Wines from Catalunya
Catalunya, a community set apart by its language and culture and with
its own pronounced personality, has always been a gateway to the rest
of Spain. It serves the same purpose in the world of wines.
In the language of wine, Catalunya stands for a vocation for quality
and an innovative spirit. Catalan wine counts its wine tradition in thousands
of years, yet it also points the way to the future. The region's winemakers
can justifiably boast of having always been at the vanguard of the country's
wine production.
At the end of the last century, Catalunya imported Champagne techniques
for the production of sparkling wines and today, firms like Freixenet
and Codorniu are selling tens of millions of bottles of cava all
over the world.
Winemakers like Jean Leon and Miguel Torres were pioneers in
adopting noble foreign vines. Most of the region's companies are building
up wineries with a decidedly futuristic approach, and some are applying
techniques developed in Australia or California.
Catalunya is made up of eight different areas, Penedes, Alella,
Costers del Segre, Ampurdan-Costa Brava, Tarragona, Terra Alta,
Priorato and Conca de Barbera as well as the omnipresent cava,
sparkling wine made with the champagne method, making it a wine making
region difficult to surpass.
Alella
Alella is one of the smallest designations of origin in Spain. As well as representing
autochtonous interests in the form of the Pansa Blanca grape, Alella also
offers a range of aromas and tastes through other typical varieties such
as Macabeo and Parellada, and the useful Chardonnay and Chenin Blanc grapes.
It's been clearly demonstrated that the local microclimate, located
between the coastal sierra and the mists of the Mediterranean, together
with the silica in the soil, favored the development of these French-origin
grapes.
Cava
The simple mention of the word cava on a label automatically implies the origin
of this typical sparkling wine and no further specific refernce is necessary.
The cava production area is made up of 159 municipalities across eight Spanish
provinces.
In practice, 99% of cava is produced in Catalunya, chiefly in the area
of Penedes. Using the authorised varieties and only first press
musts, the base wine, white or rose virgin fermented. The whole
cava production process, from harvest to final elimination of deposits,
takes a minimum of nine months.
Costers del Segre
Costers del Segre was reborn as a wine-growing region thanks to a gamble taken
by the Catalan company Raimat, which belongs to the powerful Codorniu
group. The move has meant that wine buffs have had to sit up and take notice
of an area which, up to a decade ago, didn't swing any weight as a prestige
wine-growing area.
Today, Costers del Segre is being viewed more and more as a vanguard
region and a driving force behind developing the potential of some foreign
grape varieties.
On the other hand, the wines we could call "genuine" within
the D.O. have little commercial presence, partly because they come from
sub-zones where the producers bottle small quantities, partly because
they are used as base wines for cava production.
Penedès
Rather than a rigid designaiton of origin, Penedes is a geographical
frame within which a good number of interesting wine producers move around
fairly freely thanks to the prevailing liberal attitude and business flexibility.
The spectacular growth of quality sparkling wines in the Eighties created
a golden age for the region, which was swift to take advantage of wine
doctrine and modern techniques to totally transform its previous offer
of quiet wines.
There's been nothing to hold back the amazing growth of Catalan red
wines. The wineries are unable to hide their glee when they see the foreign
critics praise their areas as producing some of the finest Spanish red
wines.
Priorato
This is a small area sheltered by the natural barrier of the Montsant, with
grapes like the Garnacha which give robust, deeply-colored wines with a high
concentration of aromas and flavours and high alcohol content. The vineyards
lie on slopes with slatey soil, amid scenery that's comparable with the stony
bed of the River Douro in Portugal. The exceptional climatic and soil conditions
where the vines grow give rise to wines of tremendous character.
A lot of wine experts, both inside and outside Spain, are pinning their
hopes on this tucked-away corner of Tarragona as a region for the future.
Priorato is being used as a kind of experimental field by a small group
of visionary wine-growers who are producing top grade reds in which the
autochtonous and original varieties have been carefully supported with
other noble grapes such as Merlot, Syrah or Cabernet Sauvignon.

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