Louis-Antoine Luyt | Cauquenes, Maule Valley, Chile • Natural Wine • Pipeño • País • Carignan • Cinsault • Torontel • Corinto • Muscat • Dry-Farmed • Ungrafted • 200-300 Year Old Vines • Founded 2006 • Clos Ouvert • Saint-Malo • Brittany • Beaujolais Method • No Sulphites • Zaranda • Lagar • Pipas
Louis-Antoine Luyt | Cauquenes, Maule Valley, Chile • Natural Wine • Pipeño • País • Carignan • Cinsault • Torontel • Corinto • Muscat • Dry-Farmed • Ungrafted • 200-300 Year Old Vines • Founded 2006 • Clos Ouvert • Saint-Malo • Brittany • Beaujolais Method • No Sulphites • Zaranda • Lagar • Pipas

The Breton, the 300-Year Vine & the Pipeño Hand

Louis-Antoine Luyt is a Breton vine archaeologist who crossed the Atlantic at age 22 and never truly returned. Based in Cauquenes, deep in Chile's Maule Valley, he has spent nearly two decades rescuing the ancient País vineyards that the industrial wine machine tried to erase. Working with dry-farmed, ungrafted bushvines between 200 and 300 years old — the oldest living vineyards he had ever seen — he crafts pipeño in the most traditional Chilean manner, infused with the Beaujolais wisdom of his mentor Marcel Lapierre. When the 2010 earthquake trapped him under rubble for fifteen minutes, he emerged with a vow: no more sulphites. What followed was a portfolio of pure, fluid, zero-added-sulphur wines that proved what landowners had told him was impossible — that País, the derided Mission grape, could produce wines of genuine finesse and terroir transparency. His labels are inspired by Santiago bus advertisements. His bottles are often one-litre. And his mission is singular: to save the old vineyards before the bulldozers arrive.

2006
Founded
300
Years Max
1L
Bottle
Louis-Antoine Luyt • Maule • Cauquenes • País • Pipeño • Natural Wine • 300-Year Vines • Dry-Farmed • Ungrafted • Saint-Malo • Brittany • Beaujolais • Zero Sulphur • Zaranda • Lagar • Pipas

The Saint-Malo Boy, the Lapierre Harvest & the Earthquake Vow

The story of Louis-Antoine Luyt begins in Saint-Malo, the Breton coastal fortress city, where he was born into a world far from the granitic hills of southern Chile. At 22 years old, tired of life in France and seeking adventure, he planned a three-month trip to South America to improve his Spanish. He arrived in Chile in July 1998, found work in a local restaurant, worked his way up to wine buyer, and was introduced to Hector Vergara, a South American Master of Wine about to open a sommelier school in Santiago. Louis-Antoine became one of his first students — and what he discovered in those classes shocked him. Despite the extraordinary diversity of climates and terroirs he had seen travelling through Chile, the wines in his school glasses were homogeneous, industrial, and largely anonymous. The ancient rural traditions he had glimpsed in the countryside seemed to have no connection to what was in the bottle.

Determined to learn how to bridge that gap, Louis-Antoine returned to France and enrolled in viticulture and oenology studies in Beaune. There, he met Matthieu Lapierre and spent five consecutive harvests working at Domaine Marcel Lapierre in Villié-Morgon — the beating heart of the natural Beaujolais movement. He also gained formative experience alongside Philippe Pacalet. The Lapierre philosophy — respect for the land, nature, tradition, minimal intervention, and breaking away from the conventional — became the blueprint for his life. In 2006, with the support of his cousin Matthieu de Genevraye, he returned to Chile for good and founded Clos Ouvert in Cauquenes, 400 kilometres south of Santiago.

The turning point came on 27 February 2010. When the devastating earthquake struck Maule, killing 521 people, Louis-Antoine was trapped under rubble for fifteen long minutes. In that horrible quarter-hour, he made a decision: he would stop using sulphites in his wines entirely. The will to survive, and the international solidarity that followed, led to a new chapter. Clos Ouvert ceased trading, and Louis-Antoine refocused entirely on quality natural wines from País and heritage varieties — creating the Pipeño and Pais et Huasa lines that would redefine Chilean natural wine. He taught the local farmers the Beaujolais method; they taught him the ancient Chilean way of vinification. To this day, they make wines in both manners — a dialogue between Brittany and Maule, between carbonic maceration and the zaranda.

