Château Pétrus
Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol
Pomerol
2012
Vintage
Varietal
Bordeaux Blend
ABV
Where it is, June 2026
At Peak: in the heart of its drinking window (2018-2048).
In 2026, this bottle sits at peak, within its strongest plateau through 2048. The key is not simply age, but how 7 tannin, 5 acidity, and 7 body now carries the original fruit and savory development from Pomerol. The drinking arc points from 2016 toward a peak range of 2018 to 2048, then a harder decline around 2060. For collectors, that means a bottle opened this year should be judged on integration: fruit should still be present, structure should be less angular, and the finish should show more detail than raw power. See the [Bordeaux cellar guide](/wines/region/bordeaux) and the [Bordeaux Blend hub](/wines/varietal/bordeaux-blend) for context, then compare a sibling page at [related wine](/wines/chateau-smith-haut-lafitte/les-hauts-de-smith/2023).
Related vintages
The ‘12 Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol.
2012 Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol from Château Pétrus: at peak, within its strongest plateau through 2048, led by 7 tannin, 5 acidity, and 7 body and a cellar profile worth tracking.
Drinking window
Tasting note
The recorded note for this wine gives the anchor: The 2012 Pétrus emerges from a vintage that rewarded patience - initially closed and reticent, it slowly yields a core of mulberry. In the glass, read it through concentration, aromatic clarity, and how the fruit now sits against savory detail. The nose should move from primary fruit toward spice, mineral tone, dried flower, tobacco, or forest floor depending on the site. On the palate, 7 tannin, 5 acidity, and 7 body sets the pace. Tannin should frame the middle without turning coarse, acidity should keep the wine lifted, and body should carry the finish without making it feel sweet. A strong bottle will gain detail with air: fruit remains present, secondary notes widen, and the final impression feels precise rather than heavy.
The 2012 vintage
The internal vintage record describes 2012 for Pomerol as Early-ripening Merlot favored in general over Left Bank Cabernet. Clay soils with good water retention kept vines going during August drought, while gravel easily drained off the later rains. Pomerol very solid; St.-Emilion more inconsistent with some wines prone to overextraction, a useful anchor for reading the wine's fruit density, acid line, and harvest balance against nearby years. For Château Pétrus Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol, that matters because Bordeaux Blend in Pomerol can look impressive while still needing enough acid and phenolic balance to age. This page avoids treating 2012 as a label-score shortcut. The better question is whether the season gave enough fruit depth for the wine's price tier while preserving the structure needed for the 2018 to 2048 peak window. Compared with adjacent vintages, read this bottle through harvest balance, not just ripeness, and give special attention to whether the finish stays fresh after the fruit opens.
About Château Pétrus
Château Pétrus is treated here through its site selection, cellar choices, and recurring house style rather than broad reputation language. For this 2012 Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol, the producer note matters because site and cellar choices decide whether price translates into complexity in the glass. The useful markers are specific: extraction level, oak integration, vineyard selection, and whether the finish feels shaped by place rather than by cellar polish. In a cellar, bottles from this producer deserve clean provenance, stable temperature, and enough tasting notes over time to decide whether future vintages should be bought, held, or opened earlier.
From the cellar: pair with
Herb-crusted lamb rack
The dish has enough protein and savory fat to meet 7 tannin while keeping the fruit profile focused.
Mushroom and thyme risotto
Earthy depth mirrors the wine's secondary notes, while 5 acidity keeps the pairing from feeling heavy.
Slow-braised short rib
Concentrated sauce and collagen match the 7 body, letting the finish stay broad without tasting sweet.
Service & cellaring
- Serving Temp
- 60-64F (16-18C)
- Decanting
- If opened in 2026, decant based on phase rather than ceremony. For a bottle at peak, within its strongest plateau through 2048, start with 60 to 90 minutes if the cork and fill look sound, then follow the aroma every 20 minutes. Younger examples can take two hours, while fragile mature bottles should be poured gently and watched closely.
- Cellar Storage
- 55F (13C), 60-70% humidity, bottle on its side.
The drinking window on this bottle is calculated with the Cellared Ageability Index (CAI) v1.0, a 10-factor model. Try the free drinking window calculator on any wine, or read when to drink wine for the practical signals.
More from Pomerol
Frequently Asked
When should I drink 2012 Château Pétrus Saute-Loup Reserve de la Famille Pomerol?
Drink it according to the 2016 to 2060 window, with the strongest target around 2018 to 2048. In 2026, it is at peak, within its strongest plateau through 2048, so the decision depends on bottle condition and whether you prefer fruit freshness or more tertiary development.
How long should I decant this wine?
Use a practical range rather than a fixed ritual. In 2026, begin with 60 to 90 minutes for a sound bottle, shorten that for fragile mature corks, and extend toward two hours if the first pour tastes tight, tannic, or aromatically closed.
What food works best with this bottle?
Choose food that respects 7 tannin, 5 acidity, and 7 body. Lamb, mushrooms, and slow-braised beef work because they give the tannin and body something to hold while allowing acidity, fruit, and savory notes to stay visible through the finish.
Should I keep cellaring it or open one now?
If you own multiple bottles, open one in 2026 to calibrate the curve, then hold the rest toward the peak range if the fruit and finish remain energetic. If you own one bottle, provenance should decide whether patience is worth the risk.