Review: Wines from Bandol, France’s Hidden Gem of a Region

These rosés break all the seasonal stereotypes and pair well with, well, everything

Three bottles of wine from Bandol

Three bottles of wine from Bandol

By Kate Dingwall

What we’re drinking: Bandol wines

Where they’re from: The sun-soaked namesake Bandol appellation in the Provence region.

Why we’re drinking these: Here’s what I suggest: Extend the rosé-all-day sentiment beyond 24 hours. Rosé is versatile, able to pair well past the warmer weather and into the colder months. I’m constantly surprised every time I open a bottle of Bandol and it just works with whatever I’m eating. Charcuterie, grilled seafood and anything with spice, be it a tomato sauce with a heavy hand on the hot pepper flakes or a grilled pita wrapped around lamp skewers. It does it all.

Rosé́ is often thought of as summer water — cheap, cheerful patio bottles. But the wines of Bandol break those stereotypes, offering up incredible minerality, complexity and aging potential.

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Take a look at where Bandol is: perched high on limestone cliffs that overlook the cerulean blue waters of the Mediterranean and the fishing village of Bandol. The seaside resort district is filled with languid beaches, seafood stands, patio brasseries, and palm trees. There’s no better place to drink rosé. Or make it — the limestone soils and warm coastal climate are the ideal home for Mourvèdre grapes.

Real shame that Bandol is not picturesque
Courtesy of Chateau de Pibarnon

The reds here are equally intriguing. Mainly made from Mourvedre, the reds are big, brooding and bold — the antitheses of the rosés that come out of this region. The notes of tobacco and rich plum will only get better as you age it for ten or twenty years. (And yes, that’s a very good idea.)

How they taste: 

Fun fact: The earliest instances of wine in the region date back to 500 B.C. (!), when Romans would bottle up wines and ship them out of the port.

Where to buy: Bandol wines will be available at most fine wine retailers and bottle shops, though Domaine Tempier is more difficult to find. 

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