By Tim Morgan, Senior Sommelier & Contributing Editor
Cabernet Sauvignon is the world’s most planted red grape variety — approximately 340,000 hectares globally, spanning every wine-producing continent. It is the grape of First Growth Bordeaux, of cult Napa Cabernets, of Chile’s finest reds, of Coonawarra’s terra rossa, of Super Tuscans, of Margaret River, of Bolgheri, of Hawke’s Bay. It is, by any objective measure, the most successful, most widely distributed, and most commercially dominant red grape in history.
And yet — precisely because of this dominance — Cabernet Sauvignon is also the grape most often taken for granted. Its ubiquity has bred a kind of indifference. It is everywhere, and because it is everywhere, people assume they know it. They think Cabernet is just Cabernet — big, dark, tannic, predictable.
They are wrong.
Great Cabernet Sauvignon — the real thing, from the right place, made with conviction — is one of the most complex, most age-worthy, and most profoundly satisfying wines on earth. The problem is not the grape. The problem is that most of the world’s Cabernet is mediocre — a sea of competent but forgettable wine that obscures the peaks of genuine greatness.
This guide is about the peaks.
Identity Card
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Full name | Cabernet Sauvignon |
| Parents | Cabernet Franc × Sauvignon Blanc (natural cross, discovered 1996 via DNA) |
| Colour | Red — deeply pigmented, among the darkest of grapes |
| Origin | Bordeaux, France — 17th century (a relatively young variety) |
| Skin | Very thick — high tannin, deep colour, excellent disease resistance |
| Ripening | Late |
| Climate | Warm to moderate — needs heat and a long season to ripen fully |
| Acidity | Medium to high |
| Tannin | Very high |
| Body | Full |
| Ageing potential | Exceptional — 20, 30, 50+ years for the finest examples |
| Global plantings | ~340,000 hectares — the world’s most planted red grape |
| Key character | Structure, power, blackcurrant, cedar, age-worthiness |
What Does Cabernet Sauvignon Taste Like?
CLASSIC CABERNET PROFILE:
FRUIT
├── Blackcurrant / cassis (THE signature note)
├── Black cherry
├── Blackberry
├── Plum
├── Blueberry (warmer climates)
└── Black olive
STRUCTURAL
├── Cedar (the hallmark of Bordeaux Cabernet)
├── Pencil shavings / graphite
├── Tobacco
├── Cigar box
├── Dark chocolate
├── Espresso / coffee
└── Vanilla (from oak ageing)
HERBAL / SAVOURY
├── Green bell pepper / capsicum (pyrazines — cool climate marker)
├── Mint / eucalyptus (especially in warmer climates)
├── Dried herbs
├── Bay leaf
├── Leather
└── Earth
AGED CABERNET (10–30+ years)
├── Cigar box
├── Leather
├── Earth
├── Dried fruit
├── Truffle
├── Mushroom
├── Iron
├── Wet gravel
└── Cedar intensifies
“Cassis and cedar.” That is the two-word description of Cabernet Sauvignon, just as “tar and roses” defines Nebbiolo. The blackcurrant fruit and the cedar-pencil-shavings note from oak ageing are the twin pillars of the Cabernet experience. When they are in balance, the result is one of the noblest flavour profiles in wine.
Where It Grows
Cabernet Sauvignon is the great traveller — unlike Nebbiolo (which barely leaves Piedmont) or Pinot Noir (which needs very specific conditions), Cabernet adapts to an extraordinary range of climates and soils. It succeeds almost everywhere it is planted. But “succeeds” and “excels” are different things.
🇫🇷 Bordeaux — The Origin
Bordeaux is Cabernet Sauvignon’s birthplace and its spiritual home. But here’s a fact that surprises many people: Cabernet is not Bordeaux’s most planted grape. That honour belongs to Merlot. Cabernet Sauvignon dominates only on the Left Bank (Médoc and Graves), where it is typically blended with Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and sometimes Petit Verdot.
The Left Bank appellations:
| Appellation | Character | Benchmark Estates |
|---|---|---|
| Pauillac | The aristocrat. Powerful, structured, long-lived. The most concentrated Cabernets. | Lafite, Latour, Mouton Rothschild, Lynch-Bages, Grand-Puy-Lacoste |
| Saint-Julien | Elegance and balance. The “perfect” appellation — neither too powerful nor too light. | Léoville-Las-Cases, Ducru-Beaucaillou, Léoville-Barton, Gruaud-Larose |
| Margaux | Perfumed, silky, floral. The feminine Médoc. | Château Margaux, Palmer, Rauzan-Ségla, Brane-Cantenac |
| Saint-Estèphe | Firm, tannic, austere. The most structured, most slow-developing. | Cos d’Estournel, Montrose, Calon-Ségur |
| Pessac-Léognan | Gravel soils. Elegant, smoky, mineral. Reds and outstanding whites. | Haut-Brion, La Mission Haut-Brion, Smith Haut Lafitte |
The Bordeaux style: Cabernet here is rarely bottled alone — it is almost always blended. The classic Bordeaux blend (Cabernet Sauvignon + Merlot + Cabernet Franc) achieves a completeness that pure Cabernet rarely reaches on its own: Cabernet provides structure and blackcurrant fruit, Merlot adds flesh and softness, and Cabernet Franc contributes perfume and spice.
