ClassificationLes Baux-de-Provence AOC
VarietalsGrenache, Mourvedre, Syrah, Cinsault, Carignan, Cabernet Sauvignon, Rolle
Hectares40 ha
OwnerCartier family
OrganicECOCERT
NeighbourhoodAlpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Tip: Importer Kermit Lynch carries the wines in the US; Mouries is also the olive-oil capital of Provence and the estate sells its own pressing.

Location

Address: Le Destet, 13890 Mouries, France, Provence

Also in Alpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Domaine Hauvette ★ 4.6

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDNaturalAlpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Dominique Hauvette works native-yeast ferments, no added enzymes, no fining and minimal sulphur across her Cornaline red and Roucas white, the Alpilles reference for natural-leaning farming and cellar work.

Tip: The Cornaline red is the canonical Hauvette wine; the small-production whites move quickly through specialist merchants.

Domaine Hauvette low-sulfite winemaking ★ 4.5

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDNaturalAlpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Dominique Hauvette works with minimal added sulfite across her range, with the Cornaline red and Roucas white bottled with no fining and only protective sulfite at bottling. The Alpilles reference for low-sulfite Mediterranean reds.

Tip: Low-sulfite reds travel less robustly than conventional bottles; buy from a temperature-controlled merchant and drink within a few years.

Full Alpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence) food guide →

More biodynamic & natural in Provence

Chateau Leoube ★ 4.4

ORGANIC CERTIFIEDBormes-les-Mimosas (Cotes de Provence)

Chateau Leoube on the seaward coast at Bormes-les-Mimosas farms its Cotes de Provence vineyards organically and is a reference for organic Provençal rose. The estate also makes olive oil from the same land.

Tip: The garden tasting at Leoube has sea views; arrive late afternoon for the best light.

Domaine Saint Andre de Figuiere ★ 4.4

ECOCERTCotes de Provence La Londe

The Combard family farms Saint Andre de Figuiere at La Londe-les-Maures organically since the early 1990s, with Ecocert certification. The estate works the eastern coastal Cotes de Provence La Londe sub-appellation across Grenache, Cinsault, Mourvedre and Rolle.

Tip: La Londe sits closest to the sea among the Cotes de Provence sub-AOCs; the salinity in the rose is the marker of the sub-appellation.

Domaine Hauvette ★ 4.6

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDNaturalAlpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Dominique Hauvette works native-yeast ferments, no added enzymes, no fining and minimal sulphur across her Cornaline red and Roucas white, the Alpilles reference for natural-leaning farming and cellar work.

Tip: The Cornaline red is the canonical Hauvette wine; the small-production whites move quickly through specialist merchants.

Domaine de Trevallon ★ 4.7

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDNaturalAlpilles (IGP Alpilles)

Domaine de Trevallon works low-intervention winemaking across the IGP Alpilles red and white, with the Durbach family practising biodynamics on the limestone north of the Alpilles since the early 1980s.

Tip: Trevallon is the cult Alpilles wine; allocations are tight and the cellar list is loyal, so visits and bottles move through specialist merchants.

Chateau La Coste vegan-friendly winemaking ★ 4.4

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDLe Puy-Sainte-Reparade (Aix)

Chateau La Coste's biodynamic and organic farming pairs with minimal cellar intervention, with the estate's own pages confirming the vineyard is farmed in agriculture biologique and biodynamics. Like most biodynamic Provençal estates, the wines are unfined and suitable for vegans.

Tip: Vegan-friendly white Provence is widely available because top estates skip animal fining; ask the estate to confirm the practice vintage by vintage.

Domaine Hauvette low-sulfite winemaking ★ 4.5

Biodynamic PracticingORGANIC CERTIFIEDNaturalAlpilles (Les Baux-de-Provence)

Dominique Hauvette works with minimal added sulfite across her range, with the Cornaline red and Roucas white bottled with no fining and only protective sulfite at bottling. The Alpilles reference for low-sulfite Mediterranean reds.

Tip: Low-sulfite reds travel less robustly than conventional bottles; buy from a temperature-controlled merchant and drink within a few years.

See every biodynamic & natural pick in Provence →

← Back to Biodynamic & Natural in Provence ← Provence wine guide