Other Shandong Estates: The Map at Closer Range
Mystic Island, Chateau Junding, Lannas, Tonglu, Bodega Langes, Anuo, Huadong, and the rest of the Penglai field. Where to look, what they do, and which ones matter.
Penglai officially has more than 60 estates. Most of them produce small volumes for the local Shandong market or never made the leap from theme-park castle to serious wine. The estates worth knowing fall into a smaller list. Below are the ones you should be able to place.
Mystic Island (神秘岛)
Section titled “Mystic Island (神秘岛)”Located on Daheishan Island, an offshore island in the Yellow Sea about 60 km north of Penglai. The estate sits on the only island vineyard in China. About 20 hectares of vines. Granite soil, with sea breezes that lower diurnal temperature swings.
The owner, Wang Wei, started the project in 2008. The wines focus on Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. The Chardonnay is the more distinctive wine: a saline-driven, mineral white that picks up the maritime influence in a way that mainland Penglai whites do not.
Mystic Island has not yet broken into national distribution at a serious level, but it is the most interesting terroir-specific small project in Shandong. Visiting requires a ferry from Penglai. Production is roughly 20,000 bottles a year.
Chateau Junding (君顶)
Section titled “Chateau Junding (君顶)”Junding is one of the most physically impressive estates in Penglai. The chateau resembles a French Renaissance manor, set on 300 hectares of land. Production scales to industrial levels. Owned by COFCO Wine, the same state-owned conglomerate that owns Greatwall Wine.
The wines are competently made and inoffensive. Junding produces a wide portfolio: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Chardonnay, sparkling, and a Premier Reserve line. None of them are particularly distinguished. The estate’s main business model is wine tourism — corporate retreats, banquets, weddings — rather than fine-wine production.
If you visit Penglai, Junding is the most accessible high-end winery tour, with hotels, restaurants, and a tasting program. For the purposes of this book, the wines themselves are not the headline.
Lannas (朗格斯)
Section titled “Lannas (朗格斯)”Lannas was founded in 1999 by a Liaoning-based businessman, Zheng Junpeng. The estate sits on the eastern edge of Penglai, with about 80 hectares of vineyard. Style focus is Bordeaux-leaning reds: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, with some Marselan added more recently.
Lannas was an early adopter of organic certification in China and built one of the country’s first underground cellars. The flagship Lannas Premium Reserve is a respectable Bordeaux blend, scoring 89–92 at international competitions, priced around RMB 400–600. Mid-range pricing in the Chinese market, well above Greatwall but below Long Dai.
The estate also makes a port-style fortified wine, which has its devotees but is not a serious wine in the global context.
Tonglu Estate (统鹿)
Section titled “Tonglu Estate (统鹿)”Tonglu is a younger estate, established around 2014. About 35 hectares, located in the Penglai sub-region of Murou. The defining characteristic is its winemaker: French oenologist Bertrand Bourdil, formerly of Bordeaux’s Pomerol. Bourdil joined Tonglu in 2018 and has been shaping a Bordeaux-Pomerol style — Merlot-led blends with rounder tannins and earlier drinking windows.
The wines are well-made but lack the depth of older Penglai estates. Tonglu’s significance is more about being part of the wave of new model Penglai estates: smaller, with international winemakers, oriented toward export and high-end domestic. The next decade will test whether estates like Tonglu can establish a clear identity.
Bodega Langes (拉菲尼酒庄)
Section titled “Bodega Langes (拉菲尼酒庄)”Bodega Langes is a Spanish-styled estate. Owned by the Austrian Gernot Langes-Swarovski (yes, the Swarovski crystal family). The estate was built in 2005 with the explicit goal of bringing Austrian and Spanish winemaking aesthetics to Penglai. The focus has been on Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Tempranillo.
Wines are technically clean and well-made, with a slightly different style from neighboring estates — fresher, lower oak influence, more red-fruit character. The estate is also distinguished by its Austrian-style architecture and a wine school inside the property that hosts WSET courses. Production around 100,000 bottles. Mid-priced. Worth visiting if you are in the area.
Chateau Anuo (安诺)
Section titled “Chateau Anuo (安诺)”A boutique estate in the Mulang sub-region, with about 6 hectares of vineyard. Founded by Anqi Niu, a returned wine professional who studied in Bordeaux. The estate emphasizes single-vineyard plot-level wines and has a small line of Chardonnay, Cabernet Franc, and Marselan.
Anuo’s wines are made in tiny volume (under 10,000 bottles a year). They are most often available through Beijing-based sommelier channels rather than retail. The Chardonnay is the most consistently strong wine. The estate is a useful example of young, small, ambitious in Penglai’s emerging next generation.
Huadong Estate (华东)
Section titled “Huadong Estate (华东)”Huadong is the grandfather estate of Penglai. Founded in 1985 by Hong Kong businessman Michael Parry, the estate was the first to plant European vinifera at scale in modern Shandong, the first to make a varietal Chardonnay in China, and the model that taught the rest of the region how vineyards should be planted.
By the mid-2000s, the original estate had passed through several owners. Allied Domecq held it for a time, then Pernod Ricard. It was sold to local Shandong investors around 2008. The wines have lost their original sharpness; production is mid-volume, with mid-quality results. The estate is more important historically than for what it currently makes.
If you are passing through Penglai, Huadong is worth a visit for context. The vines are old, and the building tells a long story.
The Smaller Names
Section titled “The Smaller Names”A list of others worth knowing, if you ever taste them:
| Estate | Notable for |
|---|---|
| Chateau Reifeng-Auzias (瑞枫奥赛斯) | Sino-French JV; focused on Bordeaux-style reds |
| Chateau Vinarrayan (拜赛诺) | Italian style; small production |
| Chateau Jicang (吉藏) | Chinese-Australian JV; Marselan and Petit Verdot |
| Chateau Cinetour (爱诗图) | French boutique style |
| Yantai Bodega (烟台波黛迦) | Spanish style; Tempranillo focus |
These estates are mostly in the 5,000–30,000 bottle range, often family-owned or boutique. They are part of the long tail that gives Penglai its real character. Most of them will not produce wines you remember. A few will surprise you.
What the Map Tells Us
Section titled “What the Map Tells Us”Counting Changyu, Long Dai, Nine Peaks, Treaty Port, Runaway Cow Ridge, Longting, Mystic Island, Junding, Lannas, Tonglu, Bodega Langes, Anuo, and Huadong, plus the smaller names, you have a rough catalogue of serious Shandong wine in 2026.
What strikes me: how unmapped most of it remains. Penglai has marketed itself as China’s premier wine region for two decades, but the gap between the top three estates (Long Dai, Nine Peaks, Changyu) and the median is wide. The bottom 40 estates contribute little quality and consume most of the region’s marketing oxygen.
The future of Shandong wine will not be made by 60 estates. It will be made by 10 or 15 estates that take the work seriously. We have covered them in this chapter.