* * * * *
Text & Photographs By Gerry Dawes©2018
The
unheralded existence of terroir-driven native varietals flourishing in
northwestern Spain is comparable to the iceman encased in the glacier:
By shining a critical spotlight on Bierzo, at the gates of Galicia in
León province, and Ribeira Sacra, in Galicia's Ourense and Lugo
provinces - much like sunlight melting back a the glacier ice - the
native mencía grape emerges from obscurity. Grown in precariously steep
vineyards and often clinging to treacherous slate-strewn hillsides and
Roman-style terraces, the indigenous variety is responsible for some of
Spain's most intriguing and delicious terroir-laced reds.
Mencía vines on a steep slate-strewn vineyard
It
has become quite evident to me, after tasting through more than 75 such
wines on six return trips to these regions over the past five years,
that mencía-based wines grown on these stony, well-drained soils, and
enjoying beneficial altitudes (some vineyards are more than 2,500 feet
above sea level), sunlight and rainfall, have the potential to rival the
best in Europe. This assessment holds up despite a preponderance of
popular, New Age, cellar-driven winemaking techniques that threaten to
obscure both the glorious freshness of the mencía fruit and the
haunting, mineral flavors for which many French vintners would give an
arm.
Some bodegas here strive to make copycat, market-styled wines that rely on overripe fruit, high alcohol and aggressive new oak. But with the best vineyards, the marriage of mencía and ideal terroir produce enough personality that sometimes the fruit actually has enough character to stand up to such abuse. Better yet, when makers back off and don't try to produce ersatz Priorat or Ribera del Duero then the charm of sweet red and black raspberry-currant fruit imbued with the masculinity of somewhat rustic, garrigue-like country flavors and a strain of graphite-like minerals (Bierzo and Ribeira Sacra, as well as Priorat, have these traits in common) make for a memorable palate profile that calls the drinker back for sip after sip. Mencía is also grown in the Galician DOs Valdeorras and Monterrei, where predominately white wines, especially those made from the potentially spectacular native godello, rule (see "Galician Gold" article).
Some bodegas here strive to make copycat, market-styled wines that rely on overripe fruit, high alcohol and aggressive new oak. But with the best vineyards, the marriage of mencía and ideal terroir produce enough personality that sometimes the fruit actually has enough character to stand up to such abuse. Better yet, when makers back off and don't try to produce ersatz Priorat or Ribera del Duero then the charm of sweet red and black raspberry-currant fruit imbued with the masculinity of somewhat rustic, garrigue-like country flavors and a strain of graphite-like minerals (Bierzo and Ribeira Sacra, as well as Priorat, have these traits in common) make for a memorable palate profile that calls the drinker back for sip after sip. Mencía is also grown in the Galician DOs Valdeorras and Monterrei, where predominately white wines, especially those made from the potentially spectacular native godello, rule (see "Galician Gold" article).
"Mencia
is being abused. Way too much oak for no discernable reason. This is a
wonderful grape which doesn't need that much help to shine. There is
nothing wrong with leaving well enough alone," says Roger Kugler, General Manager & Wine Director at Suba and Wine Director at Boqueria,
two of New York City top Spanish tapas restaurants. "Its not that all
the oak aged Mencias are bad (there are a few that are very good), its
just that most of them are inferior to the wines of 10 years or so ago
which did not have the aggressive oak aging."
Yet
this surprising red variety is having its greatest impact in the
aforementioned Bierzo, some 250 miles northwest of Madrid, and emerging
Ribeira Sacra, another 70-odd miles to the west. At this juncture, by
far the most important of these two regions is Bierzo, which was not
even a blip on the Spanish wine radar screen less than a decade ago -
even for Spaniards.