"I was told it was impossible to make good wine out of País. And I shouldn't even think about being able to sell them. My thought was: challenge accepted…"

— Louis-Antoine Luyt

Maule, Cauquenes & the Granitic Hand

The Maule Valley is the historical heartland of Chilean wine — a vast, diverse region 400 kilometres south of Santiago where Spanish missionaries first planted vines in the 16th century, and where the modern industrial wine boom largely passed by. For Louis-Antoine, this was not a backwater but a treasure trove. He settled in Cauquenes, a town in the dry interior of Maule, and began travelling the countryside talking to landowners. They told him they had never produced wine for themselves — they could not compete with cooperative prices, so they were obliged to sell their grapes for anonymous bulk production. The more he learned, the more dedicated he became to fighting for independent viticulture and protecting the old vineyards from being torn out.

Louis-Antoine farms and sources from multiple parcels across Maule and into the Bío-Bío, working with a network of smallholder farmers who have kept their ancestral vines alive despite decades of pressure. The vineyards are dry-farmed, ungrafted, and bush-trained — many of them 200 to 300 years old for País, and over 100 years old for white varieties like Torontel, Corinto (Chasselas), Cristalina (Semillon), and Muscat d'Alexandria. The soils are extraordinarily complex: sandy decomposed granite, red iron clay, quartz, schist, and marble. Because phylloxera never reached Chile, these vines are franc de pied — rooted directly in their native soil, carrying centuries of uninterrupted microbial memory. Many parcels are worked by horse. Nothing is irrigated. The yields are microscopic, the labour is punishing, and the fruit is concentrated with an intensity that only centuries of struggle can produce.

The direct grower partnerships are the moral foundation of the project. Louis-Antoine pays premium prices for parcel-specific fruit, markets each vineyard by name, and has helped transform the rural economy of communities like Coronel del Maule, Carrizal, Sauzal, Empedrado, and Pilen Alto. Before the artisan revival, these growers sold their centuries-old fruit to volume producers for prices that barely covered costs. Many were pulling vines to plant commodity crops or eucalyptus. The relationships established by Louis-Antoine — collaborations fuelled by curiosity and excitement — have saved an unknown but substantial number of ancient vineyard parcels and stabilised farming families who had no other market for their heritage fruit.

Cauquenes — The Dry Interior

Cauquenes is the town where Louis-Antoine built his cellar and his life — a working agricultural community in the dry interior of the Maule Valley, 400 kilometres south of Santiago. It is not a wine tourism destination; it is a place where farmers have tended the same País vines for generations, passing knowledge from father to son without textbooks or enology degrees. The climate is warm and dry, with significant diurnal shift, and the soils are a patchwork of granite, clay, and quartz. For Louis-Antoine, Cauquenes is the centre of his universe — the place where he returned from Beaujolais to apply the Lapierre philosophy to the oldest vines he had ever seen. The town is surrounded by the polyculture vineyards of farmers like Sergio Perez, who has farmed the same dry-farmed parcels for over seventy years.

Coronel del Maule — The Ancient Heart

Coronel del Maule is the source of Louis-Antoine's most iconic Pipeño País — from vines planted 200 to 300 years ago by smallholder farmers on iron-rich clay soils punctuated by quartz and granite. Sergio Perez has farmed this polyculture for over seven decades, never using chemicals, never irrigating, tending the same gnarled bushvines that his ancestors planted. The grapes are hand-destemmed using the traditional zaranda method and fermented in open-top lagares. This is not a single estate but a living agricultural community where the vine is older than the nation of Chile itself. For Louis-Antoine, Coronel del Maule represents the soul of the project: the proof that País from ancient, dry-farmed vines can achieve a transparency and finesse that rivals any noble variety in the world.

Pilen Alto — The Mountain Escape

Pilen Alto is a hidden mountain valley 30 kilometres from the coast, elevated to 580 metres above sea level and tucked into a cooler microclimate that escapes the drought pressure of the valley floor. The País vines here are between 200 and 300 years old, planted on a mixture of red clay, granite, and schist. The site is farmed by Margarita Flore and Lionel Diaz, two of the smallholder partners who have become central to the Pais et Huasa line. The cooler temperatures result in lower alcohol levels, higher acidity, and a more delicate, floral expression of País than the warmer interior sites. For Louis-Antoine, Pilen Alto is the terroir expression that most closely recalls the elegance of Morgon — a Burgundian soul in a Chilean mountain valley.

