Posts Tagged : wine

Madeira’s Wine Institute – A Masterclass that made all the difference!

Text Olga Cardoso | Translation Bruno Ferreira

The Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM is the responsible entity for the supervision of regional wine activities and by the certification and quality control of Madeira wine.

An entity which, with administrative and financial autonomy, efficiently cares for the consolidation and sustained growth of traditional and regional products, without however neglecting the effectively rising promotion and the quality conservation, whether at a national or international level.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_1

The Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM – Photo Provided by IVBAM | All Rights Reserved

Madeira has about 400 hectares of vineyards. The agricultural lands are characterized by very steep slopes, generally in form of terraced fields. Madeira’s irrigation water is collected in the highlands of the island and is driven through channels called “levadas” that consist of an impressive 2150 Km channel system.

The most traditional conduction method is the “latada” (pergola), in which the vines are horizontally conducted. More recently there’s the espalier conduction method, which, however, can only be used in less steep slopes.

Normally the harvesting happens between mid-August and mid-October and it’s done in a totally manual way. The efforts are many, and the rituals mirror the difficulty relative to a whole smallholdings system spread over an extremely rugged terrain.

To speak of Madeira wine is like speaking of dramatism. Dramatism which is manifested not only in the overwhelming island’s view but also in its wines vinification method and long aging periods. Drama is indeed a well-defining word not only to Madeira but to everything that is portuguese. Yes, we’re a dramatic people… and it’s patent in the various aspects of our culture.

Our sound or national music is Fado – is there any other as strong, sad or deeply-felt? I can understand the difficulty that someone from the Northern Europe has, people that are usually colder, precise and devoid of such melancholic feelings. Or of someone from more cheerful and relaxed countries as are the South American ones. Indeed it must not be easy to understand all these exacerbated feelings of ours.

But, back to wine… It’s really a boast to be Portuguese. We’re young as concerns to still wines and yet we’ve won several international prizes and we’re already in publications of Wine Spectator and that confers us a place among the best world wines. However there’s still a long way to go in this area. That is if we want to maintain and increase this quality recognition.

We produce a little bit over 6 million hectoliters per year. To be on the top of the world in the quality matter, will demand a lot of us in the future. Spreading the word across the international consumers and not gird ourselves to the magazines’ recognition, will demand even more. Yes, because one thing is the magazines’ recognition and another quite different is the consumers’ acceptance and it’s that that will allow the Portuguese wines growth.

Does the press buy wines? No. Does the trade buy wines? Yes, but only to sell and while it’s financially justifiable. So, who do we have to attract? Naturally, the consumers.

Here I am, digressing again… Let’s get back to Madeira wine and IVBAM then.

This year I’ve been 4 times to Madeira and I’m about to board again. Really.. I just can’t get enough and I intend even to get more attached to the island in the future.

The last trip to Madeira, mid-November 2014, was remarkable. All of the Blend – All About Wine’s team members got quite impressed. We visited all of the Madeira wine producers and we also did a generic tasting of Madeira’s table wines.

We tried different and amazing restaurants’ and at the same time realized of its outstanding touristic potential… still so strangely forgotten when it comes to its wines.

Along the 5 trip days we tasted many high quality wines. New wines but mostly very old wines. Several of them with over 100 years, showing and proving, all of the island’s peculiarity. Some of them were tasted during the IVBAM’s MasterClass, very well led by the Head of IVBAM’s Chamber of Tasters – Rubina Vieira.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_2

MasterClass, led by the Head of IVBAM’s Chamber of Tasters – Rubina Vieira © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

In addition this MasterClass was also nicely customized. Yes, it was a Blend – All About Wine MasterClass, born and bred for us!

We tasted twelve wines from different producers, years and varieties. Starting with a Colheita de 1996 and finishing off with a Verdelho de 1850. The ones that impressed me the most were the Sercial 1862 and the Moscatel 1875. Due to its difference and rarity, the Bastardo de 1927 didn’t went by unnoticed as well.

Complexity, concentration, deepness and balance. Those were the common characteristics to these two wines. The first one, obviously, drier and thinner than the second which reveals more viscous and molassed notes although showing itself very harmonious and with no drop of excesses. What a great wines!

But the important thing here isn’t to talk about the wines/producers and their particularities and/or differences. That’s a task to each one of my colleagues, to talk about each producer individually.

Here it’s important to talk about all of the plenitude and grandiosity of Madeira wine. Five are the noble varieties of said wine. In a sweetness crescent grading we have: Sercial, Verdelho, Boal, Malvasia and yes…the Terrantez!!!

In a sweetness grading matter we can place it between the Verdelho and Boal. But, being so rare and amounting only 1% of the island’s production can’t be even taken into account.

We’re talking about a variety that gives birth to amazing wines. Think for instance in the monstrosity of the Pereira D’Oliveira Terrantez 1880.. From the wines I tasted to this day it’s probably one of the closest to perfection.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_3

Tasting table © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Even though not considered a noble caste, the Tinta Negra, is a variety widely used in the Madeira Wine. Nowadays the Madeira wines produced by this variety are already considerable, not only in quantity but also in quality.

The harvesting’s priority is:

  1. Verdelho;
  2. Boal;
  3. Tinta Negra;
  4. Malvasia;
  5. Sercial;

As regards the vinification process and/or aging, one of two processes may occur: Estufagem or Canteiro.

Estufagem – The wine is placed in stainless steel ovens, heated by a coil system where hot water circulates for a period not less than 3 months, at a temperature between 45 and 50 degrees Celsius. After the “estufagem”, the wine is subjected to an aging period of at least 90 days at room temperature. From this moment on it can remain in stainless steel or be placed in wooden casks, until it meets the conditions that allow the winemaker to do the wine’s completion, so it can be placed in the bottle, with the necessary quality assurance. However, these wines cannot be bottled and marketed before 31th October of the second year, following the harvest. These wines are mainly blends.

Canteiro – The wines selected to age in “Canteiro” (this denomination derives from putting the barrels under wooden beam supports, called canteiros) do so in casks, usually on the higher floors of the warehouses where temperatures are higher, for a minimum period of 2 years. It is an oxidative aging in casks, developing in the wines unique characteristics of intense and complex aromas. The “canteiro” wines can only go out to the market after a minimum of three years, counted from January 1st of the year following the harvest.

The fortification consists in the fermentation stoppage and the addition of wine alcohol at 96%. The timing for the fermentation interruption is scheduled accordingly to the sweetness level intended for the wine. This method allows the outcome of four wine types: dry, mid-dry, mid-sweet and sweet.

To me, speaking of Madeira wine is like speaking of passionate wines, engaging and thrilling. I confess myself completely rendered to its charms. I’m a Madeira wine Geek … it’s true!

Voluptuousness and seduction, lust and lasciviousness, hand in hand with a huge sensitivity, with finesse and wisdom. Who said these seemingly antagonistic characteristics cannot harmonize perfectly? Might all this telluric energy, all this authenticity and depth, encapsulate the foretaste of paradise?

Voltaire said that the Tokaji had the gift to spark up even the smallest fiber of their brains. Well, the he was an illuminist and I’m not … but I think that’s what really happens to me when it comes to Madeira Wine!

