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This is a Burgundy and Champagne house at heart, built on white and red Burgundy with serious bottlings from Domaine Leflaive, Domaine Roulot, and Domaine de la Romanee Conti, plus grower and grande marque Champagne from Bereche & Fils, Salon, and Krug. The list is deep at 484 wines, weighted toward red and white with a strong sparkling section, and it climbs to the top of the market with a Coche Dury Corton Charlemagne at $12,600 and several DRC bottlings near $8,000. That said, bottles start at $20 and the median sits around $245, so there is real range for guests who are not chasing trophies. The glass program is modest at 34 pours, so steer by the glass guests carefully and lean on the bottle list for anything specific. Beyond France it covers Piedmont Nebbiolo, Tuscan Sangiovese, Bordeaux Cabernet, and Napa names like Opus One and Screaming Eagle, so it rewards a guest who knows the classic regions and wants benchmark producers.