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Diamantakos, Naoussa Xinomavro

Macedonia, Greece 2018 (750mL)
Regular price$44.00
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Diamantakos, Naoussa Xinomavro

While grown in several PDOs (Protected Denominations of Origins) across northern Greece, the region most sommeliers are fixated on is Naoussa, in the southeastern foothills of the Vermio Mountains. We’ve offered several excellent Naoussa wines here on SommSelect, but the 2018 from Diamantakos was a total game-changer. We were all completely transfixed by it, and, speaking as the one who got to take our sample bottle home, I can confirm it only got better over two days open. Naoussa is often referred to as the “Barolo of Greece,” and while Diamantakos’ does indeed give a hat-tip to Barolo’s Nebbiolo grape, it seems to have its sights set more squarely on blue-chip red Burgundies from villages like Vosne-Romanée and Chambolle-Musigny.


George Diamantakos tends 30+-year-old vines, with the cumulative knowledge of three generations and a degree in viticulture and enology. His wines are undeniably influenced by Burgundy, the pinnacle of what Greece is capable of today. The pocket-sized estate is run with the utmost attention to traditional methods. Xinomavro is famously persnickety—just like Pinot Noir—and requires careful canopy management to thrive. The sandy, limestone-rich clay soils, and vines are dry-farmed for maximum structure and additional fruit.
 
There’s an intoxicating intensity to the fruit on this wine, each sniff dripping with ripe strawberries, tomato paste, vanilla bean, and cocoa powder. The nose unfurls luxuriously over the next hour, coaxing out spicier notes of anise and warm clay to balance the initial fruitiness. The palate is equally refined with hints of pepper and black cherry. Diamantakos really shines in terms of structure—tense, a touch velvety, and wonderfully acidic for optimal food pairing. 

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Greece

Central Greece

Thessaly

Thessaly is in Central Greece, covering a coastal plain and surrounding mountain ranges. Headquartered in Tyrnavos, in the foothills ofMount Olympus, the Zafeirakis vineyards cover 12 hectares, in clay soils mixed with sand and limestone. Altitudes range from 200-300 meters in vineyards that feel an exchange of mountain- and sea-borne air.

Northern Greece

Drama

Named for its historic anchor city—mythical home of Dionysus himself—the Drama wine region is in the northeastern-most corner of Macedonia, surrounded by an array of mountain ranges that provide a “rain shadow” effect much like the one felt in Alsace, France. It is a cool, dry,“continental” climate, with soils comprised mainly of sandy clay. The Aegean Sea is about 20 miles to the south.

Southwestern Greece

Mantinia

Vineyards are in the shadow of the Arcadian Mountains, in soils of alluvial gravel and reddish clay that is high in iron. As in other areas of the world with this kind of red soil, it lends a sanguine quality to the reds. It’s an arid, but relatively cool, climate, with wide diurnal shifts in temperature

Northern Greece

Naoussa

The Naoussa appellation is in Macedonia, in northern Greece. Vineyards are nestled in the southeastern foothills of the Vermio Mountains, far enough from the Aegean Sea to be considered a cool, “continental” climate.

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