Sweet — late harvest / dessert wine
Sweet wine made from concentrated-sugar grapes — noble rot, late harvest, sun-drying, or vine-freezing. Sauternes is the global reference. Some examples age essentially indefinitely.
About Sweet wine
Sweet late-harvest wine is editorially one of fine wine’s most demanding production categories and one of its most age-worthy. The defining feature is achieving high residual sugar in the finished wine — done by concentrating grape sugars before fermentation, not by adding sugar. Four main methods exist: (1) noble rot, where Botrytis cinerea fungal infection in humid morning conditions concentrates sugars and adds complex aromatic compounds (Sauternes, Tokaji, German BA/TBA); (2) late-harvest extended ripening, where grapes are left on the vine well past normal harvest to dehydrate and concentrate sugars; (3) passito or sun-drying, where harvested grapes dry on mats or in rooms (Vin Santo, Recioto della Valpolicella, Pedro Ximénez); (4) Eiswein / ice wine, where grapes freeze on the vine and are pressed frozen to leave water as ice and extract concentrated juice (Germany + Canada). The most editorially significant category is Sauternes, where Château d’Yquem’s unique Premier Cru Supérieur status sits above the 1855 classification’s 27 other châteaux. Sauternes ages essentially indefinitely — 19th-century vintages remain drinkable; modern bottlings cellar 25-50+ years easily. The category also includes Tokaji Aszú (Hungary’s great sweet wine, with 5, 6, and Eszéncia tier hierarchy) and German Prädikat sweet wines (BA, TBA, Eiswein).
Production process
Principal producers
- Château d’Yquem
- Egon Müller (Auslese, BA, TBA)
- Royal Tokaji Wine Company
- Disznókő
Editorial notes
Sauternes ages essentially indefinitely; pairs classically with foie gras, blue cheese (Roquefort), or aged cheese — not just dessert. Tokaji Aszú tiers measured in puttonyos (3, 4, 5, 6; Eszéncia is the highest). German BA/TBA Rieslings can age 50+ years.