Yet in just the past half-dozen years, the region has experienced meteoric growth, vaulting from obscurity to critical acclaim. Among the stalwart wines: the richly flavored Descendientes de J. Palacios wines from the old vines vineyards of Corullón (made by Priorat's Álvaro Palacios and his nephew, Ricardo Pérez); a range of Domino de Tares wines made until recently by former Ribera del Duero enologist Amancio Fernández; and Paixar, crafted by the sons of Mariano García, arguably Spain's top winemaker. These higher-profile Bierzo wines have had increasing success in the United States, which has become Bierzo's most important export market. Many others have come in their wake, including the highly regarded Tilenus, Castro Ventoso, Pittacum, Pucho, Peique, Cuatro Pasos (a wine from Martín Codax of Rías Baixas Albariño fame), Cásar de Burbia and Vega Montán. Both Tilenus and Castro Ventoso, as well as the newly inaugurated Bodega Cabildo de Salas, are made by Raúl Pérez, a young rising star winemaker.
Yet in just the past half-dozen years, the region has experienced meteoric growth, vaulting from obscurity to critical acclaim. Among the stalwart wines: the richly flavored Descendientes de J. Palacios wines from the old vines vineyards of Corullón (made by Priorat's Álvaro Palacios and his nephew, Ricardo Pérez); a range of Domino de Tares wines made until recently by former Ribera del Duero enologist Amancio Fernández; and Paixar, crafted by the sons of Mariano García, arguably Spain's top winemaker. These higher-profile Bierzo wines have had increasing success in the United States, which has become Bierzo's most important export market. Many others have come in their wake, including the highly regarded Tilenus, Castro Ventoso, Pittacum, Pucho, Peique, Cuatro Pasos (a wine from Martín Codax of Rías Baixas Albariño fame), Cásar de Burbia and Vega Montán. Both Tilenus and Castro Ventoso, as well as the newly inaugurated Bodega Cabildo de Salas, are made by Raúl Pérez, a young rising star winemaker.
I
became acquainted with many of the aforementioned wines in 2002 when I
made a pilgrimage to Bierzo and Ribeira Sacra to taste the bright,
fruity, mencía-based reds that were beginning to draw serious attention,
especially those of Palacios and Pérez made from ancient vineyards at a
place called Corullón. On the way to my appointments, I came across a
lively country wine fair in Cacabelos, the key town of the Bierzo DO.
Cacabelos is surrounded by vineyards and every May 1st it celebrates its
chief industry in the Plaza del Vendimiador, where a statue of a family
of grape pickers pays homage to those souls who have brought in the
harvest here for centuries.
Vendimiador (Grape Harvester) Monument in Cacabelos (Bierzo)
I
eagerly waded in, tasting a range of mencía-based wines with the
producers themselves. Most were works in progress, but others were
eye-opening in their potential (two that stood out among the nearly
dozen booths were Castro Ventoso and Val de Paixarines) and almost all -
even the more rustic or heavily oaked examples - displayed an
intriguing red and black raspberry richness laced with distinct terroir.
Although the bodegas that produced them were only then beginning to
make wines for outside markets (hence a number exhibited the harsh new
oak character that comes with a barrel room full of new oak), beneath
their oak curtains, the raw material augured well for the production of
wines that would make Bierzo the most exciting emerging Spanish region
since Priorat.
After tasting at the wine fair, I went to lunch with three of the principals of Dominio de Tares, partner Mario Rico, former winemaker Amancio Fernández and the late general manager Fermín Uria, whose reds - Cepas Viejas (old vines), P.3 (from a 100-year-old vineyard) - showed remarkable richness of wild blackberry fruit and mineral tones. (Since then, their wines have enjoyed much success in the United States and they, along with the wines of Palacios, are a major reason that Bierzo is held in such high esteem here.)
After tasting at the wine fair, I went to lunch with three of the principals of Dominio de Tares, partner Mario Rico, former winemaker Amancio Fernández and the late general manager Fermín Uria, whose reds - Cepas Viejas (old vines), P.3 (from a 100-year-old vineyard) - showed remarkable richness of wild blackberry fruit and mineral tones. (Since then, their wines have enjoyed much success in the United States and they, along with the wines of Palacios, are a major reason that Bierzo is held in such high esteem here.)
Dominio de Tares, partner Mario Rico
At
dusk, in a misting rain, I joined Ricardo Pérez, who drove me a few
kilometers beyond the village of Corullón to visit Descendientes de J.
