Showing posts with label garnacha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garnacha. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2013

Bodegas la Cartuja, Priorat DOC


www.vinosatlantico.com

Two men come together in Spain about a decade ago; Alberto Orte and Patrick Mata. Both men come from Sherry producing families and combined, they pool together over 100 years of generational wine experience. Each.

These men forge a new wine producing company; a company with the specific goal of producing wines that reflect the nuances of the multitude of terroir in Spain. These two build 18 different labels in a decade... each expressing something special to these ambitious entrepreneurs. 

I imagine they must have been told by more then one person that they were overly ambitious. "calm down guys" I bet friends told them... "take it easy". Maybe a particularly close friend, or family member, even said "Guys - this is just crazy". It's so easy, from the outside, to look and say "this cannot be done"

And what determination it takes then to do it. What steely self-belief to persevere through the doubters and nay-sayers. And Alberto and Patrick had an edge - that much I can sense. They had the wisdom of their parents, and grand-parents, and so on - saying that wine is only as much of an expression of the land as we let it be. As we let it be.

In an age where the tractor plays a formidable role in the development of new vineyards, an age where machine-harvested grapes are considered a normal part of business, where winemakers sometimes chase after scores rather then purity. In this age, some business people stand out.

soils of La Solana
In the east corner of Spain, in a (relatively) high-altitude valley of small towns that most people outside of Spain have never heard of, here Alberto and Patrick found the 29 HA estate of La Solana. The soils of this estate are comprised of a completely unique volcanic slate and sand which imparts a distinct "graphite" minerality. These soils are low in ph and poor in nutrients, resulting in a certain brightness in the wine. Combine that with southern exposures, allowing for ripeness - and cool evenings, preserving acidity... and what results is truly extraordinary. Especially for the price! 

The result is Bodegas la Cartuja; named as a nod to the wiry Carthusian monks who first planted vineyards in this place over 1000 years ago. The monks were given the land by men who thought it worthless and, perhaps, it was. But the monks had something that most men didn't have at that time. They had something that most men today are still lacking. The monks had faith. They had belief. And with belief my friends, anything is possible.

The proof? As always - in the glass!

2011 Bodegas la Cartuja, Priorat DOC, Spain
$15.99 USD++ (sold out)
91+ points
93 points Robert Parker
90 points International Wine Cellar

varietals:   70% garnacha, 30% carinena
soil:    volcanic slate and sand
altitude:   820 feet
maturation:   6 months in French oak 225L barrique and 300L barrels
production:   3000 cases
  • visual:   clear; full garnet core with slightest bright purplish-cherry rim
  • nose:   clean; fully intense and youthful aromas of bright red raspberries and cherries, wet graphite, old leather, cigar box, lively dark floral tones
  • palate:   clean; dry, fully intense red raspberry acids, moderate+ intense fleshy tannin, moderate body, moderate alcohol (14,.5% ABV), fully intense and youthful flavors mimicking the nose, emphasis starts with bright red berry tones and finishes with hint of warm floral, minerality keenly felt throughout. Excellent balance and very good structure with long length
  • conclusion:   obviously made to be enjoyed young, this wine has the chops (concentration and structure) to last for years. Enjoy 2013-2020 and beyond
  • FOOD PAIRINGS:   bright red berry tones pair beautifully off wild game/venison. With the lively acid and well integrated tannin, consider this for an appetizer course of beef/venison carpaccio on toasted Manitoba rye bread and quark/boursin cheese... because the venison is a leaner meat, and beef carpaccio tends to leanness as well, a touch of rich soft cheese add dimension to this dish!

Here in British Columbia, we think of ourselves as wine-savvy. We have more wine selection then most places, and we have more students-of-wine (sommeliers) per capita then almost any other region. Why then, after years of study, and thousands of tastings, am I just finding out that garnacha; that ultra-bright, ultra-fresh Saturday night Summer wine can become as big, bold and expressive as most right-bank Bordeaux blends dream of? 

Priorat is not my region of study. I've been fortunate enough to taste perhaps a few dozen examples from here. But this? This is something different. A wine retailing for under $20 USD upon release, competing (and beating) wines that sell for double, triple the price. But not "beating" for this isn't a boxing match. This is a lesson in poetry. This is an exercise in Tai Chi. This is wine, and for generations the families of Alberto Orte and Patrick Mata have been saying that their work in the vineyard is to allow the land to express itself through the grapes.

