Château Grand Puy Lacoste
In Pauillac, Château Grand‑Puy‑Lacoste is counted among the Médoc’s oldest domains, with ownership lines documented back to the 16th century. Classified in 1855 as a Fifth Growth, it entered a decisive modern chapter in 1978 when the Borie family took over, restoring the estate while preserving its original spirit.
Vineyards rest on deep gravel over a limestone base—classic Médoc terroir that suits Cabernet Sauvignon for tension and clarity. Parcels are harvested separately, fermentations are clean and precise, and extraction is kept measured to protect balance.
Élevage in French oak barriques, with carefully judged new‑oak levels, aims for integration and a long, focused line. Grand‑Puy‑Lacoste thus sells Pauillac as a historic terroir statement: structured, age‑worthy and unmistakably 1855 in pedigree, yet modern in precision.Château Grand Puy Lacoste
In Pauillac, Château Grand‑Puy‑Lacoste is counted among the Médoc’s oldest domains, with ownership lines documented back to the 16th century. Classified in 1855 as a Fifth Growth, it entered a decisive modern chapter in 1978 when the Borie family took over, restoring the estate while preserving its original spirit.
Vineyards rest on deep gravel over a limestone base—classic Médoc terroir that suits Cabernet Sauvignon for tension and clarity. Parcels are harvested separately, fermentations are clean and precise, and extraction is kept measured to protect balance.
Élevage in French oak barriques, with carefully judged new‑oak levels, aims for integration and a long, focused line. Grand‑Puy‑Lacoste thus sells Pauillac as a historic terroir statement: structured, age‑worthy and unmistakably 1855 in pedigree, yet modern in precision.