Palacios's spectacular, impossibly steep vineyards. Pitched on
slate-strewn hillsides, the precipitous sites we toured included the
soon-to-be-celebrated Moncerbal vineyard, where old vines mencía thrives
on magical slate soil. Later, at the Palacios cellars in Vilafranca del
Bierzo, we tasted the sweet, rich, terroir-imbued, still tannic wines
of the Moncerbal vineyard. All were lush, rich, minerally reds that
seemed to validate the promise of the wines tasted at the fair.
I dined later that evening with the owner of Luna Berberide, Alejandro
Luna, and winemaker Gregory Pérez, who introduced me to yet another fine
Bierzo Mencía made in consultation with the great Mariano García
(former winemaker at Vega Sicilia and owner of Bodegas Mauro in Tudela
de Duero, just west of Vega Sicilia). Taken altogether, that memorable
May Day yielded one of the most meaningful epiphanies I have experienced
in more than three-plus decades of covering Spanish wine: Bierzo's
mencía-based reds were capable of standing alongside the best of
Burgundy, Bordeaux, Napa Valley or any region on earth. As noted
earlier, Mariano García and sons Alberto and Eduardo are also making
their own Bierzo, the very highly regarded Paixar from the village of
Dragontes, another high-altitude spot near the border of Lugo, one of
the four provinces of Galicia.
The senior García is enthusiastic about Bierzo's prospects. "From these
high-altitude, hillside, broken-slate vineyards it is possible to make
wines with great style and personality," he asserts. "There is an
explosion of quality wines from Bierzo and emerging single vineyard
pagos [that are] comparable to the great northern Rhône Valley cru
vineyards in Hermitage and Côte-Rôtie."
Another name consumers will be hearing quite a lot about is the
aforementioned Raúl Pérez, who makes compelling wines in Bierzo and is
also the consulting enologist for several Galician wineries, among them
Alguiera, which is shipping its top-notch Ribeira Sacra wine to the
United States this fall. "Ribeira Sacra, Vinos del Cielo" (wines of
heaven) reads a sign overlooking a heavenly view of perhaps the most
strikingly dramatic and stunningly beautiful wine region in the world
(from a photo-journalist fresh off a visit to Portugal's Douro River
Valley, this is not hyperbole).
The sign is also a tie-in to the origin of the region's name, which
comes from the profusion of ancient sacred (sacra) monasteries and
churches that dot this region. Some are more than 1,000 years old, and
several are Romanesque churches founded in the 12th and 13th centuries
by Burgundian Cistercian monks, who were the "Johnny Grapevines" of
their epoch. They established vineyards all around France, Spain and
Germany, many of which are still the basis for some of the world's most
famous wines (Clos de Vougeot, Beaumes de Venise and Vega Sicilia to
name but a few). While other grapes are grown here, including minority
red varieties brancellao and merenzao, and the superb white godello,
Ribeira Sacra is the land of mencía par excellence. It's a snake-shaped
DO - still practically unknown in this country - with 3,000 acres
terraced along the spectacular slate-strewn hillsides of the dammed-up
Miño (flowing north-to-south) and Sil (flowing east-to-west) river
valleys. It is shared by the Galician provinces of Lugo in the north and
Ourense in the south, and is divided into five subzones: northernmost
Chantada and Ribeiras do Miño along the Miño, Amandi and Quiroga-Bibei
along the Sil (all four in Lugo province) and Ribeiras do Sil (along the
Ourense portion of the Sil).
Most notable in Ribeira Sacra are its single-row terraces composed of
old vines mencía (with some garnacha tintorera and the white grapes,
albariño and godello mixed in) growing on treacherous slate-strewn
slopes first planted by the Romans 2,000 years ago. These vineyards are
so steep that steel tracks have been placed at strategic points to allow
the grapes to be hauled up, and some, like a Cividade, are so sheerly
pitched and isolated that they can only be reached by boat, on which the
grapes are transported during harvest to the winery.
