Cigales – tasting notes

Thursday, 25 February 2010
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Here are my stream-of-consciousness notes from a tasting of local wines that are exported to the UK from this small but distinctive wine region in north-west Spain. I had the  pleasure of participating in the tasting when I was there last November.  See Cigales – between a rock and a hard place for a full overview of a small region worthy of your attention.

Just about to be released. 14 months in oak, 70% French, 30% American, old and a little new. Real integrity on the nose and then very firm structure and bone dry but the fruit certainly stands up to the oak. Fresh and dense. Bottled in 2008. (JR) 14%
Drink 2009 – 2015
£7.99 Decanter Wines
Very dark crimson and high toned. Firm and rich and sleek. Solid. Very dry end. Correct and fiery and reminds me of Saperavi because it has so much acidity and structure. Obviously noble. Velvety texture and not too much acidity. Sufficiently fresh fruit. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2017
£13/14 Wells & Youngs
Started growing vines 1965. Started bottling in 1999. Young female winemaker called Ruth. 600,000 bottles. Buy about 20% of their grapes for rosé. Mid rose colour made from 20% white grapes fermented with red grapes. Smells of a holiday! Sweet and quite juicy and very modern with quite smart modern packaging. Substantial. Drink with food! (JR)
Drink 2009
Decanter Wines, Bon Vivant
They picked around 8 Oct in 2009. Very dark crimson. Smells very intense – reminds me of Russia! (Almost brown sugar it's so intense.) Sweeter than most – or at least lower in acid. Very good for the US market, I would have thought. Flattering and opulent. Rather dry end. Quite Pomerolly. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2014
Decanter Wines
16 months in American and French oak. Chosen as the best wine of Castilla y León by sommeliers. Extremely deep crimson. Much more savoury than the 2006 Crianza. A selection of the best barrels, and an extra four to five months. Very complete and lush and with deep undertow of ripe tannins. 100-year-old vines on the label. Hint of liquorice and definite herbs. Really quite superior but a bit hot. 10,000 bottles approximately. (JR) 14.9%
Drink 2009 – 2019
Decanter Wines
They own 80 ha of vines but buy in a lot, 80% red grapes. Family company but perhaps not all the members of the company are committed now. Very heavy and sweet and really rather syrupy. (JR)
Drink 2009
Berkmann & Rhône UK/Florida, New York and Pennsylvania
Doesn't say Frutos Villar on the label because it's the owner of three bodegas in different regions, Ribera, Toro, Rueda and Cigales. Mid crimson. Tobacco nose and then rather tight and taut. A little eviscerated. (JR)
Drink 2010 – 2011
They make perhaps more than any other producer here, though Museum's cellar is bigger. Mid crimson. 0.5 million kg of grapes. Some of the high-acid character but not really enough flavour. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2013
Europa Worldwide Logistics
He comes with his first vintage of red and his English-speaking nephew. It's a typical family bodega with a long history of pink wine. Why red? It was a necessity. The oenologist Cesar Munoz said 'you really should take advantage of the red grapes here'. Very dark crimson. Very harmonious and complex and proper wine. Very rich and proper and serious. Long. Fresh as well as rich. Well done! (JR)
Drink 2005 – 2018
Georges Barbier of London, /Fine Wine Import on East Coast
He owns 42 ha and 17 are of 60-100 years minimum. He buys in sometimes. The oak seems a lot more obvious – very modern it seems. Still very tight. Taken out of barrel earlier than the 2000. Serious stuff with a lovely texture but still very young. (JR)
Drink 2012 – 2020
Georges Barbier of London
Walter the oenologist is Uruguayan and been here for four years. Owner is a businessman. 84 ha. They don't buy in. Started about 2002/3 in the market. 80% Tempranillo + Verdejo and Albillo. Rather rude and in your face and syrupy. (JR)
Drink 2009
Robert Anthony Wines (Leeds)
Mid crimson, not the most intense colour. Rather rustic nose. Very sweet and in-your-face. Tastes a bit overripe and porty, with a rusty-nails end. (JR)
Drink 2008 – 2011
First vintage was 1998. Very dark. Quite a volatile nose. Blast from the past! Heavy and sweet with possibly a little brett. Still for sale, apparently 'we have many bottles'. Hmm. Can rather understand why. (JR)
Drink 0
Robert Anthony Wines
