Winemaker Notes
Primeiras Vinhas has a bright lemon to golden-yellow color and a concentrated ripe fruit aroma with buttery notes and plenty of spice. It boasts an elegant, vibrant flavor that is very firm and tropical tasting in its youth and gets bigger with ageing. Its full body perfectly balances with a crisp acidity. These complexities are due to the early ripening of the Alvarinho on the suntrap, nicknamed 'Soalheiro,' where their first vineyard is located.
The wine made from the oldest vines features lively acidity with added complexity from the barrel, making it a versatile match for many plates. It pairs well with seafood, all kinds of fish, poultry dishes, mature cheeses, smoked meats, or Asian and Mediterranean gastronomies.
Professional Ratings
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Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
The 2023 Primeiras Vinhas feels closed, backward, shy and undeveloped, serious and a little austere. It comes, of course, from the first family vineyard they planted in 1974. The wine feels especially complete and balanced, with good ripeness, more complexity and depth but also with more freshness, possibly reflecting the cooler year. It fermented with indigenous yeasts in stainless steel, used barriques and a 5,000-liter oak vat and, since 2021, also two oak foudres. The part in oak represents perhaps 15% of the volume, but it does not play a part in the aromatics or flavors. Rating: 93+
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Wine Enthusiast
This is a beautifully textured Alvarinho from the north of Vinho Verde. Ripe apple aromas and warm, rich and rounded white fruits give a juicy wine, all fruit and ripeness.
Bright and aromatic with distinctive floral and fruity characteristics, Albariño has enjoyed a surge in popularity and an increase in plantings over the last couple of decades. Thick skins allow it to withstand the humid conditions of its homeland, Rías Baixas, Spain, free of malady, and produce a weighty but fresh white. Somm Secret—Albariño claims dual citizenship in Spain and Portugal. Under the name Alvarinho, it thrives in Portugal’s northwestern Vinho Verde region, which predictably, borders part of Spain’s Rías Baixas.
A cheerful, translucid, lemon-yellow and slightly pétillant white wine, Vinho Verde literally means ‘green wine’ and is named after the northwest Portugese region from which it originates. The ‘green’ in the name refers to the youthful state in which the wines are customarily released and consumed, not the color of the wine.
It is typically a blend of various percentages of Alvarinho, Loureiro, Trajadura, and Pedernã (Arinto). Following initial alcoholic fermentation, a natural, secondary malolactic conversion in cask produces carbon dioxide, giving Vinho Verde its charmingly light sparkle.