But while the Tokaji is considered the King of Wines and the Wine of Kings (so once said Louis XV while offering a glass of that wine to his lover Madame de Pompadour), let me say that, for me, for his triumphant acidity and its martyr winemaking process, conditions that make it almost immortal, Madeira is much more than a wine of kings … it’s truly a GODS’s wine!

And last but not the least have a look at this outstanding video on Madeira wine.

Video provided by the Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM

Contacts
Instituto do Vinho, do Bordado e do Artesanato da Madeira, I.P.
Rua Visconde de Anadia, nº44
9050-020 Funchal
Tel: (+351) 291 211 600
Fax: (+351) 291 224 791
E-mail: ivbam.sra@gov-madeira.pt
Site: www.ivbam.gov-madeira.pt

Madeira's Wine Institute – A Masterclass that made all the difference!

Text Olga Cardoso | Translation Bruno Ferreira

The Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM is the responsible entity for the supervision of regional wine activities and by the certification and quality control of Madeira wine.

An entity which, with administrative and financial autonomy, efficiently cares for the consolidation and sustained growth of traditional and regional products, without however neglecting the effectively rising promotion and the quality conservation, whether at a national or international level.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_1

The Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM – Photo Provided by IVBAM | All Rights Reserved

Madeira has about 400 hectares of vineyards. The agricultural lands are characterized by very steep slopes, generally in form of terraced fields. Madeira’s irrigation water is collected in the highlands of the island and is driven through channels called “levadas” that consist of an impressive 2150 Km channel system.

The most traditional conduction method is the “latada” (pergola), in which the vines are horizontally conducted. More recently there’s the espalier conduction method, which, however, can only be used in less steep slopes.

Normally the harvesting happens between mid-August and mid-October and it’s done in a totally manual way. The efforts are many, and the rituals mirror the difficulty relative to a whole smallholdings system spread over an extremely rugged terrain.

To speak of Madeira wine is like speaking of dramatism. Dramatism which is manifested not only in the overwhelming island’s view but also in its wines vinification method and long aging periods. Drama is indeed a well-defining word not only to Madeira but to everything that is portuguese. Yes, we’re a dramatic people… and it’s patent in the various aspects of our culture.

Our sound or national music is Fado – is there any other as strong, sad or deeply-felt? I can understand the difficulty that someone from the Northern Europe has, people that are usually colder, precise and devoid of such melancholic feelings. Or of someone from more cheerful and relaxed countries as are the South American ones. Indeed it must not be easy to understand all these exacerbated feelings of ours.

But, back to wine… It’s really a boast to be Portuguese. We’re young as concerns to still wines and yet we’ve won several international prizes and we’re already in publications of Wine Spectator and that confers us a place among the best world wines. However there’s still a long way to go in this area. That is if we want to maintain and increase this quality recognition.

We produce a little bit over 6 million hectoliters per year. To be on the top of the world in the quality matter, will demand a lot of us in the future. Spreading the word across the international consumers and not gird ourselves to the magazines’ recognition, will demand even more. Yes, because one thing is the magazines’ recognition and another quite different is the consumers’ acceptance and it’s that that will allow the Portuguese wines growth.

Does the press buy wines? No. Does the trade buy wines? Yes, but only to sell and while it’s financially justifiable. So, who do we have to attract? Naturally, the consumers.

Here I am, digressing again… Let’s get back to Madeira wine and IVBAM then.

This year I’ve been 4 times to Madeira and I’m about to board again. Really.. I just can’t get enough and I intend even to get more attached to the island in the future.

The last trip to Madeira, mid-November 2014, was remarkable. All of the Blend – All About Wine’s team members got quite impressed. We visited all of the Madeira wine producers and we also did a generic tasting of Madeira’s table wines.

We tried different and amazing restaurants’ and at the same time realized of its outstanding touristic potential… still so strangely forgotten when it comes to its wines.

Along the 5 trip days we tasted many high quality wines. New wines but mostly very old wines. Several of them with over 100 years, showing and proving, all of the island’s peculiarity. Some of them were tasted during the IVBAM’s MasterClass, very well led by the Head of IVBAM’s Chamber of Tasters – Rubina Vieira.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_2

MasterClass, led by the Head of IVBAM’s Chamber of Tasters – Rubina Vieira © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

In addition this MasterClass was also nicely customized. Yes, it was a Blend – All About Wine MasterClass, born and bred for us!

We tasted twelve wines from different producers, years and varieties. Starting with a Colheita de 1996 and finishing off with a Verdelho de 1850. The ones that impressed me the most were the Sercial 1862 and the Moscatel 1875. Due to its difference and rarity, the Bastardo de 1927 didn’t went by unnoticed as well.

Complexity, concentration, deepness and balance. Those were the common characteristics to these two wines. The first one, obviously, drier and thinner than the second which reveals more viscous and molassed notes although showing itself very harmonious and with no drop of excesses. What a great wines!

But the important thing here isn’t to talk about the wines/producers and their particularities and/or differences. That’s a task to each one of my colleagues, to talk about each producer individually.

Here it’s important to talk about all of the plenitude and grandiosity of Madeira wine. Five are the noble varieties of said wine. In a sweetness crescent grading we have: Sercial, Verdelho, Boal, Malvasia and yes…the Terrantez!!!

In a sweetness grading matter we can place it between the Verdelho and Boal. But, being so rare and amounting only 1% of the island’s production can’t be even taken into account.

We’re talking about a variety that gives birth to amazing wines. Think for instance in the monstrosity of the Pereira D’Oliveira Terrantez 1880.. From the wines I tasted to this day it’s probably one of the closest to perfection.

Blend_All_About_Wine_IVBAM_3

Tasting table © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Even though not considered a noble caste, the Tinta Negra, is a variety widely used in the Madeira Wine. Nowadays the Madeira wines produced by this variety are already considerable, not only in quantity but also in quality.

The harvesting’s priority is:

  1. Verdelho;
  2. Boal;
  3. Tinta Negra;
  4. Malvasia;
  5. Sercial;

As regards the vinification process and/or aging, one of two processes may occur: Estufagem or Canteiro.

Estufagem – The wine is placed in stainless steel ovens, heated by a coil system where hot water circulates for a period not less than 3 months, at a temperature between 45 and 50 degrees Celsius. After the “estufagem”, the wine is subjected to an aging period of at least 90 days at room temperature. From this moment on it can remain in stainless steel or be placed in wooden casks, until it meets the conditions that allow the winemaker to do the wine’s completion, so it can be placed in the bottle, with the necessary quality assurance. However, these wines cannot be bottled and marketed before 31th October of the second year, following the harvest. These wines are mainly blends.

Canteiro – The wines selected to age in “Canteiro” (this denomination derives from putting the barrels under wooden beam supports, called canteiros) do so in casks, usually on the higher floors of the warehouses where temperatures are higher, for a minimum period of 2 years. It is an oxidative aging in casks, developing in the wines unique characteristics of intense and complex aromas. The “canteiro” wines can only go out to the market after a minimum of three years, counted from January 1st of the year following the harvest.

The fortification consists in the fermentation stoppage and the addition of wine alcohol at 96%. The timing for the fermentation interruption is scheduled accordingly to the sweetness level intended for the wine. This method allows the outcome of four wine types: dry, mid-dry, mid-sweet and sweet.

