Jorge Ordóñez didn't just revive Toro; he transformed it from a forgotten backwater with five co-ops into one of Spain's most fashionable appellations. After selling his pioneering Numanthia project to LVMH, Jorge could have rested on his laurels. Instead, he doubled down, founding Bodegas Vatan to work exclusively with Toro’s most precious resource: its ungrafted, century-plus-year-old vines.
The Finca Los Quemaos vineyard tells a story of survival against impossible odds. Planted in 1900 on their original rootstock, these gobelet-trained vines have weathered 124 years of drought, heat, and abandonment. The secret to their survival? Sandy loam soils dating to the Cretaceous period, underlain by a protective layer of red clay that created an impenetrable barrier against phylloxera.
Jorge's winemaking honors this heritage. Each cluster is sorted by hand, gently destemmed, and fermented with native yeasts in small open vats. The vertical basket press—an eight-hour process—extracts only the finest juice. After spontaneous malolactic fermentation in a mix of new and used French oak, the wine rests for nearly two years, giving these 121-year-old national treasures their due.
Why You'll Love It
Living History: These aren't just old vines—they're pre-phylloxera survivors, offering a direct link to how Spanish wine tasted before the modern era. This wine is not too dissimilar, however much fresher, than the same Toro red that Spanish explorers carried to the New World.
Matchless Concentration: The combination of 121-year-old vines, sandy soils, and extreme continental climate creates wines of stunning depth. Look for layers of dark fruit intertwined with leather, tobacco, and dried herbs that unfold over hours in the glass. Toro DO should be every Napa Cabernet Sauvignon lover’s home base in Spain.
Immense VALUE: At $40 (or $36/bt for six), you're accessing fruit from some of Europe's oldest continuously cultivated vines at a fraction of what similar pedigree commands elsewhere—not just in Spain, but the world over.
How to Serve It
Decant this wine 1-2 hours before serving at 58-62°F in large Bordeaux stems to appreciate its full aromatic complexity. The structure and concentration demand time to open fully.
This wine is drinking beautifully now but will reward patience through 2035 or beyond, as these ancient-vine Tempranillos are built for the long haul.
Pair with ropa vieja stew or smoked, reverse-seared ribeye.
Country
Spain
Region
Toro
Soil
Sandy loam and clay
Farming
Dry Farmed and Organic
Blend
Tinta de Toro
Alcohol
15.0
OAK
French, new and used
TEMP.
58-62°F
Glassware
Bordeaux stems
Drinking
Now - 2035
Decanting
1-2 hours
Daily Discovery
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