Six bottles from one Alsace estate, chosen in the cellar

An Alsace wine case is six bottles from a single producer, composed by the estate as their own recommendation across the grapes and styles they know best. Browse cases from independent Alsace growers on Free Grape Society.

Riesling, Gewurztraminer and Pinot Gris grown on the slopes between the Vosges and the Rhine plain — each case the grower's own selection.

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Alsace

Alsace wine cases

Alsace is the only major French wine region that names its wines primarily by grape variety rather than by appellation, which means a label tells you what is in the glass before it tells you where. The grapes here — Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris, Muscat — thrive on the rain shadow cast by the Vosges mountains to the west, giving the region some of the driest growing conditions in France and wines with concentrated fruit and a distinctive aromatic profile.

Alsace wines

Each wine case in this section is six bottles from one Alsace producer, put together by the grower as a single recommendation rather than assembled from across the region. That keeps the case coherent: you are moving through one estate's range, seeing how the same producer handles Riesling on a sandy plain parcel against a Gewurztraminer from granite higher on the slope. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop.

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Alsace wineries

The producers listed here farm parcels across Alsace's long north-to-south strip, from the outskirts of Strasbourg down toward Mulhouse. Some hold parcels within the fifty-one Alsace Grand Cru sites; others work lower-elevation vineyards classified at village or regional level. The wines they compose for their cases reflect that range — a case might walk you through a single grape across several soil types, or pair a dry Riesling with a late-harvest Pinot Gris to show the breadth one estate can reach.

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Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and those reviews appear on the individual wine pages and on each expert's own profile. The experts listed here have reviewed wines from Alsace producers featured on this page. They do not select which producers are listed or compose the cases — that is the grower's own work.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order an Alsace wine case from Free Grape Society?

Choose a case from the listings below, add it to your order and complete checkout using Klarna or card. The six bottles are packed and shipped directly from the Alsace producer's own cellar, so you are buying exactly what the grower made. Delivery typically takes between four and fourteen days, with an average of around eight to nine days.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

What is included in an Alsace wine case?

Every wine case on Free Grape Society contains six bottles selected by a single producer as their own recommendation. For an Alsace case, that usually means a range of the estate's varieties — often a mix of Riesling, Pinot Gris, Gewurztraminer or other grapes the grower farms — drawn from their own parcels and vinified in their own cellar. The specific wines are listed on each case page.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I find the right Alsace wine case for me?

Each case page shows the six bottles included, the producer's location within Alsace, and the grape varieties covered. If you already know which variety you prefer — Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris — that is a practical starting point. If you are less certain, the independent expert reviews on each wine page give you a grounded read on what to expect before you order.

Can I find out more about the Alsace producer before ordering?

Yes. Each case links to the producer's full profile page, where you can read about the estate, the vineyards they farm, and the wines they make. Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and those reviews are visible on both the wine page and the expert's own profile, so you can read the track record before you buy.

Which Alsace wine expert can recommend something for me?

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society review wines they have personally tasted, including wines from Alsace. Their reviews appear on individual wine pages and on each expert's profile. Browse the expert profiles to find someone whose focus and tasting notes match what you are looking for, and you can reach out to them directly through the platform.

Why are Alsace wine cases always six bottles from one producer?

Because a case composed by one grower says something coherent about how that producer thinks. Six bottles from a single Alsace estate might trace the same grape across different parcels, or show how Riesling and Gewurztraminer read in the same hands. Mixing wines from several producers would lose that — you would end up with a sampler rather than a point of view. The six-bottle format is the producer's own recommendation, not a curated mix.

Can I buy Alsace wine cases in a normal wine shop?

Producer-composed wine cases shipped directly from an Alsace estate are not something most retail or online wine shops offer. Conventional distribution routes move wine through importers and warehouses, which adds cost and removes the direct relationship with the grower. On Free Grape Society, the producer packs and ships the case themselves, so the price reflects what the estate actually charges and the bottles travel without an intermediary in between.

What goes into an Alsace wine case

An Alsace wine case from Free Grape Society is six bottles from one producer, composed by the grower as their own recommendation across the varieties they farm. Alsace is unusual in France for labelling by grape rather than by appellation, which means a producer's six-bottle selection often reads as a tour of the region's main varieties — Riesling, Pinot Gris, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Blanc — and sometimes a sparkling Crémant d'Alsace alongside. Because the grower puts the case together themselves, the line-up reflects how that cellar thinks about its own range, not a generic sampler. The result is a more coherent tasting than buying six unrelated bottles: the wines share a house style, the same soils, the same vintage conditions. You can see further wine cases from France or compare with producer selections from Bordeaux and Champagne to get a sense of how different regions read across six bottles.

How Alsace producers compose their six bottles

Alsace sits on a narrow strip of land between the Vosges mountains and the Rhine, and the mountains do most of the work: they block Atlantic rain and leave the region one of the driest and sunniest in France, which means grapes ripen reliably and producers can work across a wide range of styles from dry to late-harvest sweet. A grower farming parcels in several villages might use their six-bottle case to show how the same grape — Riesling, say — reads differently on granite in the north versus clay-limestone further south. A smaller estate might walk you through the full spread of Alsatian varieties instead, using the case as an introduction to what the region grows. Because every case stays with one producer, the selection is always a statement of that grower's priorities, not an editorial choice made elsewhere. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the cases reflect that directly: the producer ships from their own cellar, and the composition is theirs. Browse all French wine cases or explore the individual Alsace wines and Alsace wineries behind them.

Getting to know Alsace through one grower

For a wine region as variety-focused as Alsace, a single-producer case is a practical way to build a picture of how one estate reads its own land before committing to a longer run of bottles. Alsace's grand cru vineyards — there are 51 of them, each named and mapped — are spread across villages along the Route des Vins, and individual growers often farm parcels in several of them. A case from one of those producers might trace the difference between a standard village wine and a grand cru parcel from the same grape, or it might span the range of varieties the estate is known for: the spice of Gewurztraminer, the mineral edge of a dry Riesling, the softer body of Pinot Gris. Wines tasted before listing means the bottles you receive have been assessed at source, and independent wine experts add their own ratings and reviews on the wine pages. You can also look at wine cases from other French regions, or explore red wines from France and white wines from France if you want to compare Alsace's style against the broader French range.