To me, speaking of Madeira wine is like speaking of passionate wines, engaging and thrilling. I confess myself completely rendered to its charms. I’m a Madeira wine Geek … it’s true!

Voluptuousness and seduction, lust and lasciviousness, hand in hand with a huge sensitivity, with finesse and wisdom. Who said these seemingly antagonistic characteristics cannot harmonize perfectly? Might all this telluric energy, all this authenticity and depth, encapsulate the foretaste of paradise?

Voltaire said that the Tokaji had the gift to spark up even the smallest fiber of their brains. Well, the he was an illuminist and I’m not … but I think that’s what really happens to me when it comes to Madeira Wine!

But while the Tokaji is considered the King of Wines and the Wine of Kings (so once said Louis XV while offering a glass of that wine to his lover Madame de Pompadour), let me say that, for me, for his triumphant acidity and its martyr winemaking process, conditions that make it almost immortal, Madeira is much more than a wine of kings … it’s truly a GODS’s wine!

And last but not the least have a look at this outstanding video on Madeira wine.

Video provided by the Madeira’s Institute of Wine, Embroidery and Crafts, IP – IVBAM

Contacts
Instituto do Vinho, do Bordado e do Artesanato da Madeira, I.P.
Rua Visconde de Anadia, nº44
9050-020 Funchal
Tel: (+351) 291 211 600
Fax: (+351) 291 224 791
E-mail: ivbam.sra@gov-madeira.pt
Site: www.ivbam.gov-madeira.pt

Justino’s Madeira Wine

Text João Pedro de Carvalho | Translation Bruno Ferreira

The wine tradition in Madeira is secular. It all began in the XV century when Infante D. Henrique ordered the plantation of the Malvazia/Malmsey vineyards imported from Greece. Over 500 years later Madeira wine became one of greatest Wine World icons, as much by its longevity as by its quality, being present on important events such as the United States Independence Declaration on July 4, 1776 e.g..

On the recent trip to Madeira one of the the visited companies was the “Justino’s, Madeira, S.A.” created in 1953 whose founder was Justino Henrique Freitas in 1870 when it was still a family business, known as Vinhos Justino Henriques (V.J.H.). In 1981 Sigfredo da Costa Campos acquired the company and amplified its value with the purchase of Companhia Vinícola da Madeira’s stock. In 1993 associates to the french group “La Martiniquaise” and in 1994 moves out of the downtown facilities to the Parque Industrial de Cancela where it lies till today. With his death in 2008, the French group took hold of the company’s full control.

Blend_All_About_Wine_Justinos_1

10 years lineup (Sercial, Verdelho, Boal, Malvazia*) © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

The tasting, excellent by the way, was held on the current and modern facilities which gave me some longing feelings of that atmosphere so characteristic of the oldest wineries where the passage of time has taken its toll. Fortunately, with the help of the served wines excellency, the nostalgia disappeared almost immediately. Before pinpointing the ones I enjoyed the most, a small note about the “Justino’s 10 Anos” better known varieties (Sercial, Verdelho, Boal, Malvazia). Wines which present us an above average intensity and maturity.

It’s from this point on that the “Madeira World” starts to be probably better understood, wines where the set’s harmony blends into a more mature bouquet making us aspire to higher stages.

Blend_All_About_Wine_Justinos_2

Justino’s Terrantez Old Reserve © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Justino’s Terrantez Old Reserve
The Terrantez is a rare and nearly extinct variety, filling its wines with a mystery and fascination cape. We’re before a wine with over forty years, some nuances such as the greeny traces on the rim indicating it might as well be older than that. A concentrated and deep wine, some iodine notes, curry, lacquer, old cask wood, dried fruit with english cake, exotic and mysterious.
Mouth with an involving entrance, lining the palate with an unctuous aftertaste of nuts and almonds, orange jelly, and a great elegance along with a conquering acidity’s in a great and long ending.

Blend_All_About_Wine_Justinos_3

Justino’s Sercial 1940 © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Justino’s Sercial 1940
It’s the one needing the most time to develop and have presence in bottle, due to the high acidity which the variety conveys to the wines. My favorite of all with a lot of sea notes, lots of salty almond, lacquer, complexity and elegance, honey with an orange crystallized peel and at the same time exhaling a sharp freshness that tones the whole tasting. Great palate presence with a slight dried salty fruits greasiness. Iodine, citrus zest, plenty of emotion and flavour and once again an acidity focus, presenting an unforgettable wine! At all levels!

Blend_All_About_Wine_Justinos_4

Justino’s Verdelho 1954 © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Justino’s Verdelho 1954
A wine wine exhaling both freshness and energy, complexity in droves in a dense and even quite pinched set at the start. A touch of ripe lemon jelly, green tea, flowers bouquet along with nuts. Plenty of life in a dry and strong set. Mouth contrasting the aromas, full of flavour with remarkable notes highlighting a dryness that revitalizes the palate and invites to one more gulp. Always with plenty of flavour and a soft unctuous touch in a wine with a spicy and huge ending.

Blend_All_About_Wine_Justinos_5

Justino’s Malmsey 1933 © Blend All About Wine, Lda.

Justino’s Malmsey 1933
A great wine, showing why there’s no comparison to the great Madeira’s! The longevity cohabits with a complexity/freshness hard to find anywhere else. This is one of the great, those that win us over immediately. It feels, by the variety’s nature, that is sweeter and “heavier” than the previously tasted wines. Great complexity with milk caramel, fig raisins, lacquer, dried fruits. An elegant set with the necessary acidity conferring it plenty of life, ground coffee, box of cigars, spices. All pronounced in a perfect harmony between mouth and nose. Unctuous and fresh palate passage with a tiny tip of sweetness in the ending making it sinful.

Contacts
Parque Industrial da Cancela
9125 – 042 Caniço
Madeira
Tel: (+351) 291 934 257
Fax: (+351) 291 934 049
E-mail: justinos@justinosmadeira.com
Site: www.justinosmadeira.com

An Afternoon in Camarate With Domingos Soares Franco

Text José Silva

Domingos Soares Franco doesn’t need any introduction in the wine world. He belongs in the family that owns the firm José Maria da Fonseca, where he is also the master winemaker, but he is above all a wine lover and an investigator, someone discontented, always trying to do better and to do different. His work is for sure one of the main reasons of the success of one of the biggest Portuguese wine producers.

But he is also a funny person that loves being around a lot of people, and appreciates the good things in life. Every year, in June, Domingos Soares Franco invites a small group of wine writers who are also his friends, for a simple lunch at his house in Camarate, where the first rule is that everybody brings a bottle of wine, to which Domingos Soares Franco will add half a dozen other bottles of the house. Second rule is that there are no rules: we taste the wines (that in the meantime have been placed in champagne frapés with ice, so that they are at the right temperature), we exchange opinions, we draw comparisons, we remember other tastings, other wines, other styles.

Blend_All_About_Wine_An_Afternoon_in_Camarate_Wines

Wines © Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

With all the guests present, plus Domingo’s wife and son, and his nephew António, we seat at the table, for a simple but complete meal. We had tasted before some dry fruit, some toasts, bread and a piece of Azeitão cheese, cured, dry, that Domingo’s wife didn’t want him to put on the table, due to its bad look!

