2023 Bodegas Pirineos 3404 Tinto Merlot Garnacha Moristel

From the DO or should it be DOP of Somontano up in foothills of the Pyrenees comes this odd blend. The back label says 3404 refers to the altitude of the mountain El Aneto overlooking the sunny Somontano vineyards. And a bit of cooler air has done this no harm. Lots but not too much extraction of delicious plum, cherry pip and raspberry fruit, fresh and full of juice. Just that extra length and intensity of flavour that pushes above the basic Spanish joven examples. This has a rich purple plum thing which those who know the left bank of Bordeaux business say is perhaps typical of Merlot? Probably not the sort of posh tannin poise though? Good fresh and natural feeling acidity on a chew of slate like skin tannin keeps things trim and taut. Pirineos’ Moristel has often been a tasty off the beaten path treat. This too is a diversion worth following. More interest for me than a lot those bottles labelled Crianza or Reserva.

14% alcohol. Diam, nearly ubiquitous in Spain now it seems. About €5, great value.

92 points.

NV Romate Fino

Spanish supermarkets seem to vary quite a bit in their wine offerings. The big Mercadona in Mahon, capital of lovely Menorca, only has a small range of cheap, large scale production Tempranillo and Verdejo which is very uninspiring, particularly as it has really good food offerings on display. Oddly, the small supermarket in the dreamy seaside village of Binibequer had this fresh bottle on the shelf for about €10 amongst other tempting things. Think the producer’s full title is Bodega Sanchez Romate Hermanos, quite grand. The back label said L24319 which means it was bottled in 2024, possibly on the 19th March? I can never remember how the numbers run. As there’s no 31st September, I could be correct? You have to be grateful for something more interesting than the boring Tempranillo and Verdejo which seem to clog the shelves in Spain in the same way cheap Shiraz and kiwi Sauvignon Blanc do in Australia. This is a delicious version of how good the winemaking has become in some parts of El Triangulo in recent years. Loads of savoury flor, chamomile and yellow fruit. Stony sea smells and an austere bite of yeasty straw, all nicely cushioned by comforting glycerol like cream texture and soft acidity. All nicely clean and easy. A mouthful after a bite of one of those gilda spears with anchovy, tiny pepper and olives, and you’ve got one of the best value taste sensations on the planet. Did I mention I like Spain?

15% alcohol. Screw cap, things are changing in Jerez. €9.95.

92 points.

2017 Celler Aixalà Alcait Les Clivelles de Torroja Priorat

It’s been over six months since the last post, and having had my credit card automatically debited again for the minimum WordPress subscription, it’s probably best to actually write something. This bottle was one of two left in the stash from a bargain mixed six pack once offered by a favourite importer, aptly named The Spanish Acquisition. It was when Covid hit and lock downs made it very difficult to stay in business. Without their generous offers, I may have never discovered how good are recent versions of Priorat. Made from pure Carignan or Carinyena in Spanish or Samsó in Catalan, this single village wine is so very much of place. Odd they put the Spanish name for the variety on the label but then write something in the local Catalan which amplifies my language confusion. Carignan can ripen to 14.5% in Priorat but still stay so fresh and full of bounce. Still some purple red in both colour and flavour. Dark red cherries, rich cocoa and that unmistakable sooty old fireplace thing that those llicorella stony soils seem to bring. Lovely build of fruit and that mineral, er…slate or something, freshness drives on and on till the bottle’s gone. Don’t really want to go back to the dark and quiet days of lock downs but wish I’d ordered a few more.

14.5% alcohol. Cork. Bargain and good to see TSA still going strong.

94 points.

