From a cluster of south-facing hillside vineyards above the Loire, Domaine Huet has been making the case for Chenin Blanc as one of the world's great white grapes for close to a century. Gaston Huet (widely regarded as the father of Vouvray) founded the domaine on the foundational philosophy of total devotion to terroir, to such an extent that it earned him the reputation of ‘méticuleux et maniaque’. Three single-vineyard sites — Le Haut Lieu, Clos du Bourg and Le Mont — each convey a different expression of Vouvray's chalky limestone soils. Le Haut Lieu, with its deep brown clay over tuffeau, delivers round, generous wines that open early and reward patience in equal measure. Clos du Bourg, the estate's crown jewel and a monopole, sits on barely a metre of topsoil over solid rock: the result is a wine of ferocious minerality and extraordinary longevity, arguably the finest white wine site in the Loire Valley. Le Mont, its soils threaded with green clay and flinty pebbles, produces Huet's most electrifyingly nervy, tightly wound wines — pure tension in a glass. Across the range, whether you're drawn to the brisk precision of a Sec, the tantalisingly almost-dry Demi-Sec, or the rare luscious Moelleux, the house style is unmistakable: purity, precision, and a mineral backbone that anchors everything. When young, these wines crackle with white flowers, citrus pith and smoky freshness. Given time, they evolve slowly and magnificently — honeyed, savoury, autumnal, and still very much alive. We have tasted bottles from the 1940s that remain in superb condition. Very few producers in the world can say that. Across all three sites, styles shift with the vintage — from bone-dry sec to luminous moelleux première trie — a reminder that at Huet, the season speaks as clearly as the soil.