Château Langoa Barton, 2025 - Magnum
Château Langoa Barton, 2025 - Magnum
- 150cl
- 13%
- Red Still
- Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc
- Organic
Please note, en primeur wines are not available for delivery until they arrive in the UK
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Est. delivery in 2028
Château Langoa Barton sits in the heart of Saint-Julien, where the Barton family has been making wine since 1821. We find their approach refreshingly old-school: no consultants, no marketing tricks, just Cabernet Sauvignon-led blends that age gracefully for decades.
What the critics say:
"Focused, with volume and drive, it shows aromas of berries, warm spices and some leather. Medium- to full-bodied with fine, firm tannins. Structured and compact, with bright fruit at its core. Long, focused finish."
"Langoa is very much a wine of the moment, with a sense of energy and punch, and you get that here, juicy and characterful, raspberry and cherry pit, hard to beat in terms of pleasure delivery. Great stuff. Very drinkable wine. Tasted twice, love the energy here."
"Deep dark ruby garnet, opaque core, violet reflections, delicate edge brightening. Delicate nougat, fine herbal spice, dark wild berries, ripe plums, delicate wood spice, a hint of blueberries. Juicy, elegant, fine extract sweetness, ripe tannins, chocolaty on the finish, a charming, versatile food companion."
The 17-hectare vineyard sits on classic Saint-Julien gravel beds over clay subsoil, providing excellent drainage while retaining moisture during dry spells. The proximity to the Gironde estuary moderates temperatures, extending the growing season and allowing for gradual ripening. These Günz gravel soils impart the mineral precision and structured tannins that define great Saint-Julien, while the clay beneath provides depth and longevity.
Saint-Julien represents Bordeaux at its most elegant, producing wines with less power than Pauillac but more structure than Margaux. The appellation's 910 hectares are dominated by classified growths, and the commune's unique terroir of deep gravel over clay creates wines of exceptional balance and longevity. Unlike its neighbours, Saint-Julien has no first growths, but its consistency across the hierarchy is unmatched.
The 2025 Bordeaux vintage emerged from one of the most demanding growing seasons in recent memory — the earliest budbreak since 1989, June temperatures second only to 2003 since records began, and an unusually early harvest beginning in August for the whites. Conditions that should have produced heavy, overripe wines. They didn't. Decanter's Georgie Hindle, who tasted close to 200 wines ahead of the formal campaign, describes "exceptional concentration, aromatic purity and a freshness that contradicts the record-breaking heat.
The early critical consensus places 2025 stylistically between the precision of 2020 and the structure of 2016, with the brightness of 2023 — a combination that suggests a very serious vintage indeed. Yields are dramatically low, the smallest crop since 1991, with production across the Gironde running around 15% below the five-year average. The quality is here. There simply isn't very much of it.