Dry-Farmed & Ungrafted — The Ancient Covenant

Louis-Antoine's viticulture is a direct continuation of methods practised in Chile for over 400 years. The vines are dry-farmed — no irrigation, ever. They are ungrafted — phylloxera never reached Chile, so the vines root directly into their native soil without American rootstock. They are bush-trained — head-trained gobelet style, forming low, gnarled bushes that resist wind and require no trellising. And they are farmed organically by tradition — the old farmers never used chemicals, and Louis-Antoine continues this practice, managing the vineyards with compost, bio-fertilisers, manual labour, and in some cases, horse traction. The yields are tiny, the work is backbreaking, and the results are extraordinary: fruit that carries the concentrated essence of centuries of adaptation to granitic soil, dry climate, and human care. This is viticulture as time capsule — and as moral act.

Pipeño, Beaujolais & the Zaranda Hand

Louis-Antoine Luyt's winemaking philosophy is built on two parallel traditions that speak to each other across the Atlantic: the pipeño method of ancient Chile, and the natural Beaujolais method of Marcel Lapierre. Etymologically, pipeño refers to wine stored in a pipa — a very large ageing vessel made of native Raulí beech wood. Culturally, it means wine of and for the people, made rustically from traditional Spanish cultivars using methods that have barely changed since the colonial era. Louis-Antoine embraced this tradition not as a museum piece but as a living practice — one that produces wines of extraordinary honesty when combined with his exacting attention to vineyard health, harvest timing, and the Beaujolais techniques of carbonic and semi-carbonic maceration.

The cellar in Cauquenes is deliberately low-tech and non-industrial. There is no temperature control. The process begins with the zaranda — a traditional hand-destemming method where grapes are trampled and removed from their clusters manually over a woven screen. The must is then fermented in open-top wooden vats (lagares) made of Raulí wood. There are no pump-overs. The cap is managed by foot-stomping and gentle manual pressing. For some cuvées, Louis-Antoine applies whole-cluster and semi-carbonic maceration — the Beaujolais method he learned at Lapierre — to push the aromatic profile of País into new territory. Once fermentation completes, the wine is gravity-fed into Raulí pipas for ageing. Fermentation is driven entirely by indigenous yeasts. Since the 2010 earthquake, no sulphites are added across the range. And the wines are bottled unfined and unfiltered, often in one-litre bottles — the traditional format of pipeño — carrying their sediment, their haze, and their microbial memory from vineyard to glass.

What emerges is a portfolio that is light, fluid, and profoundly site-specific. The Pipeño País is rustic, honest, and crushable — light red fruit, earthy minerality, and a balsamic finish at 12.5% alcohol. The Pipeño Blanco is textural, aromatic, and complex — a field blend of Torontel, Corinto, Cristalina, and Muscat with waxy lemon, orange blossom, and a subtle phenolic grip from skin contact. The Pais de Quenehuao is deep, structured, and terroir-driven — a single-vineyard expression from 300-year-old vines that proves País can age. The El Mismo País is fresh, exuberant, and nouveau-style — carbonic maceration bringing out the grape's joyful, strawberry-scented side. And the Pet-Nat captures the wild energy of spontaneous fermentation in a bottle. This is winemaking for truth, tradition, and the rescue of a culture that industrial Chile tried to forget.

Pipeño, Beaujolais & the Zero-Sulphur Covenant

The guiding principle of Louis-Antoine's cellar is that the wine has already been made by the vine — the winemaker's job is to protect it from modernity and chemistry. The ancient, dry-farmed, ungrafted vines provide healthy, complex grapes with indigenous yeast populations that have evolved on the fruit for centuries. The zaranda hand-destemming ensures gentle extraction. The open-top Raulí lagares allow for natural temperature regulation and oxygen exchange. The foot-stomping replaces mechanical extraction with human touch. The gravity-fed transfer to Raulí pipas preserves the wine's delicate structure. The indigenous yeast captures the microbial soul of the Maule Valley. The zero-added-sulphur philosophy — born in the rubble of the 2010 earthquake — preserves the wine's living, evolving character. And the unfined, unfiltered bottling, often in one-litre format, keeps the texture, the phenolics, and the ancient memory intact. The cellar is not a factory but a farmhouse — where a Breton exile applies the lessons of Beaujolais to the oldest vines in the Americas.

