Ladeiras do Xil, Valdeorras Mencía “Gaba do Xil”
Ladeiras do Xil, Valdeorras Mencía “Gaba do Xil”

Ladeiras do Xil, Valdeorras Mencía “Gaba do Xil”

Galicia, Spain 2019 (750mL)
Regular price $25.00 Sale price$21.00 Save $4.00
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Ladeiras do Xil, Valdeorras Mencía “Gaba do Xil”

Valdeorras, just east of Ribeira Sacra, hugs the north bank of the Sil River, with vineyards at some of the steepest, seemingly impassable pitches you’ll ever see. Translating roughly as “valley of gold,” the region is so named for the gold mining once carried out by the Romans when they inhabited the area (these days, slate mining is more common).


Like many modern wine operations in Galicia, Ladeiras do Xil is a reclamation project, with a focus on the painstaking hillside viticulture that caused many to abandon the region a generation ago. With direction from consultant Telmo Rodriguez, Jorge Saa has restored ancient stone terraces and revitalized old bush-trained vines, which cling to granite and schist slopes overlooking the Sil River. 


The sanguine quality of Mencía (70%) is leavened here with 30% Merenzao (Trousseau), which softens the tannins and lends purple fruit/flower notes. The color is a deep, nearly opaque garnet-red, with notes of cranberry, black cherry, mint, licorice, and violets. Aged only in stainless steel, it delivers tart and juicy fruit with an underpinning of crushed-stone minerality. 

Ladeiras do Xil, Valdeorras Mencía “Gaba do Xil”
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Spain

Eastern Spain

Montsant

The Montsant DO is Priorat’s downslope neighbor in northeastern
Spain, but other than differences in altitude, there isn’t much else to tell their terroirs apart. Both appellations contain some of the world’s greatest old-vine Garnacha (Grenache) in soils of fractured granite and shale known locally as llicorella. It is a Mediterranean climate, with wide diurnal temperature swings.

Eastern Spain

Penedès

Technically, a wine labeled ‘Cava’ can be produced in several different regions, but Penedès, on Spain’s northern Mediterranean coast, is its
spiritual home. The climate is Mediterranean, the soils a favorable mix of limestone (key in pre-serving acids), sand, and clay, and Cava sparklers are crafted in the traditional ‘Champagne’ method. The traditional grapes used for Cava are Xarel-lo (cha-RAY-yo), Macabeu, and Parellada.

Northwestern Spain

Galicia

Galicia is lusher, colder, wetter, and greener than most of the rest of Spain, especially where wine-growing
is concerned. Viticulture up here is some of the most “heroic” in the world, as vineyards cling to impossibly steep slopes along snaking rivers such as the Miño and
the Sil. The influence of the Atlantic Ocean is profound, often lending wines a salty, “sea spray” character.

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