FREE online courses on Learn to Taste Wine - Wines from
Spain
Spain
makes nearly as much wine as Italy
and France, but
the natives drink it right up and export little, so we don't see much Spanish
wine in this country.
This is a shame, because the wines of Spain can be
startlingly good, combining the finesse and character of France's finest with a
sunny, Mediterranean quality like that of Italy.
On the other hand, it's a delicious secret for wine tasters
in the know, because the laws of supply and demand have kept most Spanish wines
in the bargain range.
Spanish sparkling wines from Freixenet (particularly its
Cordon Negro in a Darth Vader-black bottle) and Codorniu (whose "English Cuvee
Brut Clasico" is my favorite Spanish sparkler) are gaining deserved popularity
while remaining in the modest $6 range.
Sherry, a British mispronunciation of "Jeres," the town near Seville from which
it's shipped, has been popular with Anglo-Saxons for centuries but still remains
cheaper than currently-chic Port from Portugal.
I like Spanish red wines best. Good ones, drunk young, are as
bright and refreshing as grape juice. Aged in wood and then in the bottle, they
add a spicy savor that's hard to match at any price.
Rioja, in north-central Spain,
above Madrid, became home to
emigrant French wine makers more than 100 years ago; they applied their
traditional skills to their new country's native grapes to create a new wine
with a familiar accent.
Among Rioja labels usually available in this area are the
products of Marques de Caceres, Marques de Riscal, Domecq and Olarra.
Olarra, a relatively new and very large bodega (winery), has
made a considerable effort to capture an American market. Its wines, if rarely
outstanding, are consistently good and have been available here at remarkably
low prices.