The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | Wine writing competition

Ch Lafleur – jewel of Pomerol

• 5 min read

Here is what is said about Ch Lafleur.

 

Robert Parker, America’s leading wine critic: “one of the most distinctive, most exotic, and greatest wines – not only in Pomerol, but in the world.”

 

Michel Bettane and Thierry Desseauve, France’s most famous wine authorities: “The wine amply deserves its high prices.”

 

Michael Broadbent, doyen of British wine tasters: Not that much because the wine is so rare, although he did comment about the 1950, “Concentrated, certainly very impressive. But who wants to go to bed with a wrestler?”

 

Stephen Browett of Farr Vintners, Britain’s biggest fine wine trader: “The greatest wine I ever had was a magnum of Lafleur 1947 from John Avery’s private cellar, even though it was served alongside the famous Cheval Blanc 1947.”

 

Because only about 1,000 cases of Ch Lafleur are made each year, it is too rare and expensive for many wine lovers to have even tasted it, and although there is no shortage of demand, the story of the property itself is shrouded in obscurity. At a recent vertical tasting of Lafleur (£200 a ticket) organised by the Fine Wine Experience in London for instance, the Guinaudeau family who own and run it were not even mentioned.

 

Last April I deliberately took time out of the usual punishing primeur tasting schedule to try to visit this world-famous château. I was armed with the Pomerol map from The World Atlas of Wine and a colleague who was driving so there was no excuse not to find Lafleur on the tiny plateau of vineyards just east of the town of Libourne. We drove past the renovations at Ch Pétrus, its neighbour. We criss crossed the many little intersecting roads around it and its other neighbour Ch Lafleur Pétrus. We stopped to ask at the only house within sight that seemed to be inhabited but were met with blank stares at the name Ch Lafleur. Less than 100 metres away was a rundown farmhouse that had at least metaphorical if not actual ducks quacking around the yard that corresponded with Lafleur’s supposed position on the map but could raise no-one there.

 

Later that day I managed to speak to Sylvie Guinaudeau and arrange a meeting on the Friday morning and yes, Lafleur was indeed that small, rundown farmhouse, inhabited today by their son Baptiste who is starting to work on the property. Sylvie and Jacques Guinaudeau who are now in charge of Lafleur live at Ch Grand Village in Mouillac on the far side of Fronsac but they came to Lafleur to show us the 11 acres of vines in front of the farmhouse and the tiny cellars below.

 

Although the property has been in Jacques Guinaudeau’s family since it was founded in 1872, he has been directly involved only since 1985. For decades before that it was famously run by his reclusive aunts Marie and Thérèse Robin, sisters who slept in the same modest bedroom at Ch Le Gay, the other family holding, for almost 70 years. Admittedly in their youth Pomerol was regarded as a country bumpkin and it was only from the late 1960s that the appellation’s wines began their dizzy ascent to the top of the saleroom price ladder. Nevertheless Mesdemoiselles Robin never really understood, much less approved of, Lafleur’s newfound fame. According to Sylvie, their biggest adventure would be a bike ride in to Libourne. “Whereas Madame Loubat [the old owner of Ch Pétrus] was very open, Tantes Marie and Thérèse were very closed, and Lafleur remained in the shadow of Pétrus.”

 

It was however the dominant wine merchant of Libourne, J P Moueix, which put both Pétrus and Lafleur on the map and made them sought after by wine collectors the world over. In fact the winemaking at Lafleur was overseen by the Moueix team, who still sell most of the wine, for some time until Jacques and Sylvie Guinaudeau were able to take sole charge on the decease of the surviving aunt, Marie, in 2001. They had already taken over the day-to-day running of the property but it has been only relatively recently that they have managed to establish ownership of all the individual parcels of Lafleur vines by buying out the other five members of Jacques’ generation.

 

With the likes of François Pinault and other corporate hawks circling round this Pomerol jewel, it is something of a triumph that the Guinaudeaus have managed to keep it in independent, familial hands. To achieve this they had to sell off Le Gay (to another independent individual, the energetic Catherine Péré-Vergé who now also has wine interests in Argentina) for a reported £16.5 million.

 

It seemed clear that Lafleur was in safe hands as early as 1987 when the Guinaudeaus (Sylvie is every bit as involved as Jacques) decided that the wine was not good enough to be released under the Lafleur name and they created the Pensées de Lafleur second label which is used to this day for about 400 cases of earlier-maturing Pomerol, even in most good vintages. “I always sell off some wine in bulk,” Jacques told me, “because I want Pensées to be a good wine too.” This is an expensive decision for a property which, in a year like 1991, might produce a grand total of only eight barrels of wine. In 2003 too they produced only half as much wine as usual.