Pipeño País, Pais de Quenehuao, Huasa de Pilen Alto & the Breton Hand

The Louis-Antoine Luyt portfolio is a constantly evolving map of southern Chile's ancient vineyards — each wine named for a specific parcel or farmer, each bottle a document of terroir that has been farmed for centuries. The wines span single-vineyard País, traditional pipeño, heritage white field blends, Beaujolais-style carbonic reds, and ancestral-method sparkling — all united by native yeast, zero added sulphur (post-2010), unfined and unfiltered bottling, and a deep respect for the farmer. Production is small and highly allocated — individual bottlings often yield only a few thousand litres, and many cuvées are released in one-litre bottles, the traditional format of pipeño. The portfolio is divided into four main lines: the eponymous Louis-Antoine Luyt range (varietal wines with labels inspired by Santiago bus ads); Pipeño (the most traditional Chilean method, often in 1L); Pais et Huasa (single-vineyard País expressions following the European model of same grape, different terroirs); and Clos Ouvert (blended wines, more varietal in character, with País as a base).

"Pipeño País" — País (Red)
100% País • Coronel del Maule, Maule Valley • 200-300 Year Old Dry-Farmed Bush-Vines • Zaranda Hand-Destemmed • Native Fermentation in Open Raulí Lagares • Gravity-Fed to Pipas • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered • 1L Bottle
País / Maule
The flagship and the project's most direct expression of ancient Maule — Pipeño País comes from 200 to 300 year old dry-farmed, own-rooted vines farmed by Sergio Perez in Coronel del Maule. The iron-rich clays are punctuated by quartz and granite. Grapes are hand-destemmed using the traditional zaranda method, then fermented in open-top lagares for two weeks before being racked into traditional Raulí pipas for a brief élevage. The wine is bottled unfined and unfiltered with zero added sulphur. In the glass, a light, hazy ruby. The nose is rustic and immediate — fresh cherry, cranberry, damp earth, and a subtle balsamic note. On the palate, light-bodied with soft tannins, vibrant acidity, and a clean, mineral, slightly savoury finish. At 12.5% alcohol, this is pipeño as the farmers have made it for centuries — for pairing with empanadas, charcuterie, and afternoons of honest pleasure. The 1L bottle is the traditional format. A wine of cherry, earth, and the Coronel del Maule truth.
País
"Pipeño Blanco" — Torontel / Corinto / Cristalina / Muscat (White/Orange)
Torontel • Corinto (Chasselas) • Cristalina (Semillon) • Muscat d'Alexandria • Maule Valley • 100-200 Year Old Vines • Zaranda Hand-Destemmed • Skin Fermentation in Open Raulí Vats • Gravity-Fed to Pipas • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered • 1L Bottle
Field Blend / Maule
The white soul and the project's most textural, most aromatic expression — Pipeño Blanco is a field blend of heritage white varieties from 100 to 200 year old dry-farmed vines planted in sandy decomposed granite and clay with lots of quartz. The grapes are hand-destemmed using the zaranda, then fermented on skins for up to three weeks in open-top wooden vats with punchdowns. As they have no press, the free run is bled off into pipas for a short élevage. Bottled unfined and unfiltered with zero added sulphur. In the glass, a hazy, luminous gold with natural sediment. The nose is complex and waxy — lemon, orange blossom, honeysuckle, and a subtle tannic note from the skin contact. On the palate, medium-bodied with a grippy, phenolic texture, vibrant acidity, and a long, savoury, mineral finish. At 12.0% alcohol, this is white wine as ancient tradition — for pairing with ceviche, aged cheeses, and evenings of textural discovery. A wine of lemon, wax, and the Maule truth. The 1L bottle.
Orange
"Pais de Quenehuao" — País (Red)
100% País • Between Sauzal & Empedrado, Maule Valley • 300-Year Old Vines • Semi-Carbonic & Aerobic Fermentation in Tank • Aged in Neutral Vessels • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
País / Maule
The deep terroir expression and the project's most structured, most age-worthy País — Pais de Quenehuao comes from 300-year-old vines located between the towns of Sauzal and Empedrado. The goal here is to celebrate specificity of site: soils are a mixture of granite and clay, and the grapes are fermented semi-carbonic in tank before being fully crushed to finish aerobic fermentation. Aged in neutral vessels. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a medium ruby with natural haze. The nose is complex and layered — dark cherry, plum, dried herbs, and a distinct mineral note. On the palate, medium-bodied with fine, rustic tannins, vibrant acidity, and a long, savoury, earthy finish. At 14.5% alcohol, this is País as grand cru — for pairing with grilled meats, stews, and evenings of historical weight. A wine of plum, earth, and the Quenehuao truth. Extremely limited.
País
"Huasa de Pilen Alto" — País (Red)