But Domingos Soares Franco, knowing both the product and his guests, didn’t hesitate putting it on the table. And the cheese disappeared in an instant! Sparkling wines from Terras do Demo, Malvasia Fina and Touriga Nacional, had already been tasted, as well as Alvarinho Nostalgia 2013 and II Terroirs of the same year, and some white from Dão Quinta dos Carvalhais, and they all were very well, plain of vivacity and freshness, and they quickly disappeared.

Then came the first surprise from Domingos Soares Franco, a comparison between two white wines of the house, having spent some years in the bottle, that’s how the winemaker wants them to be: Pasmados 2009, a great structure an complexity, beautiful acidity and the wood very well integrated, that was compared with its “grandparent” Pasmados…1963, something very serious, advanced, soft, dry, brilliant! Giving good indications of the possibility of these wines to age. Through the table had already passed Casal Santa Maria Pinot Noir 2011, Mapa 2010, Casa da Passarela O Enólogo 2010 and Bairrada’s Painel 2001, all of them in very good shape, for our great pleasure.

Blend_All_About_Wine_An_Afternoon_in_Camarate_Wines_Batuta_05_Pasmados

Batuta 05 | Pasmados – Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

Back to the lunch table, they served some big shrimps with mayonnaise, lettuce and asparagus, very tasty. And the wine tasting went on, now with the company of very good food. There was even Ribeira del Duero 2003, Mythos 2005 and Batuta 2005, still at a very good level, with that touch of the reds with some years and still going up. Shrimps were followed by a dish with great tradition in the house, a juicy pea soup, with smoked sausage and poached eggs, that we repeated as much as we could bear, always in the company of those fantastic wines.

Although all of them had been already tasted, at this point of the meal, Romeira 1987, Bairrada Vinus Vitae 1987 and Quinta das Cerejeiras 1995 came back, healthy, well-balanced, elegant. Then came the second surprise from Domingos Soares Franco a red from Colares, 1963, a classic, that elegance on the nose, smooth on the mouth, a great pleasure till the last drop.

Then a relic of the Portuguese wines, José de Sousa Rosado Fernandes 1940, an extraordinary wine, that Domingos Soares Franco had the audacity to open two bottles of! Hard to describe, absolutely amazing! I haven’t tried it for several years now, my God, how it is still exuberant and perfect!

Blend_All_About_Wine_An_Afternoon_in_Camarate_Wines_Trilogia

Trilogia – Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

When dessert arrived, they were placed on the balcony – with the true Azeitão tart as a must – fortified wines appeared, and in Azeitão we have muscat wines. Also a vintage Port from Ramos Pinto. Through our glasses passed Alambre 20 Years (see here a Blend post about this wine), always safe, very pleasant, and a delicious Batardinho 30 Years, very elegant, an incredible acidity, fresh, smooth but with great structure, a great wine. And we even sang Happy Birthday to Domingo’s son.

But Domingos Soares Franco prepared a last surprise for the evening: a bottle of Trilogia, an exoteric wine, incredible, superb. A meditation wine! After this, we were done, shouting nasty words at Domingos and remembering the ugly duckling from the cartoons when he said: “It’s an injustice, it is!”

The friendly smile of Domingos Soares Franco went home with us, with pleasure.
See you next year Domingos in Camarate…

Contacts
José Maria da Fonseca, S.A.
Quinta da Bassaqueira, Estrada Nacional 10
2925-542, Vila Nogueira de Azeitão, Setúbal, Portugal
Phone: 351 212 197 500
info@jmf.pt
www.jmf.pt

Blue Skies Drinking? The Rise of The Serious Rosé

Text Sarah Ahmed

If there’s a wine style which is firmly associated with summer and the holiday spirit it has to be rosé. Can it be any coincidence that Brazil, a country synonymous with sunshine and the holiday spirit, was the target audience for Mateus Rosé when it was first launched in 1942?

As for us Brits, when I interviewed Sir Cliff Richard a few years ago he told me that he has been a fan of, guess what, Mateus Rosé, since he bought his first house in the Algarve in the sixties. So it would seem that the “Summer Holiday” star’s holiday spirit has rolled on, in fact perhaps it’s the still boyish-looking singer’s elixir of youth!?!

rose_blend

Mateus Expressions – Photo by Sarah Ahmed | All Rights Reserved

But, over the last decade, there has been a major shift among consumers who, these days, are enjoying rosé year round and not just on holiday or in the summer. Indeed, last year in the UK, Rosé accounted for a record one in eight bottles of wine bought in supermarkets and off-licences, up from one in 40 in 2000. Now popular, even fashionable, the mainstay of sales has been sweeter, entry-level wines.

Though Mateus Rosé continues to outperform the market in this category, Californian brands such as Blossom Hill, Gallo and Echo Falls have been by far the biggest beneficiaries of the rosé phenomenon. As my panel at Decanter World Wine Awards would attest, in the main Portugal’s entry-level rosés have failed miserably to build on the success of Mateus Rosé thanks to clumsy use of residual sugar and a lack of freshness.

Still, being fashionable, there’s a new rosé trend in town – the serious rosé and get this, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie make one – Chateaux Miraval from Provence! Even Mateus has gone upmarket with the launch of a new top tier range, Mateus Expressions (pictured). And I am delighted to say that I have recently found compelling evidence to suggest that Portugal may fare better with the new, quality and complexity-focused trend. Here are my serious Portuguese rosé picks of the bunch:

Blend-All-About-Wine-Blue-Skies-Principal

Principal Rosé Tête de Cuvée 2010 – Photo by Sarah Ahmed | All Rights Reserved

Principal Rosé Tête de Cuvée 2010 (Bairrada)

“Tête de Cuvée” is a wine produced from the first pressing of the grapes, which means it’s usually purer and of superior quality. Not least when, like this wine, it is made in the Rolls Royce of presses – a Coquard Champagne press – from the first (whole bunch) pressing (600l) of Pinot Noir destined for the sparkling wine (reviewed below). The pressed juice is then gravity run into small tanks (gently does it again) which also accounts for its super-pale pinky-beige hue and subtle, saline and savoury palate. Creamy but fresh and gently fruity (rhubarb/strawberry), it is very long and persistent. A serious gastronomic rosé –quite possibly the best I’ve tasted from Portugal. Excellent. 12.5% abv

Colinas Espumante Brut Rosé 2009 (Bairrada)

A very impressive salmon-coloured 100% Pinot Noir fizz which was aged for three years on the lees. It has great verve and tension. Just a hint of greenness rachets up the overall impression of tightness and dryness. A long, focused, dry finish has a very persistent fine bead. Lovely structure. Excellent. 12.5% abv

Casa de Saima Rosé 2013 (Bairrada)

Sticking with Portuguese grapes this time (Baga with just a dash of Touriga Nacional) this pale but bright Bairrada rosé is fabulously saline, fresh and dry. Baga’s firm acid backbone brings great energy and line to its delicate crunchy red fruit 9think cranberries). 13% abv.

