Just before this article
went to press, at the Encuentro
Verema (verema.com) wine
convention in Valencia,
I met Spanish film producer José Luís
Cuerda, who recently began producing Sanclodio, a delicious, complex, delightful
white made with six grapes: treixadura,
albariño, loureiro,
godello, torrontés and caiño blanco.
Only the fact that Cuerda's vines
are still young and thus exhibit little of the terroir
that they will undoubtedly show as his viñas,
keeps this superbly balanced wine from being one
of the great white wines of Galicia.
Ribavia
is dotted with charming, old wine-growing villages
hemmed by rustic, trellised small plot vineyards planted
long ago on granite-buttressed terraces. These viñedos are of another age and are among of the most picturesque
in Spain.
While looking for the vineyards of Emilio Rojo
in the hamlet of Arnoia,
it was disconcerting to happen upon a forest fire, thought
to be set by an arsonist, raging southeast of town and potentially
threatening a particularly beautiful spread of old vines
and the quaint stone houses that stood among them. The scene
became totally surreal when helicopters and fire-fighting
planes swooped in, flying back and forth to the Minho river and a nearby
reservoir to collect water for "bombing runs."
Unfortunately, this was not be the last time I came upon
such a scene during this August trip. (If one tastes a smoky
quality in some 2006 Galician whites, in all seriousness,
it will not be from a toasted barrel.)
Rías
Baixas: To the west of
Ribeiro lies Rías
Baixas, characterized by the southern
Galician Baixas,
or "lower," fjord-like inlets that mark the Galician
coast and from which both the area and the DO take their
names. The albariño grape
reigns supreme in Rías Baixas,
and the luscious, fruity, but nicely balanced, food-friendly
wines produced from it have propelled Galician whites into
both the national and international spotlight. Indeed, Rías
Baixas whites are some of the
most versatile and least intimidating in the market; its
Albariños typically exhibit lovely,
green-tinged straw or light gold colors and exude typically
fruity albariño aromas reminiscent
of pear, white peach, pineapple or apricot; racy acid underpinnings
shore up the same often luscious fruit flavors found in
the nose and balance harmoniously with delicious, complex,
dry mineral-laced finishes. This attractive combination
of fruitiness and dryness makes Albariños
ideal as apéritif wines and equally
suitable mates for a range of modern dishes, as well as
for Galicia’s legendary seafood classics. Because of their inherent versatility,
Albariños have become so popular
with American consumers that the United
States is now its most
important export market (the only Spanish wine region
that can claim that distinction).
Five designated winegrowing areas make
up the Rías
Baixas DO: Condado
de Tea, O Rosal, Val do Salnés,
Soutomaior and the relatively
new Ribeira do Ulla.
In each of these subzones, a wine
must be 100 percent albariño
to use the Albariño monovarietal
designation on the label. This is often a moot point, since
95 percent of Rías Baixas’s more than 7,500 acres
of registered DO vineyards are planted to albariño.
Yet there are some very high-quality, noteworthy whites
that cannot be labeled as Albariño,
but can be designated Rías Baixas as long as they contain
at least 70 percent albariño.
In Condado de Tea and O
Rosal some very interesting,
sometimes very high-quality versions of these wines are
made (by long-standing tradition) with up to 30 percent
of the DO’s other preferred varieties
— treixadura, loureira and caiño
blanco (some godello,
torrontés and marqués
are also authorized). Small additions of these varieties
to the albariño deepens aromas, adds body and, often these
blends show more complexity than many 100% albariño
wines.
With more than 60 percent of its vineyards
registered, Val do Salnés, surrounded on three sides by the Atlantic
and the inlets Ría
de Arousa and Ría
de Pontevedra,
is the most important Rías Baixas
subregion, followed by Condado de
Tea and O Rosal, both in southernmost
Galicia along the Minho. Several major producers in Condado de Tea, along with their 100 percent Albariño wines, also make intriguing albariño-treixadura-albariño
blends; most prominent are Marqués
de Vizhoja’s Señor
de Folla Verde, Adegas
Galegas’s Veigadares
and Valmiñor’s Dávila.
