Europe

HUNGARY

Beyond the Danube, Hungary forms a continental wine mosaic where volcanic and loess soils, cellar labyrinths and tight PDO rules converge. Tokaj sets benchmarks with Furmint and Hárslevelű—from dry single‑vineyard bottlings to Aszú shaped by botrytis and slow maturation. Eger and Szekszárd refine Bikavér as a disciplined cuvée concept, while Villány, warmed by its mesoclimate and limestone/clay, sharpens the red side. Between appellation thinking, a cru mindset and modern cellar precision, the country continually recalibrates tradition. Around Lake Balaton and the Somló volcano, microclimates and exposure further steer style down to fine detail.

HUNGARY

Beyond the Danube, Hungary forms a continental wine mosaic where volcanic and loess soils, cellar labyrinths and tight PDO rules converge. Tokaj sets benchmarks with Furmint and Hárslevelű—from dry single‑vineyard bottlings to Aszú shaped by botrytis and slow maturation. Eger and Szekszárd refine Bikavér as a disciplined cuvée concept, while Villány, warmed by its mesoclimate and limestone/clay, sharpens the red side. Between appellation thinking, a cru mindset and modern cellar precision, the country continually recalibrates tradition. Around Lake Balaton and the Somló volcano, microclimates and exposure further steer style down to fine detail.