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Alsace Wine Route · Eguisheim

Caveau Heuhaus

Family-run wine cellar in the heart of Eguisheim offering guided tastings of their estate Rieslings and Gewurztraminers.

Caveau Heuhaus, Alsace Wine Route · Eguisheim
Category
Nightlife
Duration
1h 15m
Best Time
Evening
Entry
€€
Rating
4.4 (2,113)
The place

About Caveau Heuhaus

Family-run wine cellar in the heart of Eguisheim offering guided tastings of their estate Rieslings and Gewurztraminers. The vaulted stone cellar dates back to the 17th century and maintains a cool temperature year-round. Tastings include 5-6 wines with detailed explanations of the terroir.

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The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
7 Rue Mgr Stumpf, 68420 Eguisheim, France
Neighborhood
Eguisheim
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Ask to taste their Pinot Gris from the Grand Cru Eichberg vineyard, which is only available at the cellar and not in shops.

Plan for about 1h 15m. Evening visits offer a different atmosphere with softer light.

Caveau Heuhaus is in the Eguisheim neighborhood of Alsace Wine Route. The address is 7 Rue Mgr Stumpf, 68420 Eguisheim, France. The area is well-served by metro.

Evening visits offer a unique atmosphere. The light is softer, crowds thin out, and the experience feels more intimate.

Around the corner

Nearby in Eguisheim

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Eguisheim Circular Village
Cultural Site

Eguisheim Circular Village

Eguisheim is France's most perfectly preserved circular village, built in concentric rings around a central square with a fountain and the Chapel of Saint-Leo IX, who became Pope in 1049. The inner ring features half-timbered houses painted in pastels with geranium window boxes, while the outer ring follows the old ramparts. Two excellent wine domaines within the village walls offer free tastings, and the Grands Crus vineyards of Eichberg and Pfersigberg start right at the village edge. Walking the concentric streets takes about 30 minutes and feels like exploring a living dollhouse. The houses curve away from you around each bend, revealing new color combinations of pink, yellow, and green facades. The scale is so intimate that you can touch both sides of some streets with outstretched arms, and the circular layout means you're constantly discovering new perspectives of the same charming buildings. Summer brings cascading geraniums from every window box, while winter snow transforms it into a fairy tale scene. Most guides don't mention that tour buses descend between 10 AM and 5 PM, turning the narrow streets into a bottleneck nightmare. Go early morning or evening to have this place to yourself. Skip the overpriced tourist shops and head straight to Domaine Emile Beyer for their Riesling Tradition (EUR 8-10, the regional benchmark) or Domaine Bruno Sorg for exceptional Gewurztraminer. Don't just photograph the pretty houses, walk the complete circuit twice to catch details you missed the first time.

1.5-2 hoursExplore
Musée Albert Schweitzer
Museum

Musée Albert Schweitzer

Albert Schweitzer's actual birthplace sits in this perfectly preserved Alsatian half-timbered house in tiny Gunsbach, where the Nobel laureate spent his childhood before heading to Africa as a medical missionary. You'll walk through cramped rooms filled with original photographs from his hospital in Gabon, handwritten letters, his theology books, and even recordings of him playing Bach on the organ. The collection feels genuinely personal rather than museum-polished, with captions explaining his evolution from village pastor to jungle doctor. The visit flows through just four small rooms on two floors, each packed with artifacts that tell different chapters of his story. Downstairs focuses on his early years and musical career, while upstairs documents his African medical work with compelling before-and-after photos of his patients. The house creaks underfoot and feels authentically lived-in, not sanitized for tourists. You can actually touch some items and lean close to read his personal correspondence. Most travel guides inflate this place beyond what it delivers, so adjust expectations accordingly. It's genuinely moving if you know Schweitzer's story, but won't convert casual visitors into fans. The EUR 2 entry fee makes it worth a quick stop while wine-tasting in the area, but don't drive here specifically unless you're already fascinated by early 20th-century humanitarians. Skip it entirely if you're rushed, the nearby villages offer better photo opportunities.

30-45 minutesExplore
Experience

Domaine Emile Beyer

Christian Beyer runs one of Alsace's most authentic biodynamic operations from his 17th-century cellar in Eguisheim's medieval center. You'll walk through Grand Cru Pfersigberg vineyard plots where he explains soil composition and biodynamic farming methods before descending into stone-walled cellars for tastings. The experience costs €25 per person and includes tastings of their Riesling, Gewürztraminer, and Pinot Gris alongside technical explanations of fermentation processes. The 105-minute tour starts among vines where Christian demonstrates biodynamic preparations and soil analysis before moving to temperature-controlled cellars lined with traditional Alsatian oak barrels. He speaks excellent English and connects farming philosophy to wine character in ways that make technical concepts accessible. The cellar atmosphere feels genuinely historic, not staged for tourists, with working equipment and aging wines creating an authentic winery environment. Most visitors book afternoon slots, but morning tours offer cooler vineyard walks and better light for vineyard photography. Skip this if you want surface-level wine tourism or quick tastings, Christian's approach is detailed and scientific. The €25 fee is reasonable compared to similar Alsace experiences, though some commercial wineries offer cheaper alternatives with less personal attention.

1.5-2 hoursExplore
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