Showing posts with label Ribeiro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ribeiro. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Spain Poses As Beaujolais

Wine clubs should be for exploration, not repetition. My wine club surprised me this month with a tasty imposter from Spain. The 2021 Mix Tinto, from Mixtura Wines, is all Spanish, but it does a nice impression of a Beaujolais. 

The cool-climate red is from Galacia, on Spain's northwest corner. I'll be drawing liberally here from the website of the importer, The Source Imports. "A native of Galicia, Gutier Seijo Otero developed his own project, Mix and Mixtura, in 2019 after nearly a decade at the helm of the historical Ribeira Sacra winery, Dominio do Bibei. Though his winery is in Ribeiro, the project is focused on recovering historical vineyards and native grape varieties in northwestern Spain and Portugal along the Miño and Sil rivers. His wines disregard traditional political boundaries and are labeled without appellation and variety. The project is rooted in a deep respect for the land and culture, using minimal intervention and native yeasts, with Mix largely vinified and aged in small old French oak and Tava amphoras, and Mixtura in concrete eggs and Stockinger barrels."

They aren't kidding about the labeling. I am really just guessing that the vintage is 2021. I could be wrong. I don't have to guess about the composition, though. Mix Tinto is made from 70% Bierzo Mencía grapes, grown "on granite bedrock with a topsoil of deep red clay and cobbles," and 30% "Ribeiro Caiño Longo on granite bedrock and sábrego (decomposed granite with granitic clay and sand) topsoil." The grapes were crushed whole cluster and the wine was aged in French oak for eleven months. Alcohol hits only 12% abv and the wine retails for $34.

This wine is dark purple, almost indigo. The nose is bright and strident. Aromas of blackberry dominate, and plenty of minerality comes through. A layer of oak spice completes the scene. On the palate, savory is the word. Earthy tones cover the dark fruit, while spices play with a hint of oak. The finish is lengthy and the tannins are firm without being overwhelming. 


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Monday, February 2, 2026

Light And Bouncy Red From Ribeiro

The 2022 Cume do Avia Colleita No. 10 is a light red wine from Spain’s Ribeiro region, in Galicia. The Source Imports, of Moorpark, CA, have some rich notes about the winery and the grapes. 

The main grape is Caiño Longo (40%), one of the oldest known indigenous varieties in Ribeiro. The importer calls it a “lightning bolt of freshness with an atomic level of expansive energy.” Makes you want to open it right away, doesn’t it? Sousón (34%) has a “turbo charge of natural acidity,” while Brancellao (26%) is “dainty, thin framed, soft spoken and subtly powerful.” The region is cool anyway, and the fruit is picked on the early side of ripeness.


Cume do Avia’s “geologically complex mountainside vineyards are composed of granodiorite, schist, slate, and gneiss bedrock, clay and sand topsoil” overlooking the Avia and Miño Rivers.


Colleita 10 Tinto is 40% whole cluster, aged nine months in large, ancient chestnut foudres. It is lightly filtered before bottling. Alcohol is a lilting 11% abv while the retail price is $26.


The wine has a medium-light ruby color. The aromatic nose is nearly all minerals, with raspberry and black pepper notes. The palate is smooth and savory, with tart red fruit flavors. The taste reminds me of a very Burgundian Pinot Noir or a Schiava from Italy’s Alpine region. The tannins are quite relaxed, and the acidity is on the tame side, too. It is a tasty wine, though. Pair it with soft cheese or a fruit plate. 



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