ClassificationCotes de Provence AOC
VarietalsGrenache, Cinsault, Mourvedre, Syrah

Tip: Look for the Secret de Leoube; the higher-priced La Londe and Rose de Leoube cuvees climb fast but the entry bottling carries the same organic-farming pedigree.

More budget wines in Provence

Chateau Sainte Marguerite Symphonie Rose ★ 4.2

Cotes de Provence Cru ClasseGrenache, Cinsault, Syrah, RolleEUR 18-25 retail

Symphonie is the Cru Classe entry rose of Chateau Sainte Marguerite, a 1955-classified Cotes de Provence estate at La Londe. Pale, fresh and structured at twenty to twenty-five euros, the most affordable way into Provence's Cru Classe roster.

Tip: The Sainte Marguerite Symphonie is sold at most French wine merchants; ask for the magnum format if you can find it for the same wine with slower ageing in bottle.

Mas de Cadenet Cotes de Provence Sainte-Victoire Rose ★ 4.2

Cotes de Provence Sainte-Victoire AOCGrenache, Cinsault, SyrahEUR 14-19 retail

Mas de Cadenet farms on the limestone foothills beneath Mont Sainte-Victoire and bottles a Cotes de Provence Sainte-Victoire rose that captures the cooler-night signature of the sub-appellation. Dry, savoury and tense at under twenty euros.

Tip: The Sainte-Victoire sub-AOC sits at higher altitude than the coastal Cotes de Provence; the resulting rose is a touch leaner and longer-lived than the Saint-Tropez style.

Chateau Routas Rouvier Rouge ★ 3.9

Coteaux Varois en Provence AOCSyrah, Cabernet Sauvignon, GrenacheEUR 12-16 retail

Rouvier is the Coteaux Varois red of Chateau Routas, built on Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon with Grenache fleshing out the mid-palate. Approachable Provençal red at supermarket prices, well under twenty euros.

Tip: Coteaux Varois reds are the least-known face of Provence; this is the inexpensive way to taste the cooler inland Var alongside the appellation's better-known rose.

Clos Sainte Magdeleine Cassis Blanc ★ 4.3

Cassis AOCMarsanne, Clairette, Ugni Blanc, Sauvignon BlancEUR 22-28 retail

Cassis Blanc from one of the appellation's reference estates, the cliff-edge Clos Sainte Magdeleine. Marsanne and Clairette make a dry, saline, citrus-driven white that drinks with grilled rouget and bouillabaisse for around twenty-five euros at the cellar.

Tip: The Cassis cellars sell at producer prices; for the best value, buy at the Clos Sainte Magdeleine domaine on the road out toward the corniche, where the view is the dividend.

Chateau Pradeaux Bandol Rose ★ 4.4

Bandol AOCMourvedre, Cinsault, GrenacheEUR 22-28 retail

The rose of Chateau Pradeaux, a Mourvedre-led Bandol pink from the Portalis family estate at Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer. Dry, saline, structured for the table rather than the aperitif, the least-expensive way into serious Bandol rose at the producer price.

Tip: Bandol rose typically cellars three to five years from vintage; the Pradeaux holds for three to five years and is a classic match for grilled fish with rouille.

Domaines Bunan Moulin des Costes Bandol Rose ★ 4.2

Bandol AOCMourvedre, Grenache, CinsaultEUR 18-24 retail

Moulin des Costes is the Mourvedre-led Bandol rose of Domaines Bunan at La Cadiere d'Azur, one of the consortium's founding estates. Pale, structured and dry at under twenty-five euros, the value benchmark for serious Bandol rose at the producer level.

Tip: Domaines Bunan also bottles La Rouviere reds for a similar price; pair the rose with calanque-fresh sea bass and the red with lamb.

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