All of Renan Cancino’s wines get hand-destemmed on the zaranda, foot-stomped, fermented and aged in old wooden barrels where they stay until bottling. They stay in that bottle one more... read more →
Macarena Del Río and Thomas Parayre are making some of the most talked about wines of Chile. They work multiple vineyards from Maule to Itata, but this one mesmerized me.... read more →
The muscat and the torrontel ferment on the skins with a maceration that lasts 60 days; 20% of país juice is then added with the skins of their other white... read more →
Concrete aged, all stems, it’s chocolate and serious with a long, windy finish of velvet and deliciousness. I see they have it over at Crush in New York City. It... read more →
Carmelo Santana worked with Louis-Antoine Luyt in Chile and then continued to learn in various parts of Spain. Then he took that knowledge and headed back home to Gran Canaria,... read more →
About seven years ago, a fierce advocate for authentic wines in Argentina and now winemaker, Gabriel Dvorskin, wrote me a note about the scion of the Zuccardi family, Sebastián. “He... read more →
This is part of my país love affair. This one was traditionally destemmed on a pan-pipe-like bamboo contraption called a zaranda. Next, the free run juice was fermented and aged... read more →
Friends joining forces to recoup old vines to make wine is getting to be quite a trend. Great wines have ensued. Envínate and 4 Monos would be Spanish examples. Down... read more →
This high priestess was squeezed from 100-year-old own-rooted vines grown at 2,400 feet. She is sensual, transparent, a courtesan and a spitfire. The light shines on her and around her... read more →
From the Ycoden-Daute-Isora, the northwest part of Tenerife, this parcel for the unstoppable team of Envínate is 1000 meters up. I am in wine heaven. There’s much here that’s similar to... read more →