St Emilion wines: Right Bank Bordeaux at its best

St Emilion wines: Right Bank Bordeaux at its best

Understanding the Legacy: What Makes Saint-Émilion Unique?

Perched on the Right Bank of Bordeaux, Saint-Émilion is more than a picturesque village adorned with medieval architecture and UNESCO status. It’s a vinous heartland, a laboratory of terroirs layered over limestone and clay, home to some of the world’s most age-worthy and captivating Merlots. Unlike its Left Bank counterparts, dominated by Cabernet Sauvignon and grand châteaux, Saint-Émilion offers a different dialogue—one of nuance, generosity, and typicity grounded in its complex geology and history.

But before we swirl and sip, let’s decode this appellation’s DNA. The Saint-Émilion AOC, formalised in 1936, encompasses roughly 5,400 hectares, making it the largest appellation in Bordeaux’s Right Bank. There are two classification systems to be aware of: the AOC Saint-Émilion and the higher-status Saint-Émilion Grand Cru, with an additional tier for Grand Cru Classé and Premier Grand Cru Classé (A and B). And it’s worth noting: the classification is revisited every ten years—a dynamic structure that reflects an ethos of ongoing quality rather than historical inertia.

Geology as Destiny: Terroir in Saint-Émilion

Contrary to what the general consumer might assume, ‘Right Bank’ is not a stylistic descriptor, but a geographical one. However, in Saint-Émilion, geography is destiny. The area consists of a patchwork of soil types, and these directly inform the wine in the glass.

Saint-Émilion can be divided into three major terroir zones:

  • The Limestone Plateau: Just above the village, this is home to legendary names like Château Ausone. Wines here are firm, structured, and immensely ageable. Limestone imparts freshness, minerality, and firm yet elegant tannins.
  • The Côtes (Hillsides): A mix of clay and limestone, often sloping—this zone supports vines that benefit from both excellent drainage and ideal sun exposure. Many top-level estates are nestled here. Think Château Pavie or Château Troplong Mondot.
  • The Sandy and Gravelly Plains: Lower altitude, earlier ripening Merlot fruits, softer structure, and more accessible wines. While historically considered “lesser,” modern viticulture, including green harvesting and strict selection, is changing this narrative.

Each plot is a complex lesson in adaptation—different vine densities, rootstocks, microclimates—tailored over decades to bring out what the land is willing to offer.

The Grapes: Merlot Reigns, But It’s Not Alone

It’s easy to label Saint-Émilion as “Merlot country,” and that would not be wrong. Merlot typically composes 60–90% of blends here. It thrives in cooler, moisture-retaining clay soils, ripens earlier, and provides fruit density, roundness, and plush texture. For new wine drinkers, this make these wines more immediately accessible than their tannic, Left Bank peers.

But one should not underestimate the role of Cabernet Franc. In fact, some of the most lauded wines—Château Cheval Blanc, for example—often rely on a near-equal footing between the two grapes. Cabernet Franc offers freshness, aromatic lift, and age-worthy structure. It’s the counterpoint to Merlot’s velvet. Cabernet Sauvignon, while rare, can make an appearance—usually in warmer gravel soils where it can ripen fully—but it’s seldom more than a supporting actor.

Winemaking Techniques: A Blend of Tradition and Precision

The best Saint-Émilion producers are not chasing trends; they’re perfecting balances. Maceration periods can be longer than Left Bank counterparts, allowing for maximum colour and tannin extraction, but only when the fruit supports it. Many estates still favour concrete or large-format oak for fermentation, preserving fruit integrity and allowing for micro-oxygenation.

Oak ageing is commonplace, and Grand Cru wines often see anywhere from 12 to 24 months in barrel, with varying degrees of new oak. Yet, the top châteaux understand restraint. Over-oaking masks terroir precision—a sin in a region obsessed with terroir typicity.

Interestingly, precision viticulture is on the rise: drone mapping, soil conductivity scans, and parcel-by-parcel microvinification. Yes, even in an age-old town with ancient limestone cellars, there’s room for modernity.

