Sauternes AOC
The world’s greatest sweet wine appellation. Sémillon-Sauvignon Blanc affected by noble rot (Botrytis cinerea). Home to Château d’Yquem, the only Premier Cru Supérieur.
About Sauternes
Sauternes is the world’s reference appellation for sweet wine produced via noble rot (Botrytis cinerea). The morning fog from the Ciron-Garonne confluence creates the humid conditions necessary for Botrytis to develop on grapes; afternoon sun then dries the affected berries, concentrating their sugars dramatically. The result is intensely sweet wine with extraordinary aromatic complexity and acid balance. The 1855 classification includes 27 châteaux with Château d’Yquem alone receiving the unique designation Premier Cru Supérieur. Eleven Premier Crus Classés and 15 Deuxièmes Crus complete the hierarchy. The vinification is brutally selective — yields are tiny (one to two glasses of wine per vine), and in inadequate vintages no wine is declared at all. Sauternes ages essentially indefinitely — 19th-century vintages remain drinkable. The appellation has faced commercial challenges in recent decades as sweet wine consumption declined, but Yquem and the top Premier Crus retain absolute editorial prestige.
Terroir & regulation
Principal producers
- Château d’Yquem
- Château Climens
- Château Suduiraut
- Château Rieussec
Editorial notes
Sauternes ages essentially indefinitely — there is no real “drink now” window. Modern vintages cellar 25-50+ years. The wine pairs classically with foie gras, blue cheese (Roquefort), and not just dessert.