Notes on the Atibaia Red 2017

Lebanese Wines: Atibaia Red 2017

Name: Atibaia Red 2017
Type: Red Wine
Grapes: Cabernet Sauvignon, Petit Verdot, Syrah
Year: 2017
Country: Lebanon
Region: North Lebanon
Date Consumed: November 16, 2025

Atibaia Red 2017 opens with a soft nose. We get dried fruits, warm spices, and a touch of tobacco. On the palate, the wine is smooth and composed. It is medium-to-full bodied, and we get notes of wood and a gentle velvet texture. It’s balanced, almost refined, and undeniably enjoyable. I think I’d enjoy it even more if I were smoking a medium-bodied Dominican cigar…

But here’s the tension: The Atibaia Red 2017 is priced above its weight.

Lebanon has no shortage of excellent reds in this style, many offering more complexity and character at half the cost. The Atibaia Red is a good (almost great) wine, but it doesn’t fully justify the premium it asks for. It’s the kind of bottle you buy when you’re invited to lunch or dinner and want to show up with something polished to impress the host. It’s not the wine you casually uncork at home on a Wednesday (or even a Sunday) night without thinking twice.

Why the high price? Perhaps the winemaking leans heavily on tradition, or perhaps they’re targeting a specific niche. Whatever the reason, it raises the question more than it answers it.

Would I drink it again? Absolutely… but under the right circumstances. With its current price tag, it competes with dozens of Lebanese bottles that offer more depth, and frankly, better value.

The Atibaia Red 2017 is a lovely wine. A costly one. And one I’d revisit… occasionally.

Review of Chateau Khoury's Cuvee Ste Therese 2019

Lebanese Wines: Chateau Khoury Cuvee Ste Therese 2019

Name: Chateau Khoury Cuvee Ste Therese 2019
Type: Red Wine
Grapes: Caladoc, Pinot Noir
Year: 2019
Country: Lebanon
Region: Bekaa Valley
Date Consumed: November 12, 2025

I opened this bottle during a relaxed lunch with my wife. It turned out to be the kind of wine that makes you nod approvingly after every sip.

This is the second Chateau Khoury wine we’ve tried (so far). The first one was the Chateau Khoury Symphonie 2010. We liked both very much.

The nose of the Cuvee Ste Therese offers bright notes of red fruits and friendly, agreeable spices. It feels open and lively, and it slides invitingly into the glass.

On the palate, the wine is dry and medium-bodied, The tannins are there, but they’re amicable. And a gentle thread of oak runs through it. The taste is fresh, frank, and unpretentious.

It is what it is: a good wine elevating a weekday lunch.

I’d gladly revisit this one…

I’d want to drink more of it next summer, probably chilled.

Review of the Lebanese Wine called Chateau Khoury Symphonie

Lebanese Wines: Chateau Khoury Symphonie 2010

Name: Chateau Khoury Symphonie 2010
Type: Red Wine
Grapes: Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Syrah
Year: 2010
Country: Lebanon
Region: Bekaa Valley
Date Consumed: November 8, 2025

I uncorked the bottle during a casual family dinner. This was my first time trying anything by Chateau Khoury, and their Chateau Symphonie 2010 turned out to be a wine worth returning to.

It’s the kind of bottle that wins you over slowly. The first sip is nice, but the second and third sips are much nicer. The Chateau Symphonie is very approachable yet expressive, it is refined without being showy…

The palate is smooth, with medium acidity and matured, well-integrated tannins, and its name really suits its spirit as it offers a symphony of notes, including ripe red fruits and black cherries, and subtle touches of cocoa and oak.