Winemaker Notes
Professional Ratings
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Wine & Spirits
The tannins stand firm in this wine’s scents of dark-roast coffee and flavors of bitter plum skin. There’s sour-cherry fruit in the middle, needing something fatty, like roast duck with cherries, to break through the tannic wall. Or cellar it for a few years to let those tannins soften.
Hailed as the star red variety in Spain’s most celebrated wine region, Tempranillo from Rioja, or simply labeled, “Rioja,” produces elegant wines with complex notes of red and black fruit, crushed rock, leather, toast and tobacco, whose best examples are fully capable of decades of improvement in the cellar.
Rioja wines are typically a blend of fruit from its three sub-regions: Rioja Alta, Rioja Alavesa and Rioja Oriental, although specific sub-region (zonas), village (municipios) and vineyard (viñedo singular) wines can now be labeled. Rioja Alta and Alavesa, at the highest elevations, are considered to be the source of the brightest, most elegant fruit, while grapes from the warmer and drier, Rioja Oriental, produce wines with deep color, great body and richness.