Cabernet Sauvignon
Amongst the most revered red wine grapes on the planet, Cabernet Sauvignon leads the list of the most planted wine grapes, and it has one of the largest fan bases in the realm of wine.
Cabernet Sauvignon has become a benchmark for age-worthiness, complexity and sophistication. Despite being a relatively young varietal, with just a few centuries under its belt, the grape has earned a place in the throne above all other full-bodied red wine grapes.
The History of the Cabernet Sauvignon Grape Variety
Cabernet Sauvignon is a crossing between two other popular grapes, the red Cabernet Franc and the white Sauvignon Blanc, and was created in the 17th-century in Southwest France’s vineyards.
The grape soon gained popularity for being a resilient varietal, often providing extraordinary wine of noticeable structure and age-worthiness. Cabernet soon found in Bordeaux’s gravely soils the perfect stage to show off its charms, where it lends its robust personality and affinity for oak to the region’s blends.
Cabernet soon became the most critical ingredient in the French ‘Claret.’ The style was welcomed by the British, and it’s thanks to this love affair that the grape travelled to the rest of the world. California’s victory over the French wine in the popular blind wine tasting called the Judgement of Paris of 1976 helped consolidate Cabernet’s reputation, even when grown outside France.
Now, Cabernet Sauvignon is the flagship red grape in many countries and wine regions worldwide, and its popularity has just increased throughout the centuries.
Wine Regions
The most significant French wine region championing Cabernet Sauvignon is Bordeaux, where the grape is blended with its ever-reliable stablemates Merlot and Cabernet Franc. The most significant appellations are Bordeaux, Bordeaux Superieur, Graves and the Medoc. There are also substantial Cabernet plantings in France’s southern region, Languedoc, where it is the base for many approachable wines.
The most significant French wine region championing Cabernet Sauvignon is Bordeaux, where the grape is blended with its ever-reliable stablemates Merlot and Cabernet Franc. The most significant appellations are Bordeaux, Bordeaux Superieur, Graves and the Medoc. There are also substantial Cabernet plantings in France’s southern region, Languedoc, where it is the base for many approachable wines.
Cabernet Sauvignon has gained recognition in Italy’s Tuscany, where it is the main ingredient in the famous Super Tuscans that challenged Italian winemaking traditions.
California is by far the most significant source for Cabernet Sauvignon outside France, and its most prized renditions come from Napa Valley. There are significant plantings in Washington, too, where the grape is gaining increasing fame.
We might know Chile for its rare Carmenere grape, but it’s Cabernet Sauvignon which renders the most successful results. The same can be said about Argentina, where Cabernet plays second fiddle to Malbec.
Australia has found in Cabernet the right grape to second the country’s flagship wine grape, Shiraz and Cabernet is both bottled as a mono-varietal and as part of exciting blends with Shiraz.
South Africa has found in Cabernet’s reliable marketability a building block for the country’s wine industry, and this is the case in many other countries around the wine belt. From China to Mexico, from Bulgaria to Spain — Cabernet has a special place in the global wine trade.
Wine Styles & Tasting Notes
Cabernet Sauvignon can be a source of inexpensive red wine that rarely sees oak ageing — wine meant to be drunk young with no complications. Still, the most significant Cabernet bottles are built to last.
Cabernet is a concentrated wine grape that accumulates large amounts of tannins, the gritty particles that cause that feeling of dryness on the palate. It’s these tannins that allow the wines to be astoundingly age-worthy — the finest Cabernet Sauvignon examples can age and evolve for decades.
Wine made with Cabernet is also recognised for its unique scents and flavours, including a characteristic black currant aroma, often mingling with spice scents, undergrowth, tobacco leaves and sweet vanilla coming from the French oak barrels where the wine spends over a year.
A unique herbal undertone, inherited from the vegetal Sauvignon Blanc and Cabernet Franc, can give Cabernet aromas redolent of bell peppers, which can be pleasing or off-putting.
Cabernets from warmer climates, most likely found in the New World, are often bottled as mono-varietal wines and display riper fruit and less herbaceousness. The extensive use of oak is also stressed, making the wines quite complex on the nose and palate.
Food Pairings
Cabernet Sauvignon is the quintessential steak wine. With high tannin levels that bind with proteins and fat molecules in the food, Cabernet is the right pairing for fatty steaks, hearty stews, grilled meat, roasts and barbecues. In Bordeaux, Cabernet blends are the traditional pairing for duck, a fatty bird, while in California, it is best paired with a Rib-eye — the more marbled, the better.
Cabernet’s vegetal scents and smoky undertones make it compatible with grilled vegetables, and like any other tannic wine, it’s best served with mature cheese rich in fat and protein.
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Côtes de Gascogne: Domaine Horgelus Rouge de GalaThis blend of Merlot, Cabernet-Sauvignon and Tannat, produced on Horgelus's plot called 'Gala', creates an elegant and spicy wine, revealing intense notes of blackberry and blackcurrant. With its smooth tannins, it is a perfect accompaniment to grills and cheeses.
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Côtes de Prouilhe: Chateau de Cointes CabernetSoft structure, most pleasant light wine with rich colour. Drinks well with light food.
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Pays d'Oc: Domaine V La Grange Cabernet SauvignonDeep, beautiful cherry red colour. Intense red and black fruit nose and sweet spice and liquorice flavours.