On that first visit, I was awestruck by the region's magical landscape
and remain so today. While the first mencía-based wines I drank here
were not as captivating as the terrain, I did find some of the same
deliciously fruity black-ruby red raspberry qualities and similar
graphite-slate mineral characteristics as those in Bierzo. And while
they were fresh and light (some only 12 to 12.5 percent alcohol, a
welcome relief in this era of overwrought wines), too many were
unsophisticated, not well made and often obviously overproduced. My
suspicions were confirmed when I toured a small, minifundia grower
vineyard full of heavily laden vines with Fernando González of Adegas
Alguiera. The 50-something former banker-turned-bodeguero
explained that this overzealous farmer was one of the multitude who sell
their grapes to the larger Ribeira Sacra wineries and others outside
the region. Over intervening vintages González and his quality-minded
peers have tried to persuade the minifundia growers to reduce yields
significantly. If they are successful, the difference in quality could
occur practically overnight and propel Ribeira Sacra into the front
ranks of Spain's premier red wine regions. Together with the winemaking
expertise of González's peripatetic, talented Raúl Pérez, who brought
out the best in Adegas Alguiera's wines, these small, old vine plots,
with careful vineyard practices, are capable of producing world-class
wines. The progress being made was underscored during a visit this
August.
Pradio, a new, but very isolated hill country winery overlooking the
intersection where the Sil River pours out of its "throat" (Gargantuas
del Sil) into the Miño River, with José Manuel Rodríguez, president of
the Consejo Regulador of Ribeira Sacra. Pradio's youthful and energetic
30-something owner Xavier Seone Novelle has renovated a small hamlet of
old houses and built a winery, a rural hotel and facilities for mountain
tourists. He welcomed us with glasses of Pradio 2006, a carbonic
maceration red wine, along with some of his mother's excellent tapas. It
was evident from the first sip, at least at this winery, that things in
Ribeira Sacra are moving in the right direction. The wine was
deliciously fruity, moderate in alcohol and had seen no wood - except
the trees growing on the property.
That night at O Grelo restaurant, just down the road from the hilltop
Parador de Turismo where I was staying in the Ribeira Sacra capital of
Monforte de Lemos, José Manuel Rodríguez and I tasted through his wines,
paired with house tapas. The juicy, complex Décima 2006 and the Décima
2005 (a year he says was "espectacular" for his wine) were both
delicious and full flavored, and neither topped 12.2 percent alcohol. He
then poured an unusual and unusually good Décima 2006 tinto that was a
silky, easy-drinking blend of mencía, garnacha tintoera (30 percent) and
the white godello (10 percent). The garnacha tintorera boosted the
alcohol level to 13.5, but that is low by today's standards. I now had
tasted four superb mencía-based Ribeira Sacra wines from two small
producers, and there were more to come.
A day later, after a heart-stopping tour of hillside mencía vineyards
with Fernando González (the van was worrisomely wide for navigating the
cliff-side access road), we returned to Alguiera and were met by Raúl
Pérez, who was fresh off a flying enologist run to and from Bierzo in
his Mini-Cooper. He led us through an eye-opening lineup of wines
ranging from the Alguiera 2006, which will be superb with bottle age,
back to the 2001, one of the best mencía-based wines I had ever tasted -
and certainly the best Ribeira Sacra wine ever made. As we were
drinking the wines with some tapas from Alguiera's own small restaurant,
José Manuel Rodríguez showed up with Dona Das Penas owner Antonio
Lombardía, who produced a bottle of juicy, white peach- and
honeysuckle-flavored, mineral-laced Alma Larga Godello 2006, which
clearly demonstrated that Ribeira Sacra was capable of producing a
world-class white as well. The next morning, at the Parador of Monforte
de Lemos, Antonio Lombardía poured his Verdes Matas Mencía 2006, which,
despite just having been bottled and marked by new oak, showed excellent
potential with rich, sweet raspberry and red currant fruit, mineral
flavors and only 12.5 percent alcohol.
On earlier trips to Ribeira Sacra, I had seen glimpses of potential
greatness in the meager production of José Manuel Rodríguez's Décima and
in Alguiera, Viña Cazoga and Abadía da Cova, which had been on the U.S.
market for some time, but seemed to have lost focus under the
interventionist winemaking market urgings of their former American
importer. Others, such as Peza do Rei, Rectoral de Amandi, Cividade,
Ponte da Boga, Os Cipreses and Vía Romana, showed promise, and some were
delicious with food, but, in general, they lacked finesse and some
needed to lower their yields.
