Suddenly, there was the Marques de Riscal Rioja 1862 in a wine glass in front of me. Not only did this 160-year-old red wine still have an astonishingly healthy garnet color, but even more extraordinary was that it smelled and tasted very much alive.
That’s already incredible, but there’s more to this situation than meets the eye. You see, that wine was the very first Rioja wine to be sold in bottle, and it represents the beginning of quality wine production in what is now Spain’s most famous wine region. For us, selling wines in bottle goes without saying, but for Spain in the middle of the 19th century it was a revolutionary step that opened up the possibility of exporting quality wine with a guarantee of authenticity.
The completion of the railway line linking Rioja with the port of Bilbao in 1864 made it much easier to export Rioja wines in barrel and bottle – part of the technical innovations and new winemaking methods at the time that set the region on the path to its contemporary success.