Suertes del Marqués Tenerife Valle de la Orotava Trenzado 2021 (6 Bottles) Spain

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AUSTRALIA WIDE SHIPPING INCLUDED

This charged, fuzzy/tangy, textural white takes its name from a trellis system unique to the Canary Islands and known locally as el cordón trenzado (the braided cord). This type of trellising results in a plaited cordon with several of a single vine’s branches braided together.

It’s an old-vine blend of Listán Blanco from the high altitude, north-facing vineyards of Esquilón and La Piñer, with a young vine vidueño (field blend) from La Florida, where Gual, Marmajuelo, Torrontes, Albillo Criollo, Vijariego Blanco and Verdelho populate the vineyard.

All the grapes are hand-harvested, and the wine is fermented (with a small portion left on skins) and aged in large oak ovals for nine months on lees before bottling.

This is both seductive and pure with saline/mineral notes alongside fresh citrus, some grilled nuts and a flicker of smoky reduction. It’s fine-boned with a dense core of juicy and fleshy weight, framed by athletic composition and a very lengthy close. This is primed for the dining table.

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About Suertes del Marqués Wines

Sandwiched between the Spanish territory’s highest peak—the snow-capped Mount Teide—and the Atlantic Ocean, the setting of the Suertes del Marqués vineyards is undoubtedly one of the most spectacular you will encounter. No less striking are the vineyards themselves: steep volcanic slopes blanketed by the ancient, indigenous varieties of the Canary Islands. The vines are managed using Tenerife’s unique, braided trellising system, el cordón trenzado, where multiple canes are literally plaited together to form long, twisted tentacles that can extend over 10 metres from the main trunk. The remarkable setting, the indigenous varieties and the surreal trellising method are a pointed reminder that you have arrived somewhere wholly unique. Any culture shock is, however, quickly dispelled by the remarkable quality of the wines.

Described by Jane Anson as “…a man who has made the wines of Tenerife part of the late-night conversation of sommeliers worldwide,” Jonatan García has succeeded in reminding the world as to why vines have thrived on the Canary Islands for centuries.

García’s family had been winegrowers for decades before Jonatan took the leap to grow, bottle and market the wines under their own label in 2006. Covering 11 hectares of vineyards—fragmented into 20-plus plots at altitudes ranging from 350 to 700 metres—García’s vines are located on the volcanic slopes of Spain’s highest mountain in the cool, northern D.O. of Valle de la Orotava. García has a fondness for the great wines of Northern Europe and over the years the vineyard has been arranged according to Burgundy’s pyramid model, so alongside the villages blends from multiple parcels, there is an exciting range of single-vineyard vino de parcela wines. The growing and winemaking practices too, are hardly distinguishable from those employed by the sincerest growers worldwide: low-input organic viticulture (zero herbicides or other systemic treatments), cultivation by hand, the use of native yeasts and no fining or filtration.

All Suertes vines are pie franco (ungrafted), and many are over 100 years old; phylloxera never conquered the Canaries. And, while most of the answers lie in soil, the low yields from these ancient vines also account for the intensity and depth of terroir character in the wines. The aspect and low pH guarantee freshness and Atlantic vibrance (the north of Tenerife is very green in strong contrast to the hot, dry south of the island and highly influenced by the northern Alisio winds) and this region’s fresh climate can be tasted in the invigorating structure of its wines.

Over recent years, García has invested heavily in the vineyards, while the new cellar can handle as many as 50 ferments, allowing the winemakers greater flexibility. There has been a shift to less extraction and large-format oak, bestowing ever-greater soil-to-glass purity across the portfolio. For those who have not tasted a Suertes del Marqués wine, the combination of little-known grapes, ungrafted vineyards and dramatic volcanic soils make for some of the most distinctive and delicious wines we ship. The whites are textural and mouth-filling; they ripple with energetic tangy fruit and salty freshness, touched by smoke and stone. The reds are characteristically lithe and lucid, with aromas and flavours of wildflowers, spicy fruit and garrigue and a distinctive peppery minerality from the volcanic soils. Whichever wine you go for, we can guarantee these bottles will intrigue—and hopefully delight—all who try them.

Fine Wine Cellars

On the one hand, our role as a merchant of all things wine & spirits could not be simpler. We aim to source the most delicious, the most authentic, and the highest quality products possible from Australia and around the world in order to offer them to our clients. We live or die by how well we perform this task. Of course things are rarely as simple or as easy as they seem. Hunting for wines & spirits is no different. Apart from the months spent travelling, countless days and evenings spent tasting and the outrageous wine expenditure in the name of ‘research’, sourcing quality wine and spirits requires expertise and experience. Understanding the potential of a producer and their products is much more than just a slurp and a spit.