Now, however, after the remarkable August tastings at Alguiera and the
samplings of Décima, Pradio and Pena Das Donas, I had seen the future of
Ribeira Sacra crystallize in just two days. And there are other very
promising mencía wines now entering the American market, such as D.
Ventura Viña Caniero, in the which the great Gerardo Méndez of Rías
Baixas's Do Ferreiro Albariño has a hand; the unusual, but exotic and
intriguing (cherry and chestnut wood, for example, instead of oak)
Enológica Thémera; and a trio of wines - Lacima, Lapena and Lalama -
from Priorat husband-wife team, Sara Pérez (Clos Martinet) and René
Barbier, Jr. (Clos Mogador). With Pérez-Barbier, what I fear is not an
invasion of alliterative labels, but the Priorat factor, which I hope
does not bring in its wake Mediterranean climate-style wines with 14
percent to 15 percent alcohol levels.
Andre Tamers, president of De Maison Selections and the U.S. importer of
D. Ventura Viña Caniero, fervently believes in the future of Ribeira
Sacra and warns of attempts to "Prioratize" these Atlantic-climate
wines. He says those that are being made in this fashion in Bierzo are
suffering from the overzealous use of new oak and are "completely over
hyped. Bierzo is really more like Beaujolais," he notes. "Ribeira Sacra
has the potential to be the new Burgundy." Based on the real promise of
the mencía-based wines I tasted in August, within two to three years, I
believe Ribeira Sacra will vault onto the world wine stage to join the
Spanish red wine chorus line that already includes Bierzo, Jumilla,
Priorat and Toro.
But Ribeira Sacra, if it stays true to its regional style, will be the
lightest-stepping dancer in the line as the antidote to the big alcohol
wines that still dominate today. Therein lies the challenge: to maintain
the lovely raspberry, red currant and light black raspberry mencía
fruit, minerality and modest alcohol content that makes these wines so
engaging. To do so means resisting the temptation to submit to the
ubiquitous abuse of new oak, which overwhelms both the fruit and the
terroir.
If these first few Ribeira Sacra wines entering the American market are
an indicator, they may prove to be Spain's antidote to all the overblown
blockbuster wines out there - an antidote that a multitude of
protesting wine lovers and importers like André Tamers and Alexandra
Elman of New York's Marble Hill Cellars are ready to embrace. Perhaps
big brother Bierzo will even follow Ribeira Sacra's lead and mencía will
reach the top of the Pop chart by singing its own tune. Might I suggest
"I Stop By Heaven" from Jerry Butler's soul album, "The Iceman Cometh?"
Tasting BAR
Many Bierzo wines, including some from the best, most vaunted vineyards,
have elevated alcohol levels and are often the victims of over-oaking, a
serious problem in this region (as well as in many other parts of
Spain). Newcomers to Bierzo should seek the delicious raspberry fruit
and mineral flavors of the younger, fresher, unoaked versions, and be
leery of labels that connote roble or joven roble, which could indicate a
regimen of three to six months in harsh new oak (a practice that breaks
in new barrels for aging more important wines).
The majority of the wines that follow were tasted in Spain with the producers; they were not tasted blind.
Albares Mencía, 2006 Dominio de Tares (no oak; 13.5%) - $11: Ripe black
raspberry and mineral nose. Rich, delicious mélange of black raspberry,
currant and dark baker's chocolate with a long, lingering,
graphite-mineral finish. I have to admit that this wine has been my
house red for years and I love it. At this price, Albares is a steal!
(Importer: Classical Wines) Score: 91
Pétalos Mencía, 2006 Descendientes de J. Palacios (5 months in oak; 14%)
- $20: Ripe black raspberry nose. Round, smooth entry with delicious,
deep black raspberry and currant fruit laced with graphite-like mineral
flavors in a finish that still shows some wood and fruit tannins.
Reasonable value. (Importer: Rare Wine Company) Score: 90
Peique Mencía, 2006 Bodegas Peique (13.5%) - $12: Rich fruit, clove,
licorice and mineral nose. Delicious, rich, luscious red and black wild
berries with clove, licorice and bitter dark chocolate notes.
