The St-Émilion vibe
Hilltop wine village above the Loire
Like St-Émilion, Sancerre centers entirely around its legendary wines, with tasting rooms and cellars built into medieval stone buildings. The compact village unfolds around wine culture - morning visits to family domaines, long lunches discussing terroir, and evening walks through vineyards that stretch to the horizon. Both places move to the rhythm of harvest seasons and offer that perfect balance of serious wine education and relaxed village life.
Dramatic clifftop town in Andalusia
Ronda shares St-Émilion's gift for making visitors slow down and savor. The old town unfolds along ancient stone streets perfect for meandering, with tapas bars and terraces that invite long, leisurely meals. Like St-Émilion's wine focus, Ronda revolves around local pleasures - olives, sherry, and traditional crafts - creating days that naturally flow from morning explorations to afternoon siestas to golden-hour strolls along the dramatic gorge.
Burgundy's historic wine capital
Beaune operates on the same wine-village wavelength as St-Émilion, where everything revolves around cellars, tastings, and harvest traditions. The medieval ramparts enclose a world of wine shops, cozy bistros, and centuries-old caves. Days unfold naturally around wine culture - morning visits to domaines, market shopping for local cheeses, and sunset walks through the surrounding Côte d'Or vineyards that define Burgundy.
Loire Valley's château wine town
Chinon captures that same medieval-meets-vineyard magic as St-Émilion, with ancient stone buildings housing wine caves and family bistros. The town flows between the Vienne River and hilltop château ruins, creating natural rhythms of riverside walks, castle explorations, and cellar visits. Like St-Émilion, it's built for slow discovery - morning markets, long lunches with local Cabernet Franc, and evening strolls through cobblestone streets that have hosted wine lovers for centuries.
Andean foothills wine capital
Though larger than St-Émilion, Mendoza's core operates on the same wine-centric daily rhythms. Mornings begin with vineyard visits and Malbec tastings, afternoons unfold over long parrilla lunches discussing terroir, and evenings bring sunset views of the Andes from winery terraces. The city's tree-lined streets and acequias create a relaxed pace that, like St-Émilion, naturally centers around wine culture and the seasons that govern it.
Discover places you don't know you love yet.