Château l'Évangile, 2025 - Magnum
Château l'Évangile, 2025 - Magnum
- 150cl
- 13.5%
- Red Still
- Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon
- Organic
Please note, en primeur wines are not available for delivery until they arrive in the UK
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Est. delivery in 2028
L'Évangile sits on Pomerol's famed plateau, where the gravelly soils that neighbour Cheval Blanc meet the clay that defines this small but mighty appellation. This is Merlot-driven Bordeaux at its most seductive, blending power with an almost Burgundian elegance that has made it one of the Right Bank's most coveted names.
What the critics say:
"Deep dark ruby garnet, opaque core, violet reflections, delicate edge brightening. Fine heart cherry fruit, a hint of fresh plums, delicate nougat, underlaid with candied orange zest. Complex, taut, tightly meshed, extract-sweet core, ripe tannins, good freshness, chocolaty touch on the finish, mineral aftertaste, sweet reverberation, powerful, storable style."
"Damson colour, this has a ton of juicy blue and black fruits, well judged density, energy and lift, clear ageing ability, grilled cumin, peony, iris flowers, slate and crushed rocks, 40% new oak, with large oak casks for almost half of the production. Less Cabernet Franc in this blend simply because of the size of the berries. 3.7ph. Blason no longer sold En Primeur, so not tasted here. Juliette Couderc director. Harvest began on August 26 with young Merlot on gravel. 23hl/h overall yield, fascinating to see how they split across different terroirs in the L'Evangile vineyard - on gravel 15hl/ha, on clay 28hl/ha, on sand, 38hl/h all due to size of berries. In practise this meant a lot of intra-plot harvesting, going through four or five times. The result is impressive."
"Nice plump roundness on the palate with a touch of strawberry acidity to bring some life and lift. Quite serious, fine tannins, a cool crisp, blue fruit edge with a lot of liquorice and wet stone aspects – a mineral, salty, spiced grip on the finish. I like the frame, not too heavy but it’s still quite tight. I don’t find the density of 2022 or 2023 but there’s definitely charm on offer in a cool, serious way right now with a hint of gloss. Ageing 5% amphora. 40% foudre. 45% new oak. 10% used barrels. 3,7pH. A yield of 22hl/ha."
"Deep dark ruby garnet, opaque core, violet reflections, delicate edge brightening. Fine heart cherry fruit, a hint of fresh plums, delicate nougat, underlaid with candied orange zest. Complex, taut, tightly meshed, extract-sweet core, ripe tannins, good freshness, chocolaty touch on the finish, mineral aftertaste, sweet reverberation, powerful, storable style."
L'Evangile's 22 hectares occupy prime real estate on Pomerol's famous plateau, where iron-rich clay soils sit atop a bedrock of crasse de fer (iron pan). This unique geological formation provides excellent water retention whilst forcing roots deep for minerals. The slightly elevated position ensures perfect drainage, whilst the iron content gives the wines their distinctive mineral backbone and exceptional ageing potential that sets great Pomerol apart from its neighbours.
Pomerol is Bordeaux's smallest and most exclusive appellation, covering just 800 hectares on the Right Bank. Unlike the Médoc, there's no official classification here - reputation is everything. The appellation's clay-heavy soils favour Merlot, producing wines of extraordinary richness and complexity. With legends like Pétrus and Le Pin as neighbours, Pomerol represents the pinnacle of Merlot expression, where tiny estates command astronomical prices for wines that marry power with remarkable finesse.
The 2025 Bordeaux vintage emerged from one of the most demanding growing seasons in recent memory — the earliest budbreak since 1989, June temperatures second only to 2003 since records began, and an unusually early harvest beginning in August for the whites. Conditions that should have produced heavy, overripe wines. They didn't. Decanter's Georgie Hindle, who tasted close to 200 wines ahead of the formal campaign, describes "exceptional concentration, aromatic purity and a freshness that contradicts the record-breaking heat.
The early critical consensus places 2025 stylistically between the precision of 2020 and the structure of 2016, with the brightness of 2023 — a combination that suggests a very serious vintage indeed. Yields are dramatically low, the smallest crop since 1991, with production across the Gironde running around 15% below the five-year average. The quality is here. There simply isn't very much of it.

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Château l'Evangile