Wine cases built by the grower: six bottles, one cellar, from France to Sicily

Each box is six bottles chosen by the producer who made them, a way into one grower's range without second-guessing the label. The boxes below are sorted by producer and country.

A Piedmont producer might take you from Barbera to Nebbiolo; a Bordeaux estate from Merlot to Petit Verdot, all in one box.

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Italy
Sicilia

Wine Cases

Each wine case here, what we call a mixbox, is six bottles from a single producer, composed by that grower as their own recommendation, never mixed across cellars. It is the shortest way into one estate's range. A southern Rhône producer might take you through Grenache, Syrah and Mourvèdre in a single box, while an Alsace grower might move between Riesling and Pinot Gris. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, so the case is a winemaker's own pick rather than a retailer's shelf.

Wines

The producers shipping cases through Free Grape Society range from long-established Bordeaux châteaux to small natural-wine growers in Languedoc-Roussillon, family estates in Tuscany and Piedmont, and independent growers in Burgenland and Champagne. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between. You pay the producer's own price, and the case arrives from the same address where the wine was made.

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Wineries

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted. Their reviews sit on the wine page and on each expert's own profile, so you can read what a specific expert made of a bottle before you commit to six of them. Experts review wines; they do not select which producers join the platform or compose the cases.

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Wine Experts

If you are unsure which case to start with, an independent wine expert can point you in the right direction. Fill in a short form and a wine expert will come back with a recommendation based on your preferences, the occasion, or the food you are planning. No appointment, no phone call, just a direct answer from someone who knows the wines.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order wine from a producer on Free Grape Society?

Find a producer or wine you like, add bottles to your basket, and check out securely with Klarna or card. The producer ships the order directly from their own cellar to your door. Shipping is free, and you will receive a confirmation with tracking once your order is on its way.

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.

Do I need an account to browse the producers?

You can browse every producer and wine on Free Grape Society without an account. You only need to register when you are ready to place an order. Joining is free, and membership gives you access to expert recommendations and your full order history.

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 a producer in a specific country or style?

Use the country filters above the listing to narrow to a specific country, such as France, Italy, or Austria. Within a country you can narrow further by region. If you are looking for a particular style, the wine pages let you filter by grape variety and colour across the full catalogue.

Can I find both large estates and small growers here?

Yes. The producers on Free Grape Society range from long-established family estates with decades of bottlings behind them to small growers making natural wine in modest quantities. The listing does not rank by size, so a young Alsace domaine sits alongside a well-known Tuscany estate. Browse by country or region to get a feel for the range.

Which wine expert can recommend a producer for me?

Visit the wine experts section to see all the independent experts active on Free Grape Society. Each expert has a profile showing the wines they have reviewed and the regions they know well. Fill in the question form on their profile and they will come back with a personal recommendation.

Why don't you carry every wine from every producer you work with?

Each producer selects which wines they want to sell through Free Grape Society and ships them directly from their own cellar. Some estates keep their allocation small or reserve certain wines for their home market. What you see on a producer's page is the range they have chosen to make available here, priced and presented on their own terms.

How is buying directly from a producer different from buying in a wine shop?

Most wine shops buy stock through importers and distributors before it reaches the shelf, which adds cost and time. On Free Grape Society the producer ships from their own cellar directly to you, with no importer or warehouse in between. That means the price reflects the producer's own decision rather than a margin chain, and the wine travels one leg instead of several.

How a wine case is composed on Free Grape Society

Every wine case on Free Grape Society, what we call a mixbox, is six bottles chosen by a single producer. Not a retailer's pick, not a house blend of odds and ends: the grower decides which six wines from their own cellar travel together. A producer in Tuscany might open with a young Sangiovese, move through a Chianti Classico Riserva, and close with an aged Brunello. A grower in Bordeaux might run you through three vintages of the same Cabernet Sauvignon-led blend. The logic belongs to the winemaker. That matters because it changes what the box teaches you. Six bottles from one cellar give you a vertical or lateral reading of a single producer's range, far more useful than a random assortment of unrelated bottles. Wines are tasted before listing, so what arrives has been through our own glass first.

The countries a wine case can come from

The wine cases on Free Grape Society come from producers across several European wine countries. You can browse boxes from France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Austria, among others. Each country brings its own structures. In Champagne, a case built around a grower-producer's own méthode champenoise will read very differently from a Languedoc-Roussillon producer working with old-vine Carignan and Grenache. In Piedmont, a grower whose cellar runs from Barbera to Nebbiolo offers a different arc than a producer in Cyprus working with indigenous varieties. The country pages let you narrow the list by origin; from there, the producer's own notes explain the logic behind each specific selection.

What six bottles from one producer gives you

A single-producer wine case is one of the most efficient ways to understand a grower's range without guesswork. Appellation rules in Europe are strict and highly local: a producer in Bordeaux works within a system of classified estates and blending norms built over centuries, while a grower in Luxembourg operates under entirely different regional rules and grape traditions. Six bottles from one cellar make those rules legible through the wines themselves. You start to hear the producer's decisions: which grapes they favour, how they handle oak, when they pick. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, so the cases here are a grower's own recommendation rather than a buyer's assortment. Producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between, which means the case arrives as the producer packed it.