Perhaps, now, after our mad-rush to modernization, we are coming to the realization that we need to come back to place our grandparents left us. In the vineyard, with a plow and a horse, and chickens running underfoot. Alberto and Patrick didn't start this company as a charity- it's a business. If they can make money running a winery this way, then why can't everyone? And if they can make a living chasing their dreams, then why can't I?
view at La Solana

As always, I welcome your comments and questions.

CINCIN~!!!     SLAINTE~!!!     CHEERS~!!!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Mid-Tier wines of Spain; a comparative

"Well what is mid-tier wine?" I asked myself.

   At this point in my life (and career) I have come to agree with most of my more learned colleagues in the line of thinking that almost anything can be mid-tiered, depending on one's point-of-view. I know people who have a rather ridiculous salary who consider $50 to $150 to be mid-tier and I know people who who never even consider paying over $30 a bottle. To each their own, I'm not here to debate the finer or lesser points of either - but merely to speak from my own experience. In my fiscal reality, $20 to $35 is mid-tier... anything over $50 is definitely becoming high end and something I would drink rarely (perhaps once or twice a month), and anything under $20 to me is entry level... perhaps I've met a few entry level wines that deliver far and above their price-point, and perhaps I've had a $100 bottle (or three) where I wondered who it was that came up with the over-inflated price.

   But, as usual, I digress.

   Mid-tier wines; $20 to $35, all from Spain. All available in Canada.

   For those of you who have never had a comparative tasting, whether it be with friends or colleagues, I cannot recommend it highly enough. It is a brilliant exercise and just plain old fun~! We sat the six of us, half sommelier trained and half neophytes, all passionate about wine, and talked about the bottle we had brought to the group... we learned from each other not only technical aspects of wine, but how each persons' palate may draw different notes from a wine; both in aroma and flavor. I was absolutely silent (a rarity - ask Mrs AStudentofWine) when the "least learned" of the group found a wine that spoke to her and she rattled off a plethora of tasting notes that Anthony Gismondi would have been impressed by.

   As I said, it was a great learning experience, and who wouldn't have fun cracking open a half-dozen bottles of wine with some friends old and new?

2008 Barco de Piedra, Pescqura del Duero
Spain, Castilla y León, Ribera del Duero
13.5% ABV, $27 CAD   ** VERY GOOD VALUE **
100% Temperanillo

aged:    5 months in (85%) French oak (15%) American oak
  • visual:   clean; garnet core with cherry rim
  • nose:   clean; moderate- intense and developing aromas of worn leather, drying black cherry, rhubarb, light cassis background
  • palate:   clean; dry, moderate+ red currant acids, moderate+ slightly grippy tannins, moderate alcohol, moderate body, moderate+ intense developing flavors mimicking the nose with Burgundian qualities. Good body and structure, medium length.
  • conclusion: drinking well now to 2013
  • PAIRINGS:   pair with Beef Bourguignon just as with a Burgundian Pinot Noir - I found many similarities in the construction, but that's just my interpretation

2007 Juan Gil
Jumilla, Spain
15% ABV, $28  CAD ** EXCELLENT VALUE **

100% Monastrell
terroir:   shallow chalky soil on a bed of limestone
climate:   continental
aged:   12 months French oak
  • visual:   clean; garnet core with cherry rim
  • nose:   clean; moderate+ developing bouquet of each red and black berries, light eucalyptus, light vanilla, slight brine minerality, soft black florals like irises, distinct spicy anise on the mid and end notes
  • palate:   clean; dry, moderate+ to fully intense red and black currant acids, fully intense slightly grippy tannins, moderate+ alcohol, moderate body, fully intense youthful flavors which mimick the nose well (predominately red fruit). Excellent balance and structure, long length
  • conclusion:   Too young to drink well - this will peak 2013 to 2018 and perhaps longer
  • PAIRINGS:   this wine cries out for venison prepared in just about any way imaginable; consider a flank finished with bourbon demi served with wild mushroom ravioli (to play earthy notes off the black florals in the wine)
2005 Los 800
Priorat, Cataluyna, Spain
14% ABV, $26  **VERY GOOD VALUE **
http://www.bcliquorstores.com/

45% Garnacha, 35% Carignan, 10% Cab Sauv, 10% Syrah
soil:   black slate and quartz with mica
  • visual:   clean; light garnet core with large cherry-brick rim
  • nose:   clean; fully intense and developed aromas of baked earth, dried cassis, dried black florals, savory black licorice (root), slight star anise, spicy black peppercorn finish
  • palate:   clean; dry, full red currant acids, moderate velvety tannins, moderate+ alcohol, moderate+ body, moderate+ intense and developed flavors mimicking the nose with a distinct tart plum quality and crispy mineral backbone. Good balance, excellent structure and medium+ length
  • conclusion:   drinking as well as it ever will - enjoy now to 2013(14)
  • PAIRINGS:   with the intense acids it is a perfect appero... use it to wake up the palate or be daring for main course and serve it old, old school with a roast beef and oyster stuffing~!

