Although the Spanish wine scene can seem a bit crowded, it’s also at a crossroads where some of the old-recipe producers are being left behind as a newer breed of winemakers turn to more authentic, unique offerings, often through much simpler winemaking. The result has been a wave of lighter, more transparent offerings – but by no means simple or diluted – that take it to the next level in terroir transparency, resulting in some of the greatest wines we have seen come out of the country.
After rating more than 2,500 Spanish wines in our Hong Kong office this year and encountering a record-breaking number of top scorers – four 100-pointers plus a slew rated 94-plus points – the takeaway from our tastings couldn’t be clearer: Spain stands atop the world of premium wine with a laser focus on drinkability and gastronomic consonance.
"Forty years ago, everyone in Spain wanted to make Rioja, so everything was tempranillo,” said Robert Santana, the winemaker for Envinate. “Twenty-five years ago, everyone wanted to make … wines with a lot of alcohol and 300 percent new oak, so there was a lot of cabernet and syrah.”
Run by a small group of college friends since 2008, Envinate currently works with 45 hectares of vines across Spain – in Tenerife, Ribeira Sacra, Almansa and Murcia – delivering both cool, tangy Atlantic freshness as well as fresh and spicy Mediterranean energy. Santana, one of the "four musketeers" of Envinate with Alfonso Torrente, Laura Ramos and Jose Martinez, told me in a Zoom interview that they wanted to avoid making “Coca-Cola”-type wines.