Food Pairings: What to Eat with Saint-Émilion Wines?

You’ve opened a Saint-Émilion Grand Cru—a 2015 from Château Canon, perhaps. What should grace your plate? Here, the versatility of Merlot-driven blends shines.

  • Red meats grilled or roasted: Lamb with rosemary, beef Wellington, or duck magret. The firmness of tannins in higher-tier wines thrives alongside these textures.
  • Mushroom-based dishes: The umami richness pairs splendidly, particularly with more mature vintages showing earthy tertiary notes.
  • Hard cheeses: Aged Comté, English Cheddar, or even a slice of Ossau-Iraty bring out the depth of fruit and subtle oak spicing in the wine.
  • Vegetarian options: Lentil stew with smoked paprika or a wild mushroom risotto can harness the savoury notes of Merlot and Cabernet Franc.

Cellaring and Aging Potential

One of the most undervalued traits of Saint-Émilion wines lies in their capacity to age gracefully—and with remarkable metamorphosis. While entry-level cuvées from sandy soils may show their best within 5–7 years, Grand Cru Classé and Premier Grand Cru Classé wines often reach full potential only after 10 to 20 years in bottle.

The aging arc is fascinating: youthful expressions show vibrant black cherry and plum; mid-aged wines (7–12 years) begin to reveal tobacco, graphite, and dried herbs; truly mature wines (>15 years) can offer truffle, leather, and iron-like minerality wrapped in soft, resolved tannins.

As always, storage matters: constant temperature (ideally 12-14°C), humidity control, and minimal light exposure can mean the difference between evolution and oxidation.

Notable Producers Worth Exploring

No article on Saint-Émilion would be complete without peering into the portfolios of the region’s top producers. While the full list of Grand Cru Classé wines is extensive, here are a few names that exemplify the diversity and excellence of the terroir:

  • Château Ausone: One of only two Premier Grand Cru Classé A estates (until the reclassification of 2022), Ausone is renowned for its ethereal balance of power and finesse—often featuring high proportions of Cabernet Franc.
  • Château Cheval Blanc: A global icon. Complex, exotic, and age-worthy. It showcases the interplay between Merlot and Cabernet Franc like few others.
  • Château Canon: Chalk-driven precision, layered elegance, and a stylistic shift towards restraint and minerality in recent vintages. A reference for modern Right Bank aesthetics.
  • Château Angélus: Bold, opulent, with a modernist flair. A wine of impact but also depth, particularly in warmer vintages.
  • Château La Gaffelière: Gaining serious traction for its quality and typicity. Excellent balance between ripe fruit and refreshingly savoury notes.

Is Saint-Émilion Still a Region of Value?

Here lies perhaps the most pertinent question in 2024: is Saint-Émilion still an appellation where connoisseurs can find value? The answer is a cautious but resolute yes. While blue-chip labels fetch astronomical prices on release, an intelligent buyer can access remarkable wines from lesser-known Grand Cru producers at a fraction of the price.

Names like Château Bellevue, Château Rol Valentin, or Château Fougueyres deliver texture, authenticity, and balance at accessible levels—particularly in vintages like 2014 or 2017 that were less hyped but offer classical structure and aromatics.

Moreover, climate change—though challenging—has tended to benefit Merlot in cooler, historic regions like this one. The result: ripe but balanced wines, exhibiting greater consistency across vintages than ever before.

Final Thoughts for the Curious Palate

Saint-Émilion is no longer just the pretty postcard village with cobbled streets and underground chapels. It’s a region where geology, grape, grower, and gastronomy meet with ever-refined precision. For the curious drinker—whether just departing from supermarket Merlot or already charting Classed Growth territory—this Right Bank gem offers complexity, elegance, and a startling range of styles.

And here’s a question worth pondering: if Left Bank Bordeaux asks us to wait, to decant, to contemplate… does Saint-Émilion not whisper, « Come closer, let’s talk now—then later, let’s talk again? »