Farther west, in the O Rosal subregion
at the mouth of the Minho,
Terras
Gauda, Santiago
Ruíz and Pazo de San Mauro are all
marked by loureiro in
the blend, along with smaller percentages of treixadura
and caiño blanco that promote
an attractive complexity and demonstrate the significant
potential of these lesser-known grapes when blended with
albariño.
In the literal rather than figurative sense,
Rías Baixas wines are likely the most feminine in Spain. Many of
the country’s wine regions have female winemakers and winery
owners, but not in the numbers working in Rías
Baixas, where the president of
the Consejo
Regulador is the dynamic
María
Soledad Bueno, owner
of Pazo
de Señorans. Among the
female enologists responsible for some of the region’s top
wines are María
Luisa Freire (Santiago
Ruíz), Pilar
Jiménez (Pazo
de Barrantes), Cristina
Mantilla (Veigadares,
Pazo de San Mauro, Valminor
Dávila and Couto),
Ana Martín (Condes
de Albarei), Angela Martín
(Casal Caiero), Ana Oliveira (Terras
Guada), María
del Ana Quintela (Pazo
de Señorans) and Isabel
Salgado (La Granja Fillaboa).
Many
of these producers were showing their wines at the colorful
annual Festa do Albariño
held every August in Cambados,
the main town of the Val de Salnés
district. As the first American invited to help judge this
Albariño competition at this event,
I was privileged to sample more than 70 wines over the course
of the competition, the public tastings,
official meals and impromptu gastronomic excursions around
Cambabos. Many superb, small-producer,
100 percent Albariño were among
my favorites: Cabaliero
do Val, Dona Rosa (which finished second in the
Albariño judging), Manuel Ilustre's
Dos Eidos, Gerardo Méndez's
Do Ferreiro
(one of the region's best producers), Granja
Fillaboa, Lusco,
Palacio de Fefiñanes,
Pazo de Barrantes and
Pazo de Señorans
(fortunately, most are currently exported to the United
States). Judging, tasting and drinking these wines, often
with those supernal shellfish of Galicia — ostras (oysters),
almejas (clams), cigalas
(langoustines), nécoras (small
crabs), vieiras (sea scallops) and zamburiñas
(similar to bay scallops, served with their coral) — underscored
the excellence of Spain’s
best-known white varietal wine.
The range of my dining
experiences while in Cambados, which spanned modern Spanish cuisine and regional
specialities, underscored the
versatility of Albariño, and tastings of several
wines, particularly those of Pazo
de Señorans and Palacio
de Fefiñanes, reinforced
my faith in the age-worthiness of this native white in the
hands of the best producers. Yet several barrel-fermented
Rías Baixas
whites sampled on this trip reconfirmed my belief (formed
on earlier visits) that fermenting such wines in new oak
fails to enhance their natural flavors and often masks their
freshness, fruitiness, charm, nuances and any terroir they may possess.
In this new oak-demented age, mercifully,
the majority of Rías Baixas whites are spared brutal
lashings of oak that many other Spanish wines suffer. Three
of the very best, Pazo de Señorans
(unoaked), Do Ferreiro and Do Ferreiro Cepas Vellas (old vines) and Palacio de
Fefiñanes (used barrels), see
no new oak, yet age well, particularly the latter. Pazo
de Señorans Selección de Añadas Albariño, a stellar wine
made only in the best Rías Baixas
vintages, is aged on the lees in stainless steel for three
years. Fruity and complex, it is one of Rías
Baixas’s greatest wines and one
of the best Spanish whites I have ever encountered. Founded
in 1904 and housed in a baronial palace on a charming plaza
in Cambados, Palacio de Fefiñanes makes albariños aged in
large, used oak vats (a la Alsace), which have minimal impact
on the flavor, but contribute greatly to the age-worthiness
of the wines, which I have beem tracking since the 1994 vintage). Fefiñanes,
owned and produced by Juan Gil de Araujo
(not to be confused with the Juan Gil of Jumilla),
is on par with some of the finest Chablis.
.
|