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De Bortoli Family Selection Sauvignon Blanc 75cl
AED 40.00 Original price was: AED 40.00.AED 30.00Current price is: AED 30.00.
Crisp, zippy, and straight-up refreshing, this Aussie Sauvignon Blanc is your grab-and-go white wine for weeknights, seafood nights, and “just one glass” nights. Think lime zest, passionfruit, and a little grassy snap, with bright acidity that keeps every sip clean. Easy to love, hard to overthink!
| Size | 75cl / 750ml |
|---|
Fresh, punchy, and seriously drinkable, this Australian Sauvignon Blanc is all about bright fruit and that clean, mouth-watering snap you want from a crisp white wine.
- Appearance: Pale straw with green flashes, clear and bright in the glass.
- Nose: Lime, grapefruit, passionfruit, and a fresh-cut herb vibe (think basil and grass).
- Taste: Citrus-driven and juicy up front, with lively acidity that keeps it tight and refreshing, then a little tropical fruit rolls in.
- Body: Light to medium-bodied, more “bright and brisk” than “rich and heavy.”
- Finish: Clean, zesty, and quick, it leaves a citrus peel aftertaste that makes you want another sip.
This is the kind of Sauvignon Blanc that earns its spot in your fridge because it works with real life. Spicy takeout, salty snacks, grilled chicken, prawns, sushi, a big salad with a punchy dressing, it keeps up and keeps things feeling fresh.
What makes it special is how direct it is. No weird sweetness, no heavy oak, no distractions. Just bright fruit, herbal lift, and that crisp acidity that makes white wine feel like a reset button.
If you’re building a little “reliable whites” lineup for hosting, this one’s a smart pick. It’s crowd-pleasing, but not boring, and it’s lively enough to wake up simple meals without stealing the whole show.
It also nails that classic Sauvignon Blanc character people come back for, citrus, tropical fruit, and a green, just-picked edge, without turning into a perfume bomb.
Fun Fact: De Bortoli is a family-run Australian wine name that started when an Italian immigrant, Vittorio De Bortoli, bought a small fruit block in the Yarra Valley back in 1928.