2021 Brovia Dolcetto d’Alba Vignavillej

Good wine is so much better when the it’s shared. If not at the table then swapping a few bottles can work well if you’ve scored a multi bottle auction lot and want to spread the fun. The bottle came my happy way in return for something I can’t remember but can only hope was as good. About as tasty as Dolcetto d’Alba gets, this opened clean and fresh but a little reticent. A good swirl and there’s all that thickness of sour dark cherry and kirsch good Dolcetto does well, ripe but no undue sweetness. Perfectly weighted ripe acidity and tannin, full of that Langhe stony character, float all that goodness to the point of refreshment. It’s easy to see why the Piemontese value Dolcetto like this as the thing to brighten their already delicious food. Sure, Nebbiolo can make you ponder its complications but sometimes straightforward pleasure is more fun, particularly when it’s so much of a place. What a swap.

14% alcohol. Diam. Swap.

94 points, particularly if points are for place and focus.

2021 Vitícola Mentridana Las Uvas De La Ira Sierra de Gredos Méntrida DO

Originally made by Daniel Landi from Comando G but now made separately by Curro Bareño who is in charge of Vitícola Mentriana from this vintage. Seems he’s as much of a local as señor Landi and really invested in both vineyard and winery. Reports suggest a cool vintage in the high hills of Gredos which has done the quality of fruit no harm at all on the basis of this bottle. The naming and detail of these Gredos wines can be confusing as the whole area doesn’t seem to have its own DO but the small area of Méntrida near Toledo does. It’s found in one of the two major Gredos valleys, Valle del Tiétar, which some observers have suggested would be a good on delimitating the area. Add to this confusion the individual names of wine villages overlaid on DOs that don’t make a lot of sense and I’m a bit baffled. It could all simply be Gredos Garnacha as that’s about the only red wine made there is in any quantity or quality. Anyway it’s what’s in the glass that counts and this is very, very good. The Comando G Gredos Garnachas have been a little bit..er..rustic for me at times but this is really clean without losing any of the sense of place or its grace in shape. That lovely relaxed red fruit that Garnacha does well sculpted into focus by pinpoint tannin and again for want of a better words, refreshing mineral acidity. Cherries and ripe stewed strawberries, a brush of pomegranate juice tannin, herby ripe stems maybe and wet granite like pucker. The best bits of Garnacha ripeness contained by a mountain freshness. Gentle power. Another bit of Spain on the wish list.

The back label has some interesting info, vino de pueblo etc…

14.5% alcohol. Cork. Swap.

94 points.

2021 Envínate Vinos Atlanticos Táganan

Another of the swaps for some of the annual Wendouree order and another from the Canary Islands, yet another one of Spain’s rediscovered wonders. From the north east tip of Tenerife and pre phylloxera vines including a field blend of obscure varieties as well as the principal Lístan Negro, this is extraordinary. It took nearly three days for a compelling tale to unfold. An oceanic fog of flints banged hard, that seems typical of old volcanic soils, clears to smells of fresh berries and spice. So pure and evenly spread with depth and breadth, the wave breaks on rocks that dry and refresh as the tide sucks. These are simply the best flavoured and balanced grapes turned into liquid. Individual descriptions of flavours seem redundant. How an island so close to the Sahara can produce wine that’s about as thrilling and satisfying as anything I’ve been lucky enough to drink from the established greats of France or Italy is boggling. Long threads of perfect red fruit, spiced just enough to emphasise and a structure to build stories of heroic wine if you listen carefully. Spain’s the most exciting place, from Galicia to Jerez and from Gredos to the Canaries. Prods a jaded old wine nut to hyperbole and more nonsense.

12% alcohol. Cork. Swap.

96 points. Great.

