Sauvignon Blanc
Few grapes travel the world as effortlessly as Sauvignon Blanc. Born in France’s Loire Valley, the source of those flinty, citrus-charged classics from Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé, it has since found new voices in every corner of the wine world. At its heart, Sauvignon Blanc is about freshness and clarity: a grape that thrives in cool climates, capturing light and turning it into flavour. Its signature combination of lime, gooseberry, green apple, and cut grass is instantly recognisable, while a streak of minerality or tropical fruit often reveals where it’s grown. In warmer zones, it ripens towards passionfruit and guava; in cooler spots, it crackles with citrus and herbs, always vivid, always alive.
What makes Sauvignon Blanc so compelling is its energy. It’s a grape that speaks in high definition, brimming with brightness and tension, whether from the chalk soils of the Loire, the sunlit valleys of Marlborough, or the coastal hills of Chile and South Africa. Winemakers play with it like light, sometimes letting it shine pure and stainless, other times adding texture through lees ageing or a brush of oak. The best examples strike a balance between vibrancy and depth, finishing with a clean, mouth-watering lift that makes the next sip inevitable. Sauvignon Blanc doesn’t whisper; it sings, clear, confident, and utterly refreshing.