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Casa Ferreirinha Vinha Grande Rosado 2012 – Photo by Sarah Ahmed | All Rights Reserved

Casa Ferreirinha Vinha Grande Rosado 2012 (Douro)

Sogrape owns the Casa Ferreirinha and Mateus brands. While the top tier Mateus Expressions range is still very commercial (sweet) this seriously pale dry rosé firmly ticks both quality and complexity boxes. Sourced from 100% Touriga Nacional (which seems to work very well for rosés) and from the highest point of Quinta do Sairrão (at c. 650m), it’s delicately fruity, with a textured (gently creamy), spicy, savoury (nutty), mineral palate. A lovely unshowy yet sophisticated rosé, with finely balanced acidity. Very good. 12% abv

Quinta do Perdigão Rosé 2013 (Dão)

Full-time architect and full-time organic wine grower/maker José Perdigão is wont to give 300% to everything and, when he told me that this is the most serious rosé which he has made, I knew I was in for a rare treat. Compared with my other recommendations it’s a really deep pink hue – akin to the colour of stonking Australian Grenache rosés! It’s similarly muscular on the palate too. The reason? In 2013, the Dão experienced challenging conditions around harvest with spells of heavy rain and bursts of hot weather. Some of the fruit for this wine came in at very high baumé (with a potential alcohol level of 15.5 to 16%!) In consequence, Perdigão very cleverly introduced grape stems to the ferment for the first time, which brought perfume, freshness and helped lower the alcohol degrees. So at the end of the day, you get a win win – fabulously exuberant (red berry, currant and cherry) fruit and good body with balance. As for complexity, the Dão’s signature mineral and floral notes are well present in this Touriga Nacional, Jaen and Alfrocheiro blend. As Perdigão puts it, “it’s not a swimming pool rosé.” He recommends pairing it with dried tuna and wasabi. Highly original (perhaps even a one off given the vintage) – very good. 13.5% abv

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José Perdigão – Photo by Sarah Ahmed | All Rights Reserved

Julia Kemper Elpenor Rosé 2013 (Dão)

Kemper’s rosé is also made from certified organic fruit but it couldn’t be more different. Made from 100% Touriga Nacional it’s pale and ultra delicate with gentle red fruit and floral (violets) notes. Deliciously crisp and dry with fresh, mineral acidity.

Muxagat MUX Rosé 2012 (Douro)

This is a really interesting rosé – I’m tempted to say intellectual, but I think that might be pushing it too far! Anyway, what I mean is that it bears little resemblance to the sweetish cheap and cheerful pink wines to be found in every corner shop and supermarket. All of which stands to reason given that MUX is sourced from a very high vineyard at 700m, moreover is influenced by the kind of dry, savoury rosés which Mateus Nicolau de Almeida’s southern French friends like to drink on a summer’s day (think Provence, Bandol, Tavel). A blend of Tinta Cão and Tinta Barroca which is fermented and aged partly in tank, partly in (old) barrel, this pinkish beige wine is creamy but dry and savoury with good acidity, lifted floral and dried spice notes and a hint of chocolate to its lingering finish. Much nicer than that sounds! Very good. 13% abv.

António Madeira, The Rising Star of Dão Serrano

Text Ilkka Sirén

I recently attended a meeting of a group of Finnish wine bloggers. Every now and then this bunch of thirsty wine geeks get together to taste some wines, usually blind, and eat some nice food. And you know me, I don’t need much convincing to eat and drink.

Originally we were supposed to have a picnic outside but the weather was not on our side, so we took refuge in a wine cellar located in downtown Helsinki. Everybody brought some bottles and we served them blind to each other. The evening got a dramatic start when one of the bloggers dropped a bottle of Pommery NV champagne from the 70’s on the floor, it broke together with a bottle of blanc de noir still white wine from I-don’t-remember-where. After 15 minutes of cursing and silent contempt we continued with the tasting. Actually the guys managed to save some of the old champagne and pour it into a couple of wine glasses through a coffee filter. It was heavily oxidized and way past its prime but still quite interesting for those of us who like to indulge in occasional wine necrophilia.

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Glass of Wine – Photo by Ilkka Sirén | All Rights Reserved

There was all kinds of wines being poured from Kiwi grüner veltliner to Catalan pinot noir. One of the wines I brought was António Madeira Dão Vinhas Velhas 2011. Very likely the first time it was tasted in Finland and I was curious to hear what people thought of the wine.

António Madeira is a French dude but he has his roots in Portugal. He started looking for a vineyard in the Dão wine region in 2010 and found a 50-year-old vineyard in the foothills of Serra da Estrela that had been neglected. António took it upon himself to recuperate it and in 2011 he produced the first wine from this vineyard. I have seen some pictures of this place and it looks like a mini version of Mendoza with the snowy Serra in the background. Not as big and dramatic as the Andes but still very beautiful.

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Cheese – Photo by Ilkka Sirén | All Rights Reserved

When I served it to my fellow wine geeks in the blind tasting they had a hard time pin-pointing where it’s from. Not because it didn’t have a distinctive character but just because the wines from Dão are almost completely unknown in Finland. A situation that I hope will change in the future. The closest guess was Galicia. After sniffing and tasting, well drinking to be exact, the consensus seemed very positive. People recognized that it was still quite young but definitely has potential to age well.

So, what did I think of the wine? I had tasted it once before at Simplesmente Vinho event in Porto. I remember tasting many wines that day and in these wine events sometimes even a good wine can get past your radar. I’m glad I had the opportunity to taste this again. What surprised me with this wine is that António, who is a young guy, did not overdo it. You might think why is that so surprising but in my experience many times when these young guns do their first wines they tend to do wines to impress people or prove a point. Too much extraction, too much oak, too “natural” or some other mumbo jumbo. You should keep your ego out of the equation and let the vines speak for themselves, and in this case it seems António has done just that. Something tells me that we will hear much more about Dão Serrano wines in the future.

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António Madeira Dão Vinhas Velhas 2011 – Photo by Ilkka Sirén | All Rights Reserved

António Madeira Dão Vinhas Velhas 2011
This old vineyard has a mix of traditional Portuguese grape varieties like Tinta Pinheira and Negro Mouro. The wine has a very classic feel to it. Bright red fruit with this green pine aroma that I often find in the wines of Dão. Good structure and freshness that offers some nice drinkability already at this age. Which might explain why the bottle got empty at a record speed. Nicely balanced wine that makes you wonder why isn’t Dão wines known worldwide. Well, let it be heard! These wines can win the hearts and minds of any wine enthusiast from Tokyo to friggin’ Rancho Cucamonga.

Contacts
António Madeira
Tel: + 33 680633420
Email: ajbmadeira@gmail.com
blog “A palheira do Ti Zé Bicadas

Wine Fest at Quinta da Boeira

Text José Silva

Although with a significant delay, as it should have been ready almost a year ago, it was finally inaugurated the one that is considered the biggest wine bottle in the world. It was built in fiberglass at Quinta da Boeira’s garden, in Vila Nova de Gaia, it is 32 meters long and 9,5 meters in diameter and has a capacity to accommodate about 150 people inside.

It is part of an event called “Portugal In A Bottle”, which will take place till the 27th September 2014. Inside that bottle, that wants to be a living tribute museum to the Portuguese wine, we see the wine-growing country through a 3D film and the promotion and sale of wine, gastronomy and handcraft that will attract an interested audience, both national and foreign.