100% País • Pilen Alto, Coastal Mountain Valley, 580m • Margarita Flore & Lionel Diaz • 200-300 Year Old Vines • Red Clay, Granite & Schist • Zaranda Hand-Destemmed • Fermented in Lagares • Aged in Tank & Barrel • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
País / Maule
The altitude expression and the project's most elegant, most floral País — Huasa de Pilen Alto comes from two adjacent sites farmed by Margarita Flore and Lionel Diaz in a hidden mountain valley 30 kilometres from the coast, elevated to 580 metres. The cooler climate results in lower alcohol and less drought pressure than the valley floor. The País vines are 200 to 300 years old, planted on red clay, granite, and schist. Grapes are hand-destemmed using the zaranda, fermented in lagares, and aged in a combination of tank and barrel. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a pale ruby with natural clarity. The nose is lifted and floral — wild strawberry, red currant, violet, and a subtle mineral note. On the palate, light-bodied with crunchy red fruit, vibrant acidity, and a clean, mineral, refreshing finish. At 13.2% alcohol, this is País as Alpine expression — for pairing with herb-crusted goat cheese, roasted peppers, and evenings of high-altitude pleasure. A wine of strawberry, violet, and the Pilen Alto truth.
País
"El Mismo País" — País (Red)
100% País • Maule Valley • 200+ Year Old Dry-Farmed Vines • Whole-Cluster & Destemmed Carbonic Maceration • 8-Day Fermentation • Aged in Stainless Steel • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
País / Maule
The nouveau rebel and the project's most playful, most Beaujolais-inspired expression — El Mismo País is Louis-Antoine's answer to Beaujolais Nouveau, made from 200+ year old dry-farmed País vines on sandy decomposed granite soils. The grapes are fermented as a combination of whole-cluster and destemmed carbonic maceration for eight days before being pressed off into stainless steel for élevage. Bottled unfined and unfiltered without SO2. In the glass, a light, brilliant ruby. The nose is exuberant and fresh — strawberry, raspberry, banana, and a subtle yeasty note. On the palate, light-bodied with crunchy fruit, bright acidity, and a clean, juicy, gulpable finish. At 11.5% alcohol, this is País as party wine — for pairing with charcuterie, young cheeses, and afternoons of uncomplicated joy. The name "El Mismo" means "the same" — the same grape, the same vines, but a completely different face. A wine of strawberry, bubblegum, and the carbonic truth.
País
"Red Pif" — País / Pinot Noir / Carignan / Merlot / Syrah (Red)
48% País • 23% Pinot Noir • 17% Carignan • 9% Merlot • 2% Syrah • Maule Valley • Native Fermentation • Aged in Neutral Vessels • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
Red Blend / Maule
The playful blend and the project's most cosmopolitan red — Red Pif is a field blend that brings together País, Pinot Noir, Carignan, Merlot, and Syrah from old vines across the Maule Valley. Native-fermented and aged in neutral vessels. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a medium ruby with natural haze. The nose is complex and fruity — red cherry, blackberry, and a subtle spice note from the Carignan and Syrah. On the palate, medium-bodied with soft tannins, vibrant acidity, and a long, fruity, mineral finish. This is red wine as Breton-Chilean collaboration — for pairing with grilled meats, ratatouille, and evenings of layered pleasure. The name "Pif" evokes the playful, unpretentious character of the wine. A wine of berry, spice, and the Red Pif truth. Limited production.
Blend
"Pipeño Carrizal" — País (Red)
100% País • Carrizal, Maule Valley • Old Vines • Traditional Pipeño Method • Zaranda Hand-Destemmed • Open Fermentation in Raulí Lagares • Gravity-Fed to Pipas • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
País / Maule
The Carrizal expression and the project's most direct, most traditional pipeño — Pipeño Carrizal comes from old País vines in the Carrizal area of Maule, farmed by smallholder partners in the purest tradition. The grapes are hand-destemmed over the zaranda, fermented in open Raulí lagares, and gravity-fed into pipas. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a light ruby with natural haze. The nose is simple and beautiful — red cherry, wild strawberry, and a subtle earthy note. On the palate, light-bodied with soft tannins, bright acidity, and a clean, refreshing finish that invites another glass. This is pipeño as daily wine — for pairing with simple country preparations, grilled sausages, and afternoons of uncomplicated pleasure. A wine of cherry, earth, and the Carrizal truth. Limited production.
País
"Tinto Chileno" — País / Carignan / Cinsault / Cabernet / Syrah (Red)
País • Carignan • Cinsault • Cabernet Sauvignon • Syrah • Maule Valley • Old Vines • Native Fermentation • Aged in Tank & Barrel • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
Red Blend / Maule
