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Four-Pack · Cellar Collection · Virtual Pop-Up Shop 2026

The Long Game

For the collector who understands that the best things in life require waiting — and a dedicated shelf

Anyone can buy wine to drink tonight. This pack is for something rarer.

The particular pleasure of buying wine you won’t touch for years, knowing that somewhere in your cellar, time is doing the work for you. These four bottles span three countries, four decades of potential aging, and one very clear philosophy: great wine rewards patience in ways that almost nothing else does. Tuck them away. Forget about them. Find them again on an occasion worthy of the wait.

The Bottles

1

Olivier Hillaire 2010 Les Petites Pieds d’Armand Châteauneuf-du-Pape

Châteauneuf-du-Pape · Grenache · 2010 · Olivier Hillaire

The Southern Rhône at its most profound — and still evolving

Olivier Hillaire is one of Châteauneuf’s most quietly revered producers, and Les Petites Pieds d’Armand in the legendary 2010 vintage is a modern classic. Structured, profound, iron-fisted with a velvet interior — this wine has been building complexity for fifteen years and still has a decade ahead of it. Open it before then and you’ll enjoy it. Open it at the right moment and you’ll remember it forever. The 2010 Châteauneuf vintage is widely considered the finest of the modern era. This bottle agrees.

2

GAJA 2013 Darmagi Langhe Cabernet Sauvignon

Langhe · Cabernet Sauvignon · 2013 · Angelo Gaja · Piedmont

The Italian who plays by Bordeaux rules — and wins

When Angelo Gaja planted Cabernet Sauvignon in Piedmont in the 1970s, his father reportedly said “darmagi” — Piedmontese for “what a shame.” The name stuck. The wine became legendary. The 2013 Darmagi is a serious, structured Cabernet from one of Italy’s greatest producers — concentrated dark fruit, cedar, tobacco and a backbone that demands time. Piedmont’s terroir gives it something Napa and Bordeaux can’t quite replicate: a savory, almost Barolo-like earthiness beneath the Cabernet frame. Open it before 2028 and you’re doing it wrong.

3

Tenute Silvio Nardi 2018 Brunello di Montalcino

Brunello di Montalcino · Sangiovese Grosso · 2018 · Tuscany

Sangiovese at its most aristocratic — currently in a very deep sleep

Brunello di Montalcino doesn’t ask for your patience. It demands it. The 2018 vintage in Montalcino was exceptional — warm enough for full ripeness, cool enough for the acidity and structure that defines great Brunello. Silvio Nardi’s version is classically built — dried cherry, leather, iron and dried roses with tannins that are currently doing exactly what they should be doing: knitting themselves into something extraordinary. Minimum five years. Ideally ten. Absolutely worth it.

4

Quinta do Noval 2017 Vintage Port

Douro · Vintage Port · 2017 · Quinta do Noval

The closing argument for why cellars were invented

Port is the original long-game wine — and Quinta do Noval is one of the Douro’s most historic and celebrated estates. The 2017 vintage produced Ports of exceptional concentration and balance, and Noval’s version is a benchmark — dense, dark-fruited, layered with chocolate, dried fig and spice, with a sweetness that is currently all energy and no nuance. Give it a decade and watch that energy transform into something quietly magnificent. The ideal final bottle of the pack — and the ideal final bottle of any serious evening, years from now.

What’s included

Olivier Hillaire 2010 CdP Les Petites Pieds d’Armand
GAJA 2013 Darmagi Langhe Cabernet Sauvignon
Tenute Silvio Nardi 2018 Brunello di Montalcino
Quinta do Noval 2017 Vintage Port

Pick-up available Fri–Sun ·  Recommended drinking: 2028 and beyond

Four bottles. Three countries. One instruction: wait.

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