Lot 22-131 Bodegas Barbadillo Pastora Manzanilla Pasada En Rama

An incredible bargain from the shelves of Dan Murphy’s ethanol barns. Normally about $AU40 reduced to a members’ offer for $AU21, a whole 750ml bottle too, not a half. I’ve already banged on about how Barbadillo are doing great things for the quality of their sizeable bit of El Marco, but really, this is delicious. What is old is new again in a sense as this is a revival of the first Manzanilla ever bottled in 1827 as the back label says. Reading the excellent sherrynotes.com website it seems this is taken from the vast Solear solera as a six year old and moved in barrels to the La Pastora bodega a street away for a further three years for the flor to abate, pasada. This shows in a deeper yellow than the standard Solear. It’s beautifully rounded in smell and taste with yeast mixed down into salty sea smells, dry chamomile and mellow yellow apple and apricot fruit. A long rich and clean end spiked with a tang of salty bitterness. History and renewal of a special wine place. Hankering for a return visit.

15% alcohol. Cork. $21 ludicrous.

95 points.

A 2024 bottling was just a good even if it took a while to unfurl. Bit more definition in the flavour department, great yellow apple and clingstone peach, a shimmer of almond paste and over brewed chamomile tea. Great consistency over bottles.

2016 Vigneti Boveri Giacomo Freisa La Cappelletta Colli Tortonesi

Another label for the train spotter boy in every old man wine lover I reckon. Shame I managed to get the photo out of focus as it’s one thing this wine doesn’t lack. A string of Italian names that probably mean little to most except the venerable Piemonte hound looking for value. This got a great review on The Wine Front, that most entertaining of sites. An essential resource when browsing the auction site. A few years in bottle have done nothing to interfere with the cheerful bite and depth of great grapes here. Loads of just picked dark cherries and that amazing rockiness that comes in layer after layer. Touches of woody herb and black olives. Great measures of brilliant fruit and contrasting geological flavour, assuming it’s possible to taste such things. Not hard to see Freisa’s part in parenting Nebbiolo. Shame it was my only bottle. In Piemontese terms of value these days, a bargain.

13.5% alcohol. Cork. $55 RRP.

95 points, it’s that good.

1999 Château Pierre Bise Anjou Villages Sur Spilite

Hello stranger. This was a wine I fell in love with over twenty years ago when it was imported by a wine loving doctor from the industrial town of Newcastle NSW where beer was perhaps more the drink. Think it was about $25 a bottle and it seemed such great value compared to equivalent quality Bordeaux. A blend of Franc and Sauvignon Cabernets I remember. Andrew Jefford’s ground breaking book The New France has a profile of the great Claude Papin of Château Pierre Bise and his devotion to the geology of Anjou. According to google, Spilite is a volcanic rock that comes into contact with sea water as it cools. Maybe along with schist, it’s one of the stones of black Angers? Geology aside, Claude Papin and sons also grow some grapes of great quality. This was still lively and had me wishing I had aged as well. The cork was still in good nick, came out in one piece and the only stains were on the tip highlighted with pretty tartaric crystals. Dusty old wine smells with still some gravel, leaf and rich dried cherries. Rounded and still some richness in the mouthful. Again dark berries, cassis and cherries with some concentration and a satisfying round chew of extract and rocky minerals. Great skin tannin hanging in there, freshened by still bright Loire acidity. Plateau or gentle decline, certainly no waiting needed. Couldn’t believe my luck to win a few bottles at auction for a lot less than the original RRP. A nerdy triumph.

12.8% alcohol. Cork. $17 including buyers’ premium and delivery.

93 points.

2022 Domaine de Cassiopée Bourgogne Hautes Côtes de Beaune Les Côtés

One of the great things about swapping some bottles with someone who’s on it when it comes to good wine made with less intervention is the chance to open bottles like this. Not the best metaphor but their choices are a great filter. A glass full of great contrasts. Full yellowish green colour and aromas full of crème brûlée and citrus zest. More complexity in peach and a bit of apricot in a faint mist of yeasty nattiness. A rich and satisfying mouthful of the same stretches long on honey drizzled hazelnuts. It all winds up nice and tight on chalk dust acidity and skin chew. Feels good. Less natty second day and rich and even. Excellent adventure.

Rest of the label has Cassiopeia.

12% alcohol. Cork. Great swap.

93 points.