 

What I appreciate particularly about the Guinaudeaus is that, most unusually for Bordeaux, they have an almost Burgundian ethos of care and personal attention in the way they run the property. The family personally works the vineyards and seems to know practically every vine. We tasted in the very basic (but nowadays spotless) Lafleur cellar, Sylvie having brought glasses from Ch Grand Village, keeping the slightly dreamy, and heavily moustached, Jacques on track, ever-conscious of our crammed schedule. Lafleur’s 2003 was one of very few impressive 2003s from the scorched Pomerol plateau – perhaps because within their 4.5 hectares are no fewer than five different soil types from which to make a selection.

 

I have been lucky enough to taste most of the Guinaudeau vintages, some of the wines made in the late 1970s and the early 1980s – and all too few of the legendary wines of the mid 20th century. The wines are indeed hugely concentrated and exotic but to my palate entirely in their own fashion, not in the current exaggerated and too often manipulated mode. This is terroir transmitted into bottle, the luscious opulence of the nose followed in general by a much stiffer – some say Médocain – structure on the palate. Lafleur has more complex flavours and demands much longer ageing than many Pomerols, perhaps partly because of its unusually high proportion of aromatic Cabernet Franc vines (50 per cent on the ground, typically 40 per cent in the finished wine) with the more usual luscious Merlot.

 

As we sped away from Lafleur towards the primeur tasting circus, my colleague asked whether I’d noticed how Jacques Guinaudeau physically handled each individual bottle of his wine (including a creditable Ch Grand Village 2003). “With remarkable tenderness”, she said. There is all too little tenderness in Bordeaux today.

 

See the purple pages for tasting notes on individual vintages of Lafleur.

选择方案
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 295,960 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,111 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 295,960 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,111 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Free for all

Ronan Sayburn MS, Sarah Abbott MW and Hannah Tovey at Icons tastings 2026
Free for all 从世界各地挑选 27 款霞多丽 (Chardonnay) "标志性"酒款,呈献给 18 位认证品鉴师……本文的一个版本发表于金融时报 。另见...
WWC26 post-submission graphic
Free for all 绝妙的搭配——有如此多的选择!JR 团队向所有人致以诚挚的感谢。 今年的 葡萄酒写作大赛打破了所有记录,收到了超过 400 份参赛作品...
Kullabergs Vingård © Terra Skåne/Jan Kivissar
Free for all 根据星级酒单 (Star Wine List) 的评选,这是一份比大多数指南更具权威性的榜单。上图,美食与葡萄酒行家们齐聚阿里尔德酒庄...
Mont Ventoux seen from Les Deux Cols at dawn
Free for all 南部并非全是强劲的歌海娜 (Grenache)。本文的一个版本发表于《金融时报》(Financial Times)。 另见...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Brit Nat tasting 2026 by Em Drake
Tasting articles 英伦摇滚靠边站;英国天然气泡酒 (Brít-Nat) 带着开瓶盖的争议和前卫态度来了。 亨利 (Henry) 写道 在即将成为传奇的...
Ried Kellerberg in autumn
Wines of the week 来自奥地利的一款充满石灰气息、活泼清新的白葡萄酒中的夏日梦想,售价 €9.90, £18.37, $19.99 。上图为凯勒贝格...
Diemersdal winemaking team
Tasting articles 在英国及更远地区可购得的优质佳酿——包括一些天然低酒精度葡萄酒。上图,从左至右: 雷昂·里希特 (Reon Richter)、莉娜·科茨...
Alder Springs vineyard
Tasting articles 加州一些最令人兴奋的葡萄酒来自一个远离其他任何地方的葡萄园。上图为阿尔德斯普林斯 (Alder Springs) 葡萄园(图片来源: 娜塔莉...
Judges for Chardonnay Icons at 2026 London Wine Fair
Tasting articles 澳大利亚和英格兰在今年伦敦葡萄酒博览会 (London Wine Fair) 的标志性葡萄酒盲品中胜出,评审团由上图中的葡萄酒专业人士组成。...
Poggio di Sotto vineyard
Tasting articles 如果您欣赏能够反映年份和风土的葡萄酒,那么顶级的 2020 年份布鲁内洛 (Brunello) 非常值得购买。上图为索托山庄 (Poggio...
Wine & War book cover
Book reviews 提醒我们葡萄酒在冲突时期恢复人性、幽默和希望的力量。 葡萄酒与战争 法国人、纳粹和法国最伟大宝藏的争夺战 唐和佩蒂·克拉德斯特鲁普 (Don...
Flowers in the Meinklang vineyard
Wines of the week 一款来自奥地利的神奇起泡酒,售价 €9, £15.50, $16.95 起 。 有人说,这是魔力最强大的时刻……夏至,仙灵在我们中间起舞...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.