The biodynamic Cava house Gramona remains a leader in the category with a portfolio that maximizes tradition and innovation. Where else in Catalonia can you taste a cryoextracted Xarello "ice" wine? III Lustros is a benchmark bottling for Spanish sparklers. Flavors of green olive skin, petrol, fresh pear, and white rose emerge from the fine, caressing mouse. Sensual yet sharp, it has a laser-like precision that is undeniably Cava. — 7 years ago
Terra Alta has proven one of my favorite regions for white wine that nearly nobody knows about. Lafou makes one of the best - a Garnatxa Blanca of length and texture. Sweaty and mineral, the wine offers precise, clean flavors or green olive skin, almond dust, lemon pith, and Thai basil - corrupted further with tones of petrol, dried wax, rind, and salinity. What a wine. — 7 years ago
A blend of roughly 80% Garnatxa and 20% Syrah, this Penedès wine evokes a kinship to its GSM-blend cousins in the Southern Rhône. Macerated black cherry, quinine, and garrigue meet an oily, sanguine quality that lets you know Garnatxa isn't steering this ship by itself. — 7 years ago
Lagravera is one of the most innovative, dynamic young wineries operating in the under-explored depths of Catalonia. Their top white wine, labeled La Pell, is built upon Grenache Blanc and Xarello - aged in amphorae. Honeyed and stoney, the wine opens with bountiful nectarine and peach flavors, before finding a hazlenutty back half. Lemon oil and rounded rocks, it elicits so much textural complexity and depth. — 7 years ago
The family-run Avinyó estate remains a beacon of artisan tradition for Cava wines, and their Brut Nature remains one of my favorites from their seamless portfolio. Resinous and leesy, the Xarello driven cuvée is rather giving for the Brut Nature category. Never thin or austere, the wine instead broadens on the palate to flavors of yellow apple, sawdust, pie crust, and mushroom. This is a Cava that can convert a Champagne diehard. — 7 years ago
Tempranillo isn't completely foreign to Catalonia. Here, in Costers del Segre, it goes under the alias Ull de Llebre. Tomas Cusiné's easy drinking rendition draws its title from this local name. Gamey and mineral, the wine elicits tremendous varietal character with a vibrant acidity and medicinal herbal tones. The wine follows a lean, linear trajectory, broadening a tinge on the slightly oxidative, figgy finish. — 7 years ago
Pla de Bages is one corner of Catalonia that has enjoyed the arrival of French grape varieties. Abadal's Crianza, a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, embodies that trend. Verdant and savory, you get all of those gratifyingly herbaceous Cabernet flavors - graphite, pine needles, cassis, licorice, leather. — 7 years ago
Another stunner from the Terra Alta Do, Edetària yields an untethered expression of Garnatxa Blanca. Animale, cantaloupe peel, and dried pear pave way to apollenous, expansive mid-palate that's rustic and refined at once. A pleasant tahini-like bitterness adds complexity to the finish. — 7 years ago
Empordà is proving an exciting corner of the wine world for Carignan, locally called Samsó. Rhodes is the top red from Mas Llunes, where Samsó is blended with Grenache and Cabernet Sauvignon. Structured with plush, chewy tannins, the wine leads in blue tones - blueberry and violet, tarragon and sage - with a subtle, pleasant smoky gaminess. — 7 years ago
Bryce Wiatrak
Marco Abella's top Priorat wine actually leads with Cariñena before Garnatxa, with David Marco asserting that Cariñena is the more powerful and more mineral of the two grapes. Rocky, craggy and saline, the wine's savory edges mimic the steep terraced slopes from which these wines are born. The 2012 Clos Abella finds a concentrated pillar of kalamata, prune, rosemary, smoke, and other flavors evocative of the Mediterranean coast. Stoic and lengthy, the wine has many stories yet to unfold. — 7 years ago