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“Portugal in a bottle” – Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

Inside the giant bottle there will even take place wine tastings from some regions. “The Quinta da Boeira Natural Park – Art and Culture” is the result of the recovery of an old farm which belonged to an old Port wine warehouse, now adapted to new purposes. The area is controlled by the stately home, raised in the middle of a fantastic garden, surrounded by a big wall that gives a very peculiar privacy to that place.

A beautiful, rare and quiet place, with a small lake and luxurious wood, to enjoy free time, a restaurant opened every day and a space for bigger events, always with access to the whole touristic area, including a parking place.

And it was in this fantastic place that happened, between the 30th may and the 1st of June, the “Portugal Wine Trophy – Portugal Grand Gold”, an organization of the Deutche Wein Market. It is a world competition that has got two annual editions, one in Berlin, Germany and another in Seoul, South Korea: the “Asia Wine Trophy”.

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Quinta da Boeira – Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

Now it came to Portugal, by the hand of Quinta da Boeira’s administration. This renowned contest has the sponsorship of OIV and UIOE, well known by the rigueur they put into those kinds of organizations. In this first “Portugal Wine Trophy” there was a panel of 60 judges, 40% of them Portuguese, who tasted 1.012 wines from all over the world, whose results will be known latter.

The international judges were received by the traditional Portuguese hospitality; they visited the Port wine cellars and some wine producers. They could watch the huge tourist movement in Porto and Vila Nova de Gaia towns, in funny leisure moments, where traditional food from the north was always present.

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Quinta da Boeira Warehouse – Photo by José Silva | All Rights Reserved

Wine tastings took place at Quinta da Boeira’s old warehouse, that offers great conditions of peace and temperature for this kind of events, supported by qualified personnel that were up to it, both opening and taking care of the bottles – right temperatures are essential – and in the wine service to the judges, where timing is precious. Wines from all over the world were tasted, including Portugal and many silver and gold medals were assigned and some in the grand gold level, revealing the quality of the wines in the competition. The result, in the general opinion of the foreigners invited and the German organization leaders, was very successful, and it shows that next year Quinta da Boeira will receive again this prestigious competition, probably with even more wines to be tasted.
Meanwhile, the biggest wine bottle in the world will still be there, unveiling the quality of Portuguese products.

Contacts
Rua Conselheiro Veloso da Cruz, nº. 608
Rua Teixeira Lopes, nº. 114
440-320 Vila Nova de Gaia
Tel: (+351) 223 751 338
Mobile: +351 961 360 897
Email: quintaboeira@sapo.pt
Site: www.quintadaboeira.pt

From Writing to Wine: Part 1 – The Wines of João Afonso

Text Sarah Ahmed

I have loved my three short but sweet stints working vintage, especially at Cullen Wines in Margaret River, Australia. My timing was pitch perfect – the red grapes came thick and fast. Nature dictated what we did and when which, though physically demanding, was mentally relaxing – pointless making a schedule!

And how good is it to taste the fruits of your own labour? I still get a kick out of the fact I lees-stirred the Cullen 2007 Chardonnay, which was awarded the World’s Best Chardonnay at Decanter World Wines Awards in 2010.

And I confess, if I had my time again, I’d be sorely tempted to make wine and not just write about it. There and again, perhaps I should follow in the fearless footsteps of three Portuguese wine producers who are doing just that. Their stories are inspirational. Here is the first. Posts about Richard Mayson and Tiago Teles to follow.

João Afonso was born in Coimbra in February 1957. He studied sports science at the University of Lisbon and fell in love with his first career, ballet, when a ballerina introduced dance to the sport students. Within two years he was dancing around the world with the renowned Ballet Gulbenkian, where he spent 15 years.

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João Afonso – Photo provided by João Afonso | All Rights Reserved

Afonso says he fell in love with wine more slowly since “dancers talk always and (almost) only about port de bras, cou-de-pied, pirouettes, grand jete… and dance performance. They eat and they drink not much, because they have to be in good shape every single morning”.

However, the seed of an idea about making wine was sown when, in 1983, Afonso’s wife gave him a copy of “Knowing and Making Wine” by Bordeaux University’s acclaimed Professor of Oenology, Émile Peynaud. He adds “my grandmother was a small wine producer in Beira Alta and, in a certain way, I was missing the old times when we’d got everything to eat and drink – homemade and things had another flavour and another taste (not always best, but always more genuine, without synthetic or easy flavour, I mean…)”.

Although he attended an intensive week’s study in winemaking at Anadia School, Bairrada in 1987 (Afonso has long had a passion for mature Bairrada wines), his high profile globe-trotting existence precluded the ballet’s principal dancer from seriously pursuing his interest in wine. It was only when his dancing career ended in 1993 that both knowledge and interest bloomed, especially having met Professor Virgilio Loureiro of the Instituto Superior de Agronomia in Lisbon (then winemaker at the Dao’s Quinta dos Roques and Quinta das Maias) and João Paulo Martins (the wine journalist).

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João Afonso – Photo provided by João Afonso | All Rights Reserved

By 1994 Afonso had started making wine from the family’s aged two hectare “Ribeiro” vineyard in Beira Alta. It was planted at the very beginning of the twentieth century when his grandmother was just a child. First a red and, in the following year, a white wine using old barriques supplied by Dirk Niepoort of Niepoort. Though Afonso was very happy with wines, which he describes as “outstanding (in my humble opinion)”, the beginning of the end of his first adventure in winemaking came when his oldest brother ripped out the old vineyard.

As luck would have it Niepoort and Loureiro had already introduced Afonso to Luis Lopes, the director of recently launched wine magazine, Revista de Vinhos and, as he observes, “since the winemaking was a tricky family affair (I have four more brothers…), I started with the easiest, and wonderful wine writing affair in May 1994”. He still writes for Revista de Vinhos and, between 2000 and 2008, wrote his own guide to wines in the Portuguese market. He has also written two wine books, “Entender de Vinho” and “Curso de Vinho”. However, he admits “[T]o write is, by far, not what I prefer to do. It is also an art but sometimes (many times) it has nothing to do with “the bright side of life”. For Afonso, the bright side of life is “to see and feel the beauty and the happiness”. A sensation which he vividly experienced in 2009 when he discovered a very old, small (3.9 hectare) vineyard in Reguengo / Portalegre for sale and decided that his mission was to protect and recover it.

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João Afonso – Photo provided by João Afonso | All Rights Reserved

Why Portalegre? Afonso replies “I strike the north Alentejo for three reasons: the landscape is similar to Beira Alta (more beautiful and I feel at home), it is nearer [to Lisbon] than Beira Alta and, above all, it has old vineyards with old material (without nurseryman selection) – old varieties all mixed in the same plot of vine. If we can talk about “terroir” in Portugal, Quinta das Cabeças, I mean, the Reguengo might be one”. Indeed, somewhat auspiciously, after he had bought the quinta he learned that highly respected Alentejo winemaker Colaço do Rosário (the creator of Pêra-Manca) had identified the slope of Quinta das Cabeças as the best site for wine grapes in all Alentejo.