Means 'The League'. Started in 1997 with vineyards that are now 30 years old. Bought for a deaf brother.  80 ha. They don't buy in. 85% Tempranillo and a little Cabernet Sauvignon and Garnacha. Apparently they can use Cabernet Sauvignon in a blend... Telmo Rodriguez makes his Cigales in their cellar – rather cosmopolitan bloke. Vina 105 is Telmo's. Rather awkward and with quite high acidity. A little awkward on the finish. Family company. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2010
BBR, Elizabeth Wines
Very deep. Full and a little jagged and very sweet and simple. Cinnamon notes. Again a bit hollow. Philip Schwander imports in to Switzerland. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2011
BBR
Sweet and rich and round. Pretty heavy and voluptuous. Quite a bit of alcohol, American style. Cocoa. (JR)
Drink 2010 – 2014
BBR
Family-selected grapes. Scented and fresh and really lively. More energy than their other wines. Really zesty though lighter than some of the old-vine cuvées. (JR)
Drink 2008 – 2015
BBR
Very fruity and relatively simple on the nose, but actually there is a LOT of flavour here! Long and fresh and clean with a hint of minerality. Lots of frankness and energy here. GV (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2010
£5-6 Albion Wines
Belongs to the Matarromera group, their third winery. Looks like VAL de los Frailes on the label. They saw the potential. 1998 start. Saw that there was real potential for reds not just rosés here. They export to 51 countries but not much to the UK. Working with OMNI wines in the US. Very sweet, more 2003 and a little bit heavier than the more usual energetic fresh style of the DO. (JR)
Drink 2006 – 2011
Albion Wines
14 months in American and French oak. 90-year-old vines. Very dark indeed. Sweet and exotic nose. Quite a cocktail. Very thick and sweet and rather Rollandian. Thick velvety. Very opulent, almost an overlay of oak and winemaking rather than the fruit and vineyard. Flattering. (JR)
Drink 2008 – 2013
Albion Wines
Pre-phylloxera vines, 125 years old. Very noble and intense and deep-flavoured with the fruit defnitely triumphing over any winemaking here. Lovely expressive combination of altitude and minerality. Spicy and complete. (JR)
Drink 2007 – 2015
Albion Wines
Saignée, not the traditional blend. Very aromatic – I don't even have to take my nose to the glass. Full of primary fruit. Jumps out of the glass. (JR)
Drink 2010
Richard Oakes & Telfers
55% limestone and the most recent DO study of the terroirs says that theirs is very like Pomerol. Vines are 12 to 24 years old. Rather French in aroma, neat and well behaved. Less wild than some. American and French oak. They started with 100% French oak but the wines needed too much time before they were dirnkable. 1999 was their first vintage. (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2012
£10 Ockse Wines
Half of the vines are 60- to 100-years-old, grown on pebbles (cascajo). Dark crimson. Very neat again. Rather low-key nose. Well behaved and very middle of the road. No obvious oak and lots of acidity. Gentler than Ribera. The opposite of rustic – drawing-room stuff. Not unlike bordeaux! (JR)
Drink 2009 – 2014
£16 Ockse Wines
Just 11,000 bottles. Single vineyard. A partnership between Ana Martín (flying winemaker) and Maria Pinacho, who makes wine in Ribera del Duero. Made in Pinacho's father's winery. The vines were planted in 1945. They think their clone is closer to Toro's than Ribera's. The climate is very similar to Toro, and it's a sloping vineyard. Their first vintage was in 1998 and it's still drinking well, apparently, although it loses the structure. 'We were the first to make a special red in Cigales. It was almost all clarete and rose before using very old American oak barrels. Ours was the first modern Cigales wine.' First and second year American and French barrels. Very deep crimson. Very fine and luscious and juicy with great velvety texture and very fine. Spicier and herbier rather than red fruits. Definitely spicy. Dry finish. (JR) 14%
Drink 2009 – 2019
Dreyfus Ashby/Winebow
Started in 2000, a local family. Jazzy label. 15 ha vines, about 40 years old. Some even 60 years old. Six months in barrel. Polite wine that's sort of quite nice but not attention grabbing. Difficult to rate as I think I would welcome this in a restaurant but it is not making the most of the potential. A bit sweet and drying at the end. (JR)
Drink 2010 – 2013
Very dark crimson. He says the 2005 is rounder. This is certainly a bit tough. Doesn't taste as though it were made with love, but it's adequate especially if you are forgiving of tough tannins. (JR)
Drink 2011 – 2015
Dark crimson. Smells as though picked a little overripe? Then pretty tight and tough on the end. Chewy. 80% French oak, 80% new. I'm sure the fruit is great but the balance doesn't seem quite right yet. (JR)
Drink 2011 – 2017