2008 Atteca "old vines" Garnacha
Bodegas Zabrin, DO Catalayud
14.5% ABV, $30 CAD  *** EXCELLENT VALUE ***

100% Garnacha/Grenache

vines:   80 to 120 years of age
yield:   less then 1 ton per HA
  • visual:   clean; moderate+ garnet core with light cherry rim
  • nose:   clean; fully intense and developed aromas of rich florals, red and black berries especially blackberry, red and black raspberry, cherry compote, background of rich coffee and green peppercorns
  • palate:   clean; dry, full raspberry acids, light+ to moderate slightly grippy tannins, moderate- alcohol, moderate- (light+) body, moderately intense and developed flavors much the same as the nose but dampened. Excellent balance and structure with medium- length
  • conclusion:   even though there are some red berry notes, this wine is already slowing down and getting ready to die... enjoy now to 2013 max as the concentration is slipping
  • PAIRINGS:   oddly enough - enjoy it as a Sherry~! try this with a rich beef consomme and savor the balance the fatty beef flavors will give to the overachieving acids in the wine

2005 Jean Leon Cabernet Sauvignon
Penedes district, Catalonia
13.5% ABV, $26 CAD **** BUY THIS NOW ****
(Liquor Control Board of Ontario)

85% single estate Cabernet Sauvignon and (15%) Cabernet Franc
vines:    planted 1969, the first Cab Sauv in Spain; 300 m elevation, south facing
aging:   25 months French oak
medals:   Silver @ Decanter awards 2010
  • visual:   clear; light cherry core with large cherry rim and the barest hint of brick
  • nose:    clean; fully intense developing bouquet of rich wood, blackberries, red and black raspberries, clean barnyard... very Haut-Medoc (Bordeaux) styled nose in my (humble) opinion
  • palate:   clean; dry, moderate+ red currant acids, moderate+ chalky tannins, moderate+ alcohol, moderate+ body, moderate+ developing flavors mimicking well the nose. Excellent balance and structure and very long length
  • conclusion:   this wine is a steal at under $30 CAD.. if you find it (there are only about 8 cases in all of Ontario as I write this), then buy as much as you can. This drinks well now, but will improve over the next few years. Consume 2013-2018 (and can keep beyond I'm guessing)
  • PAIRINGS:   buy the best beef tenderloin you can (free range), roll it in the best coffee you can buy, then sear it into carpaccio... serve it with grilled bread and a white truffle aioli and be transported to another world
   By far one of the best tastings I've been to in the past 6 to 12 months, and certainly one of the most enjoyable... what are you waiting for, go crack open a bottle of wine with your friends~!

As always, I welcome your questions and comments.

CINCIN~!!!     SLAINTE~!!!     CHEERS~!!!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Castillo de Almansa Reserva by Bodegas Piqueras

Between the high central plain of La Mancha and the Mediterranean sea, lies the Almansa D.O. (Denominacion di Origin) of Spain. It is in this place of transition that we find the town of Almansa; the home to Bodegas Piqueras winery ( http://www.bodegaspiqueras.es/ ) and the Castillo de Almansa wine, named for the famous castle or castillo of the region.

Almansa DO, Spain
   Bodegas Piqueras is a recent addition to Spanish winemaking by Old World standards, having been founded in 1915 by Mario Bonete, with the first bottled wine not being released until 1961. Mario's son, Juan Pablo, studied oenology and followed in his father's footstep's becoming his successor with the assistance of his brother Angel. The goal of Juan Pablo and Angel in their own words, is to produce eminent wines in limited quantities.

   By some standards, they are succeeding. In 2010, the Castillo de Almansa Valcante 2008 was a gold medal recipient at the Selections Mondiale du Vin in Quebec City, Canada. A prestigious award by anyone's standards, Juan Pablo and Angel moved on to receive 2 gold medals in Germany that year for the 2008 Valcante again and the 2007 red blend (Castillo de Almansa). A great year for the young winemakers.

