
£11.39
£15.19 per litre · incl. 20% VAT
In Stock
Want to know why everyone keeps talking about South African Chenin? Start here. This is bright, fruit-driven white from the cool, ocean-swept Darling district, all ripe yellow peach and crisp acidity, with a lovely lingering finish. Brilliant value, easy to love, and exactly the bottle you reach for when the sun finally shows up.
Not for sale to persons under 18. Adult signature required on delivery.
We're forever championing South African Chenin Blanc, and Arum Fields is one of those bottles that proves our point for us. For the money, it's hard to beat: properly ripe, properly fresh, and made with real care from old bush vines in cool, coastal Darling. We love it as a no-fuss house white, the one you can pour to anyone and watch them come back for a second glass. If you want to understand why the Cape does Chenin better than almost anywhere, this is a deliciously affordable place to begin.
There is real generosity here from the first sniff: ripe yellow peach, guava and white pear, with a twist of quince that keeps it from feeling simple. Three months resting on the lees lends a gently rounded, almost creamy texture that softens the edges. The palate stays bright though, with fresh, crisp acidity cutting through the tropical fruit and carrying it into a long, clean finish. No oak, no heaviness, just pure, lifted fruit and a lingering aftertaste that invites the next sip.
Soft, sun-warmed stone fruit leads the way, the kind of generous ripeness that makes this Chenin so easy to fall for.
Layers of tropical guava and crisp white pear give the wine its juicy, mouth-filling character without ever tipping into sweetness.
A streak of fragrant quince adds intrigue and structure, keeping the fruit focused rather than blowsy.
Fresh, zippy acidity from cool Atlantic breezes keeps everything bright and leaves the finish clean and long.
Here's a wine that quietly overdelivers. Darling sits right on South Africa's West Coast, just a few kilometres from the Atlantic, where cold sea breezes and morning fog sweep across the vineyards and keep everything fresh. That cool maritime edge is the secret behind Arum Fields: ripe fruit balanced by genuine zip, the kind of Chenin Blanc that tastes far more expensive than it is.
Expect ripe yellow peach and white pear up front, with quince and guava adding a subtle tropical lift. The palate is generous and rounded but never heavy, carried by a fresh, crisp acidity that keeps it dancing right through to a long, satisfying finish. There's no oak here. Instead, three months resting on its lees builds a gentle texture and depth that lifts it above the everyday.
The fruit comes from low-yielding, unirrigated bush vines rooted deep in Darling's granite soils, and you can taste that concentration. Pour it well chilled with fresh seafood, a plate of grilled prawns, or a lightly spiced chicken salad on a warm afternoon. It's the perfect Friday-evening white, equally happy at a summer barbecue or a relaxed dinner with friends.
We ship it to your door right across the UK. A thoughtful, easy gift for any Chenin fan, or a homesick South African who knows exactly what the Cape tastes like.
This is a natural with fresh seafood. Pour it alongside grilled prawns, pan-fried sea bass or a plate of fish and chips and the crisp acidity does the work of a squeeze of lemon. It also shines with lightly spiced chicken salads, where the tropical fruit echoes the mango or coriander on the plate. A lovely warm-evening white, perfect when the British summer finally shows up.
Well chilled but not icy. An hour in the fridge or twenty minutes in an ice bucket is ideal.
No need to decant. This is a fresh, unoaked white built for immediate pleasure, so simply chill, pour and enjoy the bright tropical fruit straight from the bottle.
A medium white wine glass concentrates the peach and guava aromatics while keeping every sip crisp and cool.
Darling owes its character to the Atlantic, just a few miles west. The cold Benguela Current pushes cooling afternoon winds and morning fog across the vineyards, keeping things several degrees cooler than the neighbouring Swartland. Hot days and cool nights let the fruit ripen fully while holding onto bright, natural acidity. The dryland bush vines crop low, digging deep into granite soils for moisture, and that concentration is exactly what you taste: ripe tropical fruit balanced by a fresh, crisp line that keeps everything lively.
Made for drinking young, while its tropical fruit and crisp acidity are at their freshest. There is no oak to carry it long-term, so enjoy it within a couple of years of release rather than tucking it away. Serve it well chilled and drink it for the joy of it.
The fruit comes from low-yielding, unirrigated bush vines planted on southwest-facing granite slopes. Those decomposed granite soils drain freely and hold little water, forcing the vines to root deep and crop modestly, which concentrates flavour. The southwest aspect catches the cool Atlantic air head-on, slowing ripening just enough to keep the acidity taut and the fruit precise.
Everything here is geared towards capturing pure, unadorned fruit. The grapes are hand harvested, then crushed and destemmed, with the juice handled reductively (shielded from oxygen) to lock in those bright peach and guava aromas. Fermentation runs slow and cool, around 14 to 15 degrees over a couple of weeks, preserving freshness. There is no oak to get in the way. Instead, the wine rests on its lees for about three months, a quiet trick that builds a little texture and roundness without ever masking the crisp, crackling acidity.
Le Domaine draws its fruit from vineyards scattered across the Western Cape, from coastal sites cooled by Atlantic breezes to warmer inland slopes, all planted between 50 and 300 metres above sea level. This broad sourcing is deliberate. By blending components from different microclimates, the cellar builds a consistent house style that balances the crisp acidity of cooler sites with the ripe generosity of warmer ones. It's the Western Cape's extraordinary diversity captured in a single glass.
Darling Cellars
Darling Cellars sits on the Cape West Coast, about seventy-five kilometres north of Cape Town, in a landscape that was dairy country long before anyone thought to plant vines. Founded in the mid-nineties as a privately owned cellar, it's run by a cooperative of around twenty shareholders farming roughly 1,300 hectares, a community venture in the truest sense. Nearly all their vineyards are unirrigated, with bush vines doing what they've always done: pushing roots deep into decomposed granite to find their own water. It's dry farming in its purest form, and it gives the wines a concentration and honesty that you simply can't manufacture. Under the direction of red wine specialist Pieter-Niel Rossouw, the cellar has built a quiet reputation for wines that overdeliver at every price point, genuine, terroir-driven, and refreshingly unpretentious.
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