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Bordeaux: Théophile QuerreA smooth palate with velvety-soft tannins. Aromas of lovely ripe plum fruits and a lengthy finish.
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Bordeaux: Chateau la BorneRipe red fruits aromas, and earthy notes, complemented by soft and generous tannins. Good persistence in the mouth.
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Bordeaux: Chateau Les Belles VignesRed fruit notes with ample tannins. Aromatic persistence on the palate.
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Bordeaux Clairet: Chateau Les Bertrands RoséFruity and fragrant wine, strawberry and raspberry aromas. perfect for grills, salads, couscous and Asian dishes.
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Cité de Carcassonne: Les Hauts de Lalande RedA carefully blended mixture of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah and Petit Verdot, giving a beautiful, rich elegant and smooth wine with a lot of fruit.
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Pays d'Oc: Domaine Villepeyroux Forest Cabernet SauvignonIts brilliant smooth and warm wine, with notes of ripe berries and vanilla oak, holding good tannins and a rounded body. A limited production of only 5,335 bottles.
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Bergerac: Château La Moulière RedRound with velvety tannins, which linger on the finish with hints of cherry stones.
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Cabardes: Chateau Lalande RedConcentrated in the mouth, showing a good balance between blackcurrant fruits and length, blended between Mediterranean and Atlantic grapes.
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Fronton: Domaine Roumagnac Authentique RedThe colour is brilliant with ruby hues and purple hints. Intense expression with fresh gooseberry and blackcurrant delightfully accented by liquorice notes. The berries give way to spices and further liquorice, reinforcing the flavours and highlighting Négrette’s strength. A nice and bold first impression on the palate with well-balanced structure.
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Coteaux du Pont du Gard: Domaine de Poulvarel Le Bouquet RedExpressive nose with fresh aromas of mint leaf, black pepper and berries. Well balanced on the palate, offering a nice freshness of mint.
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Blaye Côtes de Bordeaux: Chateau Les Bertrands Cuvee Vieilles VignesVery fruity, with flavours of blackcurrant, red/black fruits and cherry. Round and supple with a good structure, easy drinking wine.
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Côtes de Gascogne: Domaine Horgelus Phi-LingThe depth of this wine testifies to the generosity of Gascony by offering you the aromas of spice mingled blackcurrant and licorice. The taste offers soft, well matured tannins revealing the ideal balance between the strength of the Tannat grape and the elegance of the Cabernet-Sauvignon grape. Drink immediately or lay down, the pleasure will always be as intense.
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Côtes Catalanes: Domaine Boudau Le Petit Closi RedRuby red colour with purple reflection. A fine and elegant nose dominated by hints of berries. A round fore palate, silky tannins. A fleshy wine.
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Côtes de Bourg: Chateau Haut Guiraud RedA very beautiful material made up of rich and elegant tannins ensures this wine a perfect balance - The long and sustained finish heralds a long ageing potential.
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Malepère: Chateau de Cointes Tradition RedRound and supple, not heavy as the tannins have blended and produced a very smooth wine to enjoy.
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Blaye Côtes de Bordeaux: Chateau Les Bertrands Cuvée PrestigeAged in oak and with a distinctive lingering after-taste. A wine you will remember for its elegance and soft tannins. Ability to age.
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Fronton: Domaine Roumagnac O Grand RFrom selected plots; the oldest vines of the estate. Arising from a combination of the emblematic Négrette with aromas of red fruit and liquorice, and Cabernet Sauvignon which provides balance and structure. Intense nose. Seductive with a smooth body, soft tannins and a dark fruit finish.
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Bergerac: Château La Moulière Cuvée Prestige RedFull-bodied, supple and balanced with hints of prune and cherry.
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Montagne-Saint-Emilion: Chateau La Couronne RedOwner Thomas Thiou produces this wonderful wine on one of the top terroirs in the appellation. Fruity, creamy, very well balanced. A must taste!
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Medoc: Chateau Villa CarminMasculine wine, a marked touch of oak without forgetting the fruit and balance.
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Pays d'Oc: Domaine Dupont-Fahn Cabernet SauvignonThis Cabernet-Sauvignon made by Domaine Dupont-Fahn has a good earthy long after-taste whilst holding lingering fruits. Will match red or white meat.
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Graves: Chateau Bousquet Prestige RedBeautiful aromas of black fruits and spices associated with fine woody notes. A large aromatic palette of cherry and blackberry.
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Malepère: Chateau de Cointes ClemenceIntense and complex nose, nice fleshy structure, long and well-balanced.
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Lussac Saint Emilion: Vignobles Lassagne Le Big BossA complex and rich nose with notes of intense fruit and spices. On the palate it is round and powerful, blending beautiful silky tannins and notes of red fruit and blackcurrant.
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Moulis-en-Médoc: Château Ruat Petit PoujeauxA complex and fruity nose, with blackfruits, and raspberry. An elegant structure with smooth tannins and a nice length.
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Blaye Côtes de Bordeaux: Chateau Les Bertrands Nectar des BertrandsIntense colour, with great depth and complexity from a small production. Leathery, very tasty, with hints of black cherry compote. Decant it a fair while. The best is to come.
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Saint Estephe: Chateau Bel AirAromas of plum and blackcurrant. Deep cherry, powerful and supple.
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