AFAIK, most top-level courses/ books on the French deal with Winawer. Grandmaster Repertoire has a 3-volume set and the 2nd covers the Winawer exclusively. Every other variation is covered in the 2 other volumes. While Chessable is "for everyone", the majority of their stuff is for advanced/ masters (loosely speaking) where the Winawer is the way to play for an advantage.
Thoughts on Anish Giri's Chessable course

Simon William's “Killer French“ course is highly good as well, it isnt on chessable, but online elsewhere.

You can check out lectures by Akobian on Youtube, he's a french defence specialist and there are couple lectures he talks about his games with french defence, it's pretty helpful.

I briefly looked into Giri's course ( and may again ); however, I found that a lot the ideas presented were not very clear to me ( which I am sure is a shortcoming on my end ). I abandoned it as it left me with more questions than answers as opposed to other courses which I found to be clearer ( i.e. Shanklands courses do a great job in explanation and bringing you along ). I have heard a great deal of good things about Simon William's course; however, I like to find courses presented by authors who actually play the subject lines frequently ( i.e. practitonal expertise ). I would love to see a course on the French by Akobian .
Thanks for the comments so far. In stead of more books/courses, the one thing I look forward to is more master games being played out there. There have been more than a handful of cases where the Giri course have lines that have been played only once or not even at all at the GM level. And like everything else, the more you play an opening, a better feel you can get. I am now starting to get a handle on things but that's only after really sticking with it for several months now.

These chessable Grandmaster repertoire are meant for titled players, or at least 2100+ FIDE. I, myself use Simon Williams' book "Attacking Chess: The French". He gives very good practical lines that club and online players can enjoy, some of them are not entirely "engine approved" but who cares? Playing top computer lines only is for elite GMs
Late last year I chose to buy Anish Giri's highly regarded Lifetime Repertoire French Defense and have been sticking with it. I do like the course very much and without a doubt it's coverage of Winawer is encyclopedic. Having said that, I have left comment on course and email to Chessable my suggestions for improvements, specifically to the French Advanced section for Bd3, as well as adding more illustrative games. I just think it would be a shame if Anish Giri just let that course sat that as is. So I wanted to take this opportunity to see if I can encourage a few folks to do the same - write to Chessable support and get them to drive some additions that will make the course true lifetime quality.