The classic blend and the project's most structured, most complex red — Tinto Chileno is a traditional Chilean assemblage that captures the synergy between País and the French varieties that arrived later. Native-fermented and aged in a combination of tank and barrel. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a medium ruby with natural haze. The nose is complex and layered — red cherry, blackberry, dried herbs, and a subtle earthy note. On the palate, medium-bodied with fine tannins, vibrant acidity, and a long, savoury, mineral finish. This is red wine as Chilean tradition — for pairing with grilled meats, aged cheeses, and evenings of layered pleasure. A wine of berry, herb, and the Tinto Chileno truth. Limited production.
Blend
"Pet-Nat" — 100% País (Sparkling)
100% País • 200-Year Old Vines • Sand & Clay Soils • Direct Press • Stainless Steel Fermentation • Bottled with 12 g/L Residual Sugar • Méthode Ancestrale • Natural CO2 • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfiltered
Pét-Nat / Maule
The wild fizz and the project's most playful, most effervescent expression — the Pet-Nat is made from 200-year-old País vines planted on sand and clay. The grapes are direct-pressed to stainless steel tank for fermentation, then lightly filtered and bottled while there is still 12 grams per litre of sugar in the must. Fermentation finishes in bottle, resulting in a lightly sparkling rosé. Zero added sulphur, unfiltered. In the glass, a hazy, luminous pale pink with a vigorous, natural bead. The nose is exuberant and fresh — citrus, red berry, and a subtle yeasty note. On the palate, light-bodied with crisp acidity, a gentle tannic grip, and a clean, mineral, refreshing finish. At 10% alcohol, this is pét-nat as Chilean joy — for pairing with aperitivo nibbles, citrus-cured fish, and afternoons of effervescent pleasure. A wine of citrus, bubble, and the ancestral truth. Limited production.
Pét-Nat
"Gorda Blanca" — Moscatel / Torontel / Corinto / Semillon (White)
Moscatel • Torontel • Corinto (Chasselas) • Semillon • Guarilihue, Bío-Bío Valley • 250+ Year Old Vines • 4-Day Skin Fermentation • Aged in Stainless Steel • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
Field Blend / Bío-Bío
The Bío-Bío expression and the project's most aromatic, most southerly white — Gorda Blanca is made from a blend of Moscatel, Torontel, Corinto, and Semillon from 250+ year old vines in Guarilihue, Bío-Bío Valley. The grapes were fermented on skin for four days before being pressed off into stainless steel. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a hazy, luminous gold. The nose is intoxicating — orange blossom, lychee, apricot, and a subtle tannic note. On the palate, medium-bodied with a grippy, phenolic texture, vibrant acidity, and a long, savoury, mineral finish. This is white wine as southern rebellion — for pairing with Middle Eastern mezze, aged cheeses, and evenings of aromatic discovery. A wine of lychee, tannin, and the Guarilihue truth. Limited production.
Orange
"Blanco Chileno" — Gamay Blanc / Muscat (White)
Gamay Blanc • Muscat • Maule Valley • Native Fermentation • Aged in Neutral Vessels • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
White Blend / Maule
The Breton-Chilean bridge and the project's most unique white — Blanco Chileno is an assemblage of Gamay Blanc and Muscat, bringing a touch of Burgundian variety to the Maule Valley. Native-fermented and aged in neutral vessels. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a pale, luminous gold with natural haze. The nose is floral and citrus-driven — white flowers, lemon, and a subtle muscat spice. On the palate, light to medium-bodied with crisp acidity, a silky texture, and a clean, mineral, refreshing finish. This is white wine as Franco-Chilean dialogue — for pairing with shellfish, fresh goat cheese, and afternoons of cross-cultural pleasure. A wine of lemon, flower, and the Blanco Chileno truth. Limited production.
White
"Clos Ouvert — Primavera / Otoño" — País / Carignan / Cinsault / Cabernet / Syrah (Red)
~35% País • ~35% Carignan • 15% Cinsault • 10% Cabernet Sauvignon • 5% Syrah-Merlot • Vines 200+ Years • Aged in Tank & Barrel • Zero Added Sulphur • Unfined & Unfiltered
Red Blend / Maule
The original project and the estate's most blended, most varietal expression — the Clos Ouvert line (vintages Primavera, Otoño, and others) represents Louis-Antoine's earliest vision: blended wines with País as a base, augmented by Carignan, Cinsault, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Syrah. The vines are over 200 years old. Aged in a combination of tank and barrel. Zero added sulphur, unfined, unfiltered. In the glass, a medium ruby with natural haze. The nose is complex and layered — red and black fruit, dried herbs, and a subtle earthy note. On the palate, medium to full-bodied with fine tannins, vibrant acidity, and a long, savoury, mineral finish. This is red wine as the original Clos Ouvert vision — for pairing with hearty stews, grilled meats, and evenings of historical pleasure. A wine of berry, herb, and the Clos Ouvert truth. Limited production.
Blend