Within eight months Afonso had made his first wines, Equinócio ( a white) and Solstício (a red which he part ferments in clay amphora as was the regional tradition for centuries). Still, he claims never to have had a vision for the wine – “I’m not a winemaker” he says, “I just try to protect my vineyard and harvest the grapes to let them become wine”. Afonso’s confidence to let the vines do the talking stems from his belief in the vineyard – “I like to see it. I like to feel myself inside it. I don’t make wine, the vineyard makes it. I let my eyes choose for me”.

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Photo provided by João Afonso | All Rights Reserved

 

The non-interventionist approach starts in the vineyard, which is certified organic and cultivated biodynamically. For Afonso “understanding our estate, following Maria Thun’s lunar calendar and applying biodynamic preparations in homeopathic doses will result in even more genuine and intense wines”. Moreover, he swore never to use chemicals again after he sprayed his olive grove against moths in 1999 – “the smell that came out was so terrible that I feel if the olives trees had legs they would rapidly escape!”.

So has the rural idyll lived up to expectations? “Yes. Very much” is Afonso’s reply. Given that he is least inspired by “globalized or trendy wines” (wines with, Syrah, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Petit Verdot, Viognier, Sauvignon Blanc, Touriga Nacional…) which he believes have resulted in a lot of viticulture heritage being lost”, he is intensely proud that Cabeças has “proved that it is possible to make good wine with grapes that everybody despises”.

What’s more Afonso’s background means that he has been under no illusions about the challenges of selling his wine. He explains “writing about wine told me how difficult it is to sell wine, even very good wine and I have already had that experience with Beira Alta”. Additionally, writing meant that Afonso well understood the importance of having a different and genuine story and not simply making something similar to other wines – “I would be dead immediately”, he says.

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Vineyards – Photo provided by João Afonso | All Rights Reserved

Rather, he expands, “[T]he unique possibility is to do something completely different, something good, and something hard to find”. Warming to his theme and looking at the bigger picture he observes, “Portugal is different. We don’t have it [the grapes and terroir] anywhere but here. And we make very good wines indeed… They are clean, good and they speak a simple, juicy and fantastic language for those who know how to understand them”. So why should we choose his wine, I ask? Because, he retorts, “it is a taste from a 1920’s Alentejo vineyard through the eyes and hands of a wine critic – an ex dancer”. Now that truly is a unique proposition. And, weighing in, might I add that Equinócio and Solstício are also excellent propositions for lovers of excitingly authentic wines with a palpable sense of place.

Lunch at Casas do Côro

Text José Silva

After visiting the vineyards, enjoying the charming Douro river landscape and tasting Douro Superior wines, the hour had arrived to have some rest and to sit at the table. And that was what we did, in the superb Casas do Côro dining room, after an interesting guided visit to the touristic unit. The room is very well dressed, good taste everywhere, sober, very sheltering, even the light is soft, a cozy place.

Table very well-set, with everything that is needed for a quiet great meal.

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Casas do Côro Reserva © Blend All About Wine, Lda

And because Casas do Côro also have their own wines, they accompany the whole meal. And we were guided by the two owners: Cármen described the dishes, Paulo explained the wines. All of this with an excellent table service, both serving the food and handling the wines. These wines are made by two friends of the house, Dirk Niepoort, the winemaker of Douro Rosé and White Reserva, and Rui Madeira, the maker of Beira Interior White, Red and Red Reserva and Douro Red Grande Reserva. The Casas do Côro unit is located in the division line of these two wine regions.

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Casas do Côro © Blend All About Wine, Lda

We started with a white wine from Beira Interior, Casas do Côro White, already from 2013, a wine made from unfamiliar grapes varieties, still very interesting, mainly on the freshness they pass on to the wine. With a very pale citric yellow color, limpid, it reveals wild flowers aromas, very gentle and refined. On the mouth it is quite smooth, very well balanced acidity, some white fruit, pear, plum, intense citric notes and some minerality leaving a wonderful finish.

Meanwhile, bread arrived at the table, from the region, tasty, and we could appreciate a delicious olive salty cake with virgin olive oil and oregano, very well prepared, crispy but soft within, very good.

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Casas do Côro Reserva © Blend All About Wine, Lda

From the Douro region came this rosé made by Dirk Niepoort, Casas do Côro Rosé 2013, with a pale rose color, refined and dry notes on the nose, a few red fruit, presenting good acidity and delicacy on the mouth, large, velvety, involving and fresh.

As a menu entries we had codfish roll with a rough puré and vegetables on cocotte puree, very hot, a good match between codfish and vegetables, a creamy set, and on the top the contrast of a deliciously crispy cover, making contrast, excellent. We couldn´t miss a soup, a garden vegetable cream, aromatic and very tasting.

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Casas do Côro Reserva © Blend All About Wine, Lda

We still tasted another white wine, this one from the Douro region, Casas do Côro White Reserva 2012, where Dirk Niepoort puts in place all his well-known good taste, with a precious oak touch, very well matched, slight floral aromas and mild vanilla fragrance, beautiful mouth volume, very involving, a perfect marriage between freshness and acidity, an exotic wine with a long and smooth finish.

The main dish was a delicious small roast kid, boned, in small slices, with crispy roasted potatoes, and a very tasty vegetable roll.

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Casas do Côro Reserva © Blend All About Wine, Lda

Then we tasted Casas do Côro Beira Interior Red Reserva 2011, a year of great red wines. Good fruit on the nose, some barrel notes and a delicious mineral touch, performing great elegance. Persistence on the mouth, it reminds savage fruits, some black chocolate, slightly spiced and with some smoke notes along with some freshness, in a very well balanced wine.

While we appreciated this red wine, some homemade pastry and dry cheese with some crispy toasts made the end of the meal.
Then, it was time to leave, down the Douro river…

Contacts
Marialvamed – Turismo Histórico e Lazer, Lda
Largo do Côro
6430-081 Marialva – Portugal
Tel: (+351) 917 552 020
Fax: (+351) 279 850 021
E-mail: info@casasdocoro.pt ou reservas@casasdocoro.pt
Website: www.casasdocoro.pt

Aphros: At the cutting edge of Biodynamics in Portugal

Text Sarah Ahmed

Vasco Croft puts the dynamic into biodynamic, the holistic method of farming of which he has been a pioneer in Vinho Verde (and which you can read all about on his website) here.

Since I last visited the former furniture designer and trained architect’s Vinho Verde estate in Ponte de Lima in 2010, the portfolio has undergone a facelift with a new name (Aphros not Afros) and labels.

Croft explains the name change was prompted by a request from the USA, his biggest export market, who were concerned about possible confusion with Africa or the African hairstyle. Fortunately (Croft doesn’t strike me as the type to compromise) he says, “because this is the Greek way of spelling, it is in tune with the origin of the name, meaning the Mythical Foam from which Aphrodite arises.” So all’s well that ends well.

As for the labels which have a motif of three interlocking circles, these were developed from engravings by his cousin José Pedro Croft, an international plastics artist. It wasn’t just the family connection which appealed to Croft. He explains, “I hope this image will be a refreshing wind in the world of wine labels and bring contemporary art and wine close to each other.” Speaking of which, I reckon Portuguese wine labels are improving. They’re more colourful and characterful, which helps wines to stand out on the shelf and gives customers an inkling of the people behind the wines. A very good thing.