🇺🇸 Napa Valley — The New World Monument
If Bordeaux is Cabernet’s birthplace, Napa Valley is its second empire.
Napa Cabernet is typically bolder, riper, and more immediately powerful than Bordeaux — higher alcohol, denser fruit, more oak — reflecting the warmer, sunnier California climate. The best examples achieve a concentration and a richness that is spectacular, with blackberry, cassis, dark chocolate, and espresso in almost decadent proportions.
But Napa is also evolving. A new generation of winemakers — inspired by Bordeaux’s restraint and by Ridge Vineyards’ long tradition of balance — is producing Cabernets of increasing elegance, lower alcohol, and greater terroir expression.
Essential Napa producers:
| Producer | Style |
|---|---|
| Ridge Monte Bello | Actually Santa Cruz Mountains — but the California benchmark. Elegant, age-worthy, European in sensibility. |
| Opus One | Bordeaux-Napa collaboration. Polished, luxurious. |
| Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars | Historic (Judgment of Paris, 1976). Elegant Stags Leap District style. |
| Heitz Cellar (Martha’s Vineyard) | Classic. Eucalyptus-scented. Iconic. |
| Dominus | Christian Moueix (Pétrus). Bordeaux elegance in Napa fruit. Outstanding. |
| Corison | Low alcohol, high acid. The anti-Napa Napa Cabernet. Brilliant. |
| Mayacamas | Mountain. Traditional. Age-worthy. Undervalued. |
| Diamond Creek | Single-vineyard. Terroir-driven. Pioneering. |
Other Key Regions
| Region | Style | Essential Producers |
|---|---|---|
| Coonawarra (Australia) | Terra rossa soil. Elegant, minty, structured. Australia’s finest Cabernet terroir. | Wynns, Balnaves, Parker |
| Margaret River (Australia) | Bordeaux-like. Elegant, restrained, gravelly. | Cullen, Vasse Felix, Moss Wood, Leeuwin |
| Chile (Maipo Alto, Aconcagua) | Excellent value. Ripe, herbaceous, structured. | Don Melchor (Concha y Toro), Almaviva, Seña, Errázuriz |
| Bolgheri (Tuscany) | “Super Tuscan” — Bordeaux blends on the Tuscan coast. Rich, polished. | Sassicaia, Ornellaia, Guado al Tasso |
| Stellenbosch (South Africa) | Powerful, earthy, distinct Cape character. | Kanonkop, Meerlust, Vergelegen |
| Hawke’s Bay (New Zealand) | Elegant, herbaceous, increasingly Bordeaux-like. | Craggy Range, Te Mata, Trinity Hill |
Cabernet Sauvignon and Food
Cabernet’s firm tannins and full body demand rich, protein-heavy, savoury food:
| Dish | Why It Works |
|---|---|
| Grilled ribeye steak | The classic. Fat + protein + char = tannin heaven. |
| Rack of lamb, herb-crusted | Cabernet’s herbal notes mirror the herb crust. Tannins love lamb fat. |
| Beef Wellington | Rich, complex dish for a rich, complex wine. |
| Aged cheddar / hard cheeses | Umami and salt complement Cabernet’s structure. |
| Venison | Dark, gamey meat for a dark, structured wine. |
| Roast beef (Sunday roast) | The British institution deserves a serious Cabernet. |
| Dark chocolate (70%+) | Controversial but effective with ripe, low-tannin Napa Cabernet. |
What to avoid: Delicate fish, salads, light dishes. Cabernet’s tannins will bully anything delicate.
How to Serve
| Detail | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Temperature | 16–18°C |
| Glass | Bordeaux glass — tall, moderately wide, directing wine to the back palate |
| Decanting | Young Cabernet: 1–2 hours. Mature (15+ years): 30 minutes or pour directly. |
| Ageing | Entry level: 3–5 years. Mid-range: 5–15. Top Bordeaux/Napa: 20–50+ years. |
The Price Spectrum
Cabernet Sauvignon offers one of the widest price ranges of any grape — from €5 supermarket bottles to €5,000 First Growths. The key to finding value:
| Price | Where to Look |
|---|---|
| Under €15 | Chile (Maipo), South Africa, Languedoc. Outstanding value. |
| €15–30 | Coonawarra, Margaret River, Bordeaux Cru Bourgeois, Chile (premium). |
| €30–80 | Saint-Julien, Margaux (lesser châteaux), Bolgheri, top Chilean/Australian. |
| €80–300 | Classified Bordeaux (2nd–5th Growth), top Napa, Sassicaia. |
| €300+ | First Growth Bordeaux, cult Napa, Opus One, Ornellaia. |
Tim Morgan is a London-based sommelier and wine writer.











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