Stellenbosch, Coastal Region
If South African wine has a capital, it's Stellenbosch. Founded in 1679 by Cape Governor Simon van der Stel — who named it after himself, "Stellenbosch" literally meaning "(van der) Stel's Forest" — it's the country's second-oldest settlement after Cape Town, and it didn't take long to become a wine town. French Huguenot refugees arrived between 1680 and 1690, bringing serious winemaking experience the Dutch settlers mostly lacked, and van der Stel himself planted the oak trees that line the streets today, earning the town its nickname Eikestad, "Town of Oaks."
The centuries since haven't been smooth. The 18th century brought mildew, phylloxera, and a poor international reputation, and the 19th and 20th centuries layered on the Anglo-Boer War, apartheid, and a restrictive cooperative system that controlled the market. It was really only the transition to democracy in the 1990s, when that cooperative became a private entity, that gave individual wineries real independence — and the modern Stellenbosch most people know dates largely from that period onward.
Stellenbosch's most famous contribution to wine, though, came from an accident in someone's garden. In 1924, Abraham Izak Perold, Stellenbosch University's first professor of viticulture, crossed Pinot Noir with Cinsaut — known locally as "Hermitage" — hoping to combine Pinot's elegance with Cinsaut's toughness. He left for a job at KWV in 1928 and more or less forgot about the four resulting seedlings, which were rescued during a farm cleanup by a sharp-eyed young academic, Dr. Charlie Niehaus. The first Pinotage wine wasn't made until 1941, with the first commercial plantings following at Myrtle Grove farm, and the grape — named as a portmanteau of "Pinot" and "Hermitage" — has since become South Africa's own, entirely homegrown signature variety.
Geographically, Stellenbosch earns its reputation honestly. It sits between False Bay and the Helderberg, Simonsberg, and Drakenstein mountains, with maritime influence from False Bay keeping growing-season temperatures comparable to Bordeaux, while ancient granite, shale, and sandstone soils — among the oldest on earth, classified into as many as 50 different types — give different corners of the district wildly different character. Eight official wards each carry their own distinct terroir, which is why Stellenbosch can produce everything from punchy Cabernet Sauvignon to delicate Chenin Blanc within a fairly small area. Cabernet Sauvignon, often blended with Merlot, is the most prized red, alongside Shiraz and Pinotage, while Chenin Blanc, Chardonnay, and Sauvignon Blanc dominate the whites.
Stellenbosch was also, fittingly, the region that institutionalized South African wine tourism: the country's first organized wine route was founded here in 1971, and it remains the benchmark against which every other South African region gets measured.
For BoundbyWine, Stellenbosch is the anchor point of any South African collection — the region where the country's signature grape was literally invented, where its oldest university trains its next generation of winemakers, and where serious old-vine plantings sit alongside genuinely experimental young producers.
In this collection you'll find Stellenbosch's Bordeaux-style reds and Pinotage alongside crisp Chenin Blanc and Sauvignon Blanc — the full range of what put South African wine on the map in the first place