But it’s what’s in the bottle that really counts and, at Aphros, the changes go well beyond skin deep. Croft has been steadily expanding the portfolio with an ambitious oaked Vinhão (Aphros Silenus), Aphros Rosé, Aphros “Ten” (a low alcohol, 10% abv, Loureiro), Daphne (a very exciting Loureiro which undergoes skin contact) and, most recently, AETHER (a 50:50 blend of Loureiro and, to my surprise, Sauvignon Blanc, a non-native).

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Photo by Sarah Ahmed – All Rights Reserved

The growth spurt at Aphros extends to vineyards as well as wines. Croft acquired and planted Quinta de Casa Nova in the neighbouring parish of Refoios in 2009, which has been cultivated biodynamically from the beginning. He plans to convert the dilapidated house into a wine bar and, this year, has started work on a new winery with the capacity to produce 120,000 bottles. And after that, he might just play around with an Aphros Pinot Noir from Quinta de Valflores, the vineyard that he has rented next door on a long-term lease from the Bossert family from Oregon, USA (which explains the Pinot Noir)!

Meanwhile the pocket-sized original winery at Croft’s family’s original estate, Quinta do Casal do Paço (which, in accordance with tradition, is located under the house), will continue to be used for the smaller batch, hand-crafted wines. Owned by his family since the seventeenth century, until Croft started the Afros/Aphros brand in 2005, grapes were sold to the local co-operative. Croft re-structured the vineyards and started cultivating them biodynamically with input from French biodynamic consultants, first Daniel Noel, now Jacques Fourès; the estate has been fully Demeter (biodynamic) certified since 2011. It is here that compost (pictured) is seeded with biodynamic preparations made exclusively from organic matter, which are applied in the vineyard according to planetary rhythms. Homeopathic quantities of the preparations are first diluted with dynamised water from the flow form (pictured) and further energised by stirring in the copper vat (pictured). Experimental bio-stimulants (pictured) are also prepared here.

But it’s not all about wine for Croft. He emphasises “[J]ust making good wine is not enough”. As he sees it, “the question of going organic or biodynamic is really an issue of consciousness primarily, concerning understanding and caring for Nature and developing a deeper relationship with the Earth of which we are a part.” He asserts “it is not just a technique, much less a ‘marketing’ option.” It’s why his vision extends “to creating an agricultural/cultural centre” with a permaculture hill and “food forest” at Quinta do Casal do Paço – a “sanctuary” for different plant species. Increasing the estate’s biodiversity in this way helps nature to self-regulate (for example, it encourages those natural predators which kill vineyard pests or discourages pests by providing them with something to eat other than vines!). And the food forest will provide produce for the farm-to-table wine bar which is planned for Quinta de Casa Nova.

I’m looking forward to visiting the wine bar on a future visit but, meantime, I can wholeheartedly recommend seeking out the Aphros range. Last month I tasted the latest releases (reviewed below) with Croft’s consultant winemaker Rui Cunha and took the opportunity to ask Cunha about the benefits of working organically and biodynamically. Laughing when he recalls “people thought it was a bit crazy early on,” Cunha had met with German and French biodynamic practitioners during his travels but his hands on baptism by fire came at Quinta de Covela. He says “it was frightening” when Nuno Araujo (the Vinho Verde estate’s former owner) announced today we start converting the entire estate to biodynamic cultivation. This was around 2004 at a time when Portugal’s winemaking courses didn’t mention organic let alone biodynamic farming.

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Photo by Sarah Ahmed – All Rights Reserved

Like Croft, Araujo employed the French consultant Daniel Noel and, Cunha says, “we saw an immediate increase in the quality of the grapes. They were less productive and suddenly more balanced; with time, they became more consistent in yield.” He adds maturation has been slower and acidity higher, which has proved particularly useful in a hot climate. Of course the ultimate test is taste as to which Cunha says “grapes taste much better.” He observes it’s no different to comparing fruit from your own tree with shop bought fruit which has been cultivated conventionally (i.e. with chemical inputs – fertilisers, herbicides and pesticides). As for the specifics Cunha freely admits that he cannot explain why some biodynamic practices work but he has seen first hand how biodynamic preparation 500 (composted cow manure) results in much more soil vitality and just 200 grams of 501 (quartz powder) can have a significant impact on growth – “leaves become thicker, which makes them more resistant to the sun (sunburn) and insects.”

Croft has noticed that more Portuguese producers are working organically or biodynamically these days, even if they do not certify their wines. According to the Instituto da Vinha e do Vinho, Portugal now has around 2,500ha of certified organic vineyards which is cultivated by 485 grape growers and 52 certified organic wine producers. Referring to “a world trend in respecting land and tradition and authenticity in wines” in his opinion “[I]t is all good, because the agro-chemical age is ethically and scientifically gone, it belongs to the past even it will still linger for a while out of inertia.”

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Aphros Aether 2013 – Photo by Sarah Ahmed – All Rights Reserved

Aphros Ten 2013 (Vinho Verde)
Ten was first made in 2011 and is sourced from Loureiro grapes from younger vines. Its name is a reference to low alcohol content (you guessed it, around 10% abv). The 2013, a tank sample, is very pretty – this off-dry Loureiro is classically floral with talcum powder hints to its pure, crystalline flavours of lime and grapefruit, a hint of citrus peel too. Lively, mouthwatering acidity maintains focus and balance (better than in the 2011 vintage, which lacked a bit of verve). Very good; a great quaffer. 10%

Aphros Loureiro 2013 (Vinho Verde)
A number of factors make for a more serious, concentrated, structured wine. First, the fruit comes from older vines. Second, the grapes see around 4-6 hours skin contact (in the press) and, once pressed, the juice is fermented at slightly higher temperatures. It is aged on the lies with batonnage, which brings body and complexity. So while it has Loureiro’s tell tale floral lift, it is much more firmly structured, focused and mineral. Very fine, long and persistent. I reckon purer than previous vintages. Cunha agrees pointing out that this vintage benefited from the acquisition of a press (previously the press was rented and was not always available at the optimum time in terms of grape harvest). Now the grapes can be picked at precisely the right moment and go straight to the press. No hanging around which explains this vintage’s lovely precision. Very good indeed and has ageing potential. 11.5%

Aphros AETHER 2013 (Minho)
This is a 50:50 blend of Loureiro and Sauvignon Blanc, all estate grown. Cunha explains he loves Sauvignon, but there is a business rationale to this wine too. Aphros are using the better known French grape as “a door opener” for export markets. For me AETHER is a wine of two halves. The Loureiro leads on the nose with its pretty, ethereal even, floral, talcy notes. The Sauvignon dominates the palate, which has a chalky minerality, leafy blackcurrant bud notes and a crisp, more punctuated finish than Aphros’ Loureiros. It’s crisp and clean with punchy Sauvignon varietal character but, I have to admit, I’d personally gun for the more charming Loureiro every time! 12%

Contacts
Quinta Casal do Paço
Padreiro (S. Salvador)
Arcos de Valdevez 4970-500 Portugal
Tel: (+351) 91 42 06 772
E-mail: info@afros-wine.com

Website: www.aphros-wine.com