On first sip, this wine earned my double-take. What the hell is that? And then it just got more and more fascinating. Destemmed and pressed off after eight days of... read more →
At my first taste I wrote, “Hello old-fashioned deliciousness.” The fruit comes from Martin’s oldest vines in Saint-Julien which were planted in the 1950s on limestone and marl. It’s partially... read more →
Tako Juruli (Zhuka) and Zura Sanodze (Sano) stumbled upon an old house in Telavi and thought they’d put the vineyard and marani to use. They tapped the right people to... read more →
Ariane Lesné bought the domaine from Emilie Heredia in 2015 and while her love was for pineau d’aunis, gamay is its likely companion. She sourced the fruit for this from... read more →
Another winner from the beautifully farmed land of M. Rateau. 2018 was a bit of a mixed bag and the sorting table was needed. From the taste here, the work... read more →
Diego Losada had a guitar habit and a science education. If you’re going to head for zero/zero winemaking, the coupling of those talents is spectacular preparation. He rents 15 parcels... read more →
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 →
Renan Cancino is a minimalist and proud traditionalist winemaker. All of his wines get hand-destemmed on a the zaranda, fermented, foot stomped and then aged in old wooden barrels. Here the... read more →
Macarena and Thomas get this own-rooted país in the Itata Valley’s granitic soils. The grapes are de-stemmed and spontaneously fermented in stainless steel with two months and two weeks on... read more →
The Guarilihue region of Itata was long known for its small plots of hilly, fabulous terroir. That’s the homeland for Tinajacura’s fruit. This wine is made with old, own-rooted cinsault... read more →