Reminiscent of a Graves or a good Chinon. Unbelievable bargain.
(Importer: José Pastor Selections, Vinos & Gourmet, Inc.) Score:
91
Paixar Mencía, 2004 Paixar (14%) - $70: More new French oak than fruit
in the nose. Excellent black raspberry and mineral flavors. In spite of
the 14% alcohol and liberal lashing of new oak, experience with this
wine shows that time and food will tone down these normally egregious
flaws in the wines of this particular producer, who, seemingly, is
enamored of new French oak. If you are, too, and you find this rather
stiff tab in your range, this wine will really deliver. (Importer:
Aurelio Cabestrero) Score: 92
Vega Montán Mencía Roble, 2005 Bodegas Adrià (14%) - $16: Spicy, sweet
fruit, slate-like minerals and new oak in the nose. Nice entry with
sweet ripe fruit and haunting soil flavors. Well balanced, so it tastes
lighter than its 14%, but it is a bit over-oaked. Air, food and
decanting improve the mix considerably. Good value. (Importer: Marble
Hill Cellars) Score: 88
Cásar de Burbía, 2004 Cásar de Burbía (13.5%) - $20: Nice nose of red
currant, cherry and minerals. Despite five months in new French and
Hungarian oak, two-plus years in bottle have left it with none of the
new oak nasties. Delicious balance of ripe berry fruit, dark chocolate,
terroir and restrained oak. A real sleeper. (Importer: Nick Radisic, Rad
Grapes) Score: 89
Tilenus (Envejecido en Roble), 2004 Bodegas Estefanía (14%) - $20:
Earthy slate, ripe red fruit and some oak in the nose. Great balance of
rich wild berries, minerals and well-integrated oak which may contribute
to the pleasantly bitter finish. This elegant wine will surpass many
Burgundy clos on the market. Why the maker felt compelled to inscribe
"aged in oak" on the label, except perhaps for the purpose of appealing
to those who favor oak over fruit, is baffling. Nevertheless, the wine
is a fine value. (Importer: Eric Solomon Selections) Score: 91
Ribeira Sacra Décima, 2006 José Manuel Rodríguez (unoaked; 12%) - $27:
Excellently balanced nose of red fruit and minerals. Delicious, with
juicy acids balancing sweet raspberry fruit flavors and an enticing,
complex mineral finish all in harmony because of the restrained alcohol
and no oak. (Importer: Marble Hill Cellars) Score: 91
Prádio Mencía, 2006 Xavier Seoane Novelle (unoaked; 12.5% alcohol) -
$20: Pleasant candied red fruit carbonic maceration nose. Delicious,
bright, fruity, balanced, quaffable wine with lots of raspberry and
currant fruit with a lasting, mineral-laced finish. Good value.
(Importer: Marble Hill Cellars) Score: 89
D. Ventura Viña Caneiro, 2006 Losada Fernández (unoaked, unfiltered;
14%) - $26: Pure, rustic, ripe fruit and minerals in the nose. Big,
rich, loaded with fruit, but very juicy and delicious with a long,
intriguing earthy minerality in the finish. Superb. (Importer: De Maison
Selections) Score: 92
Thémera, 2004 Enológica Témera (aged in cherry and chestnut wood; 12.5% -
$23: Nice nose with subdued red fruit and scents of cherry and chestnut
wood. Rich, but not overblown, juicy fruit with those odd, but not
off-putting oak flavors that compete with minerals. Interesting, and
good with food. (Importer: José Pastor Selections, Vinos &
Gourmet, Inc.) Score: 88
Algueira Mencía Barrica 2005 Algueira, S.L. (aged 13 to 14 months in
oak; 13%) - $40: Bright red fruit, graphite and non-obtrusive oak nose.
Nice red fruit, good balance of fruit, tannin and oak, but needs more
time. Quite good. (Importer: Antonio Antalvo) Score: 93
Alma Larga Godello Blanco 2006 Pena das Donas (no oak; 13.6%) - $25:
Lovely white peach and lees nose. Of white Burgundy quality with
delicious white peach and honeysuckle flavors, laced with a long,
mineral-like finish. (Importer: Marble Hill Cellars) Score: 92 - GD
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