Château Moulin Haut Laroque

Above the Libournais, on the clay‑limestone hills of Fronsac, Château Moulin Haut‑Laroque carries a long Bordeaux lineage—the family still preserves estate‑labelled bottles dating back to 1890. In a region of discreet overachievers, the château’s see‑through style comes from patience and exacting work rather than volume.

Vineyards stretch from the slopes of Saillans to the highest Fronsac plateau, where limestone and clay bring natural tension and freshness. Merlot leads the blend, supported by Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon, with a touch of very old Malbec adding historical continuity. Parcel management, gentle extraction and oak maturation are tuned for line and proportion, not show.

The estate’s signature is therefore quietly architectural: a Canon‑Fronsac built on place, craft and the confidence to let time in bottle complete the narrative.

Château Moulin Haut Laroque

Above the Libournais, on the clay‑limestone hills of Fronsac, Château Moulin Haut‑Laroque carries a long Bordeaux lineage—the family still preserves estate‑labelled bottles dating back to 1890. In a region of discreet overachievers, the château’s see‑through style comes from patience and exacting work rather than volume.

Vineyards stretch from the slopes of Saillans to the highest Fronsac plateau, where limestone and clay bring natural tension and freshness. Merlot leads the blend, supported by Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon, with a touch of very old Malbec adding historical continuity. Parcel management, gentle extraction and oak maturation are tuned for line and proportion, not show.

The estate’s signature is therefore quietly architectural: a Canon‑Fronsac built on place, craft and the confidence to let time in bottle complete the narrative.