Chateau Cheval Blanc
Château Cheval Blanc (French for "White Horse Castle"), is a
wine producer in Saint-Émilion
in the Bordeaux wine
region of France. Its wine is one of only two to receive the highest rank of Premier Grand
Cru Classé status in the Classification
of Saint-Émilion wine of 1955, along with Château Ausone.
The estate's second wine is named Le
Petit Cheval.
In 1832 Château Figeac
sold 15 hectares/37 acres to M. Laussac-Fourcaud, including part of the narrow gravel ridge that runs through Figeac and neighboring vineyards and reaches Château
Pétrus just over the border
in Pomerol. This became
Château Cheval Blanc which, in the International London and Paris Exhibitions in 1862 and
1867, won medals still prominent on its labels. The château remained in the
family until 1998 when it was sold to Bernard Arnault, chairman
of luxury goods group LVMH,
and Belgian businessman Albert Frère, with Pierre
Lurton installed as estate manager, a constellation similar to that of the
group's other chief property Château
d'Yquem.
The vineyard is considered to have three qualities:
one third Pomerol as it is located on the boundary, one third Graves as the
soil is gravelly, and the remaining third typical Saint-Émilion. The vineyard
area is spread over 41 hectares, with 37 hectares planted with an unusual
composition of grape
varieties of 57% Cabernet Franc, 40% Merlot, and small parcels
of Malbec and Cabernet Sauvignon. The
average annual production is 6000 cases of the Grand vin and 2500 cases of the second wine, Le Petit Cheval.
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