gironde Estuary and its two main tributaries, the Garonne and the Dordogne. The region is divided into the Left Bank, for vineyards located on the left bank of the Garonne River, and the Right Bank, for vineyards on the right bank of the Dordogne. Famous Left Bank appellations such as Pauillac, Saint-Julien, Saint-Estephe and Margaux are well-known for their quality, but value is also found in Haut-Medoc and Moulis. The Right Bank is well known for Pomerol and Saint-Emilion, while the upcoming regions of Lalande-de-Pomerol and Cotes de Bordeaux Castillon should not be overlooked. Close to the city Sauternes and Barsac make some of the world's best sweet wines, while the appellations of Pessac-Leognan and Graves do a fine line in rich reds and full-bodied whites. Red Bordeaux wines are made from a blend of grapes, and the permitted varieties are Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot and, less commonly, Malbec and Carmenere. Very broadly speaking, Right Bank wines will have a predominance of Merlot, while Left Bank wines will rely on Cabernet Sauvignon as the primary variety in a blend. White wines, both dry and sweet, are made from Sauvignon Blanc, Semillon and Muscadelle.
View more wines from this regionHome to some of the most highly revered and expensive wines on Earth, Pauillac is located between the appellations of Saint-Estephe and Saint-Julien in the Medoc region of Bordeaux. While the great first growths of Latour, Lafite-Rothschild and Mouton-Rothschild take centre stage in Pauillac, the commune also produces exceptional wines under its village appellation title, and around 85 percent of its production is Grand Cru Classe. Two free-draining, gravel-rich plateaus host the vineyards, requiring the vines to dig deeply into the earth searching for nutrients and moisture. The stress on the vines delivers low-yields of richly flavoured fruit, and the soils are ideally suited to growing Cabernet Sauvignon, which makes up the bulk of production in Pauillac. Pauillac wines are typically Bordeaux, and their characteristics are what many die-hard fans of the region look for - rich fruit flavour, great elegance, firm structure, and the cigar-box note and hint of sweetness that sets fine Bordeaux apart from the rest.
View more wines from this sub regionFickle to grow, tricky to make and often majestic to drink, Pinot Noir is the grape of Burgundy, and grown all over the world, most notably in Oregon, New Zealand and California. It is also one of the major blending grapes for Champagne. While the wines from the old world and new are undeniably different, Pinot Noir is a very distinctive variety and its wines reveal soft strawberry and cherry flavours with a heady aroma and often complex savoury characteristics when the grapes are placed in the right hands.
View more wines from this grape varietyAllow 2-3 working days for delivery for standard retail orders.
Order any retail wine before 4pm and collect your order from Moor Park.
Order before 1pm (Monday -Thursday) and receive your retail order the next working day.
A full refund or exchange will be offered provided that the goods are received back to us in good resaleable condition.
At Bon Coeur we understand the risks of sending wine in the post, that’s why we hand package and seal every purchase. If you do have an issue with your order, just get in touch with us and we can get it sorted for you asap.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Eu justo gravida sed commodo odio amet et, cras. Vulputate donec ornare id mus scelerisque tristique et posuere curabitur. Maecenas neque, cursus nulla non egestas sagittis, hendrerit proin nullam. Magna viverra ultrices id sagittis, eget tellus in ipsum rutrum.