Château Talbot, 2025
Château Talbot, 2025
- 75cl
- 13.5%
- Red Still
- Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Petit Verdot, Cabernet Franc
Please note, en primeur wines are not available for delivery until they arrive in the UK
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Est. delivery in 2028
Château Talbot stands as one of Saint-Julien's most reliable fourth growths, producing wines that marry power with elegance across their 102 hectares of prime Left Bank vineyards.
What the critics say:
" This is juicy and incisive, with expressive dark fruit and fine-grained, almost grainy tannins. A savory quality in the long finish. Persistent and cohesive."
"Deep dark ruby garnet, opaque core, violet reflections, delicate rim brightening. Delicately ethereal nuances, a hint of mint and cassis, some figs and verbena, multifaceted bouquet. Complex, full-bodied, appears powerful and enegrian, ripe tannins, good length, secure aging potential, mineral finish."
The 102-hectare vineyard sits on classic Left Bank terrain of deep Günz gravel over clay and limestone subsoils, providing excellent drainage whilst retaining enough moisture for the vines during dry spells. The proximity to the Gironde estuary moderates temperatures, extending the growing season and allowing for gradual ripening. This combination of warm, well-drained gravel and maritime influence creates wines with both power and finesse,典型 of Saint-Julien's finest sites.
Saint-Julien represents the sweet spot of the Médoc, producing wines more approachable than neighbouring Pauillac yet more structured than Margaux. The appellation covers just 910 hectares but punches well above its weight, home to five classified growths including Ducru-Beaucaillou and Léoville Las Cases. Saint-Julien's regulations mirror those of the broader Médoc, but the commune's gravelly soils and moderate climate create a distinctive style that balances power with elegance.
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 Talbot