For years a Parisian literature scholar and, perhaps unsurprisingly, procuring a secondary education in wine via the formative natural wine bars of the early 2000s, Frédéric Agneray eventually made his way south to make wine, via a series of stints learning on the job, establishing La Grange du Nord as 3 hectares in the Gard, in 2014.
Finding an affinity with those growers opposing industrial agriculture and producing what he prefers to term ‘living wines’ whilst drinking in Paris, he left his then job as an a/v librarian for a TV sports channel in pursuit of his new passion, spending the best part of the next decade working and learning around the Loire, Northern Rhône and the Ardèche, with a stint of 5 years at Grange-aux-Belles in Anjou. Later, in 2017 Fred was able to grow the domaine to 10 hectares and was joined by his sister Delphine as their production more than doubled.
Sitting east, towards the Southern Rhône end of the Gard in Sabran, just west of Orange (and a short drive north from the iconic Tavel), the vines in many ways here enjoy an extension of the southern Ardèche terroir, with its limestone and clay soils and moderating mistral winds, whilst sitting at the intersection with the Languedoc and its balmy Mediterranean influence.