2011 Haut Brion Blanc

Bordeaux Blanc - 750ML
Reg: $1,353.94
$1,204.94
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REVIEWS

NM 97 WS 97 JS 95
NM 97

Neal Martin's Wine Journal, April 2012

A blend of 42.1% Sauvignon and 57.9% Semillon the Haut Brion Blanc has a slightly deeper colour than the La Mission Blanc. It displays great minerality on the nose with precision and clarity notes of green apple lime...
WS 97

Wine Spectator, April 2012

Features a chiseled feel for now with a blanched almond edge and a vibrant quinine note taking the lead over salted butter floral verbena and gooseberry notes. There's terrific depth and length but a youthful rawness that...
JS 95

jamessuckling.com, January 2014

This white from Haut-Brion is very full and rich, with apple pie, lemon and papaya. Full body, opulent and almost oily. This is decadent. Very delicious to drink now but wait at least three to four years. 58% sauvignon...

WINE DETAILS

Color & Type White
Varietal Bordeaux Blanc
Country France
Region Bordeaux
Sub-region Pessac Leognan
Vintage 2011
Size 750ML

The oldest of Bordeaux’s five first growths and the only property outside the Medoc to be included in the 1855 Classification, Chateau Haut-Brion was founded by Jean de Pontac in 1533. The name derives from the Celtic word briga, meaning “hill” or “high place”, and refers to the gravelly elevated terrain situated between the Le Peuge and Le Serpent streams.

History shows that as early as 1660, Haut-Brion wines were already appreciated at royal tables as evidenced by the purchase of 169 bottles by King Charles II of England, noted in the royal cellar book. Among the wine’s admirers are the famous London diarist Samuel Pepys, and Thomas Jefferson, who had distinguished the wine’s quality long before the 1855 Classification.

Arnaud III de Pontac was responsible for building the estate’s international reputation and for creating a new style of wine that is the basis for all currently classified growths - an era which historians have described as a revolution in winemaking.

Chateau Haut-Brion was acquired by the American financier Clarence Dillon on May 13, 1935 and has been managed by the same family since. Much of the estate’s success is also credited to the Delmas family, who have worked the estate for three generations. Nearly five centuries after the creation of its vineyard and 350 years after the first published mention under its current name, Chateau Haut-Brion remains one of the finest wines in the world today.