2007 Castillo de Almansa Reserva by Bodegas Piqueras, S.A.
Almansa DO, Spain
$12.95 CAD  ** EXCELLENT VALUE**


soil:         basically calcareous
altitude :   700 metres
varietals :  70% Temperanillo (aka Cincibel, Tinta Roriz), 30% Monastrell and Garnacha Tintorera
  • visual:   clean; deep garnet core with light cherry/brick rim
  • nose:   clean; moderately intense and youthful aromas showing some development; red cherry, red raspberry, candied strawberries, old worn leather, light vanilla florality, end notes of deep exotic floral and savory spices (star anise)
  • palate:   clean; dry, fully intense red currant acids, moderate+ intense slightly grippy tannins, moderate alcohol, moderate body, moderate+ intense and developing flavors mimicking the nose well, with the addition of light tobacco notes and stewed plums. Very good balance and structure, medium length on the palate
  • conclusion:   drinking incredibly well for a $13 wine -this can be enjoyed 2011 to 2014 due to it's concentration of flavor and lively acids. Will not improve appreciably with time.
  • PAIRINGS:   grilled steak with Pequillo sauce - a smoked pepper from the Navarra region of Spain - it would work against the berry acidity and emphasize through contrast

Castillo de Almansa
   And so Juan Pablo and brother Angel have returned to their 190 hectares of vineyards (just under 500 acres) that they manage themselves and the almost 500 hectares they have contracted to them from other growers. All of the production is within the Almansa DO, and creates about 800,000 litres of wine (over 1 million bottles per year) in over 7 blends and single varietals sold in 17 countries.

As always, I welcome your comments and questions.

CINCIN~!!!     SLAINTE~!!!     CHEERS~!!!



2008 Vintage
$14 CAD (BC) spec listing
88+ points

Still an excellent value, this wine constantly overdelivers on value! This is a wine that sells at Tuesday night prices, but offers Friday night dinner dimension; rich red berry and old leather bouquet, terrifically well balanced and lively acid, chewy fine tannins, alcohol that is kept well in check... drink this now, drink this often. It pairs with a myriad of food choices, but tonight I'm enjoying just with some grilled sausage, bread and humus. 

Enjoy!!!

Friday, March 26, 2010

oh my Achilles heel (Garnacha)

So everyone has something that is difficult for them. For some reason, blind-tasting Garnacha/Grenache is tough for me... I know Sebastian keeps reminding me to "look for the white pepper", but let's face it - it's not always there.

Grenache is a very widely planted grape - well known for spicy, fruit flavors, low tannins & high alcohol. It is also, I just learnt, often blended up to 80% into my wife's favorite wines; Chateau-neuf-du-Pape.

Lots to learn my friends.

WINE A

clear visual:
  • moderate garnet centre
  • slight cherry rim suggesting little or no age (2007-08)
  • moderate legs = moderate alcohol (12%?)

clean nose; moderate+ intense notes of

  • Old World funky leather
  • red fruit/berries
  • fungal/mushroom
  • white pepper
  • some sort of funky vegetal

clean palate; 0 dryness, moderate++ acid, moderate+ tannin, moderately intense flavors

  • chalk
  • leather
  • red fruit/berries
  • young black fruit

moderate body, moderate alcohol (my guess was 12-13% but it was 14.5%), good structure

2007 Las Rocas, Garnacha, de San Alejandro (Spain) **very good value @ $20**

________________________________________________________________

WINE B

clear visual;

  • pale garnet centre
  • light cherry rim (indicating little or no age: 2008 or younger)
  • strong legs (indicating high alcohol of 13.5% or higher)

clean nose; moderate+ intense aroma of

  • white pepper (yes Sebastian I get it)
  • funky leather (Spanish kegs)
  • red berries
  • hot alcohol
  • light rosey floral

clean palate; 0 dryness, moderate++ acid, moderate+ tannin, moderate+ intense flavors of

  • plums
  • white pepper
  • floral
  • chalk terroir
  • red berries

moderate body, full alcohol (14.5%), excellent structure

2008 Tres Ojos, Garnacha, Calatayad (Spain) **BUY THIS @ $15**

So maybe I understand a bit better now... Garnacha is high in acid, low in tannin, stupidly high in alcohol (like a Zinfindel). Aromas of white pepper & red berries, flavors of the schistous soil & that oh-so-funky Spanish casking system of theirs. Big frikin wines & Lord knows I love a glass of this!