The Vine Archaeologist, the 300-Year Vine & the Pipeño Hand

Louis-Antoine Luyt is not merely a winemaker; he is a translator and an archaeologist — the Frenchman who taught Chile to see its own oldest vines as treasures rather than embarrassments. In an era when Chilean wine was defined by industrial Cabernet Sauvignon, anonymous bulk production, and the systematic erasure of indigenous traditions, Louis-Antoine demonstrated that the most profound wines sometimes come from a 300-year-old País vine on a granitic hillside, hand-destemmed over a zaranda by a farmer who has never used a pump. It is largely thanks to him that the dry-farmed valleys of Maule and their signature grape variety, País, now get a proper mention in the global natural wine conversation. The same pipeño tradition that industrial Chile dismissed as peasant wine has become, through his work, one of the most authentic and sought-after expressions of the Americas.

The legacy of Louis-Antoine Luyt is the legacy of the rescuer hand in Chilean viticulture. He is not a typical winemaker: he did not inherit a large estate, he did not chase critic points with over-extracted reds, and he did not build his brand on tasting-room tourism. He is a Breton exile who arrived at age 22, studied with Marcel Lapierre, and spent a decade building direct relationships with smallholder growers who were on the verge of pulling their 300-year-old vines. His completion of the Beaujolais apprenticeship was not a credential but a confirmation — proof that the methods he had learned from the old farmers of Maule were not primitive but profound. The 2010 earthquake was not a tragedy but a rebirth — the moment he committed to zero sulphur and absolute purity.

The future of the project is tied to the future of heritage viticulture in the Americas — to the growing recognition that the best wines come not from the most famous appellations but from the most committed guardians of ancient vines. As the Pipeño País continues to introduce new generations to the honesty of old-vine Chilean wine, as the Pais de Quenehuao proves that País can be a wine of genuine structure and ageing potential, as the Huasa de Pilen Alto demonstrates the Alpine elegance of coastal mountain País, and as the El Mismo País brings the joy of carbonic Beaujolais to the New World, Louis-Antoine Luyt remains what he has always intended to be: a Breton farmer in the Maule Valley — structured not by marketing or technology but by 300-year-old vines, Raulí wood, indigenous yeast, zero sulphur, and the eternal reminder that the story of País is the story of the soul of Chilean wine, and that a Frenchman from Saint-Malo is communicating that story with a courage and purity that few can match. The story of this winery is the story of a 22-year-old who crossed an ocean and found a life's mission in the oldest vineyards he had ever seen.

"Adventurous and determined, Louis-Antoine is another in a long line of purebred, trailblazing Breton exiles."

— Cave Pur Jus, Natural Wine Importer