Rioja 10×10

Rioja is Spain’s flagship of wine production and each year one hundred of the best wines available in the UK are rigorously selected by a panel of exerts, including GOCV member Beth Willard, who shares her insights and experience below.

Image courtesy of Wines of Rioja UK

It’s always exciting to be surrounded by a few hundred bottles of Rioja. A little daunting, perhaps, when you know you have to taste all of them and pick out only the very best from an already high quality selection but that was the challenge we faced as judges back in May at the annual Rioja 10×10 competition. Not only has this become an important way to highlight outstanding examples of Rioja wines in the UK market, providing valuable third party endorsement, but it has also put a focus on the diversity and innovation in a region so often only talked of in terms of history and tradition.

Rioja 10×10 judging ¦ London, May 2019

I faced the task of tasting through the Crianza category – a huge number of wines – which threw up a myriad of styles. I believe there are more opportunities for the UK to push this category to mirror the success and dominance of Crianza in Spain. For everyday drinking, the winning wines offer just the right amount of fruit, spice and oak…perfectly balanced.

The difficulty in tasting through so many wines in this category was the underlying quality which made it even more challenging to select just a handful of the best.

It was also very encouraging to see so many single variety wines (not just Tempranillo), and in particular there were some excellent examples of Garnacha from old vines in some of the higher areas of Rioja. It is pleasing that wines from specific regions, vineyards, and even single vineyard sites are reaching the market more and more, quite rightly putting a renewed focus and energy on the rich tapestry that is the terroir of Rioja. It was exciting to taste so many wines whose main message is not just the ageing process and potential but rather the expression of the Riojan vines.

I’m already looking forward to seeing what the 2020 competition will deliver…

Beth Willard, GOCV member

Other GOCV members that were invited to take part in the 2019 judging for Rioja 10×10 include: Tim Atkin MW, Sarah Jane Evans MW (vice-chair); Pierre Mansour; Nick Room (chairman); and Beth Willard.


To find out more about Wines of Rioja UK’s 10×10 Tasting (strictly trade & press only) visit: www.riojatasting.com

London’s Spanish food scene

The quality and range of Spanish food throughout the UK and in particular the capital has changed enormously in the past ten years. In this blog we hear from one the pioneers who brought this about, GOCV member and founder of Brindisa, Monika Linton, who shares her experience of current Spanish food trends in London.

Written: August, 2019

Spanish gastronomy in London is evolving and adapting to consumer’s priorities and interests. The tapas culture of eating a variety of small plates continues to be popular and I would say is finding a growing number of fans.

Both dinners and shoppers are rethinking their life style choices and are far more conscious and conscientious about what they eat and drink and how much. This engagement is extremely rewarding as it allows suppliers and restaurateurs to continue to specialize their offer and as long as front of house teams and shop servers are well trained and communicate these details then you can embrace more devoted and dedicated customers.

Within gastronomy we are seeing a very keen interest in dishes that are healthier while still authentic – fish dishes be they fresh or cured fish recipes are growing in popularity, ingredients that suit vegetarian dishes such as pulses and grains are also attracting a huge number of consumers. Equally rice & Spanish fideo pasta recipes are very definitely in fashion and becoming better understood and cooked with greater skill. So although Spain is very famous for its fresh & cured meats it is also very capable of satisfying this new meat free trend in food.

Spanish cheeses are finally getting far more attention and as the recipes include predominantly sheep and goat milk with certain ones made with vegetarian rennet these also are highly suited to this wave of alternative thinking or move to flexitarian foods.

In contrast possibly to this swing to healthy choices there is a conflict between consumers wanting greater convenience while also wanting to use less packaging and plastic. It is fair to say that because people cook less than before, the use of unnecessary materials to present foods & drinks is very much greater. This is a environmental challenge as well as an aesthetic challenge as consumers at the same time do buy with their eyes and responded very strongly to highly designed and good quality packaging. Due to busy life styles and less home time people need speed, convenience and fast service all of which involves packaging.

In addition, there is an obvious growth in purchases at all venues that include experiences, learning and a level of bespoke service. This plays well into the strengths of specialist food and wine outlets. As long as one sticks to one’s core knowledge and principles this adjunct to a small business can be very gratifying.

As a very broad overview, Spain is best known for its savoury foods and flavours so that the sweet pastries and chocolates rarely gain much traction here as yet. Sweet wines and sherries that can accompany desserts and so on tend to be enjoyed more often with cheeseboards.

Recently however we have witnessed a far stronger interest in wines from lesser known areas such as the Canary Islands and wines without DOP. This is an encouraging trend for the considerable number of smaller grower-wine makers across Spain and we at Brindisa Kitchens are keen to support them.

About Monika

Monika Linton, founder, Brindisa

It is hard to imagine now but, back in 1988 when Brindisa was founded by Monika Linton, knowledge of Spanish gastronomy was almost non-existent in the UK. Starting with a conviction that the foods she loved in Spain deserved to find a wider audience, Monika launched her company on a shoestring. Visit www.brindisa.com to learn more.

Monika was made a member of the Gran Orden de Caballeros del Vino in 2015 and published Brindisa – The True Food of Spain in 2016.

The vibrant world of Spanish wine

In the first of a new series of guest blogs, GOCV member Paul Shinnie shares stories from his extensive travels round Spain’s wine-making regions and explains the major changes he has witnessed over the past forty years.

One of the pleasures of working with Spanish producers is the opportunity to travel round that large country. Such diverse countryside that- from the sandy Atlantic beaches around Cádiz, to the simple quiet of La Mancha villages disrupting the eternal flatness to the aromatic pine-steeped hillsides of Cataluña and the rolling wheat fields of Navarra there is an extensive range of climates, soil types and grape varieties to engage us.

What has become evident recently is the boldness and confidence newer entrants are displaying as they shed the old imperatives of Spanish winemaking. I so well remember weeks spent in the 80s and 90s tasting Cabernet and Merlot blends, barrels of Tempranillo with the life purged from them by the sheer dominance of super-toasty new oak and then the comparative delight of joven wines.

What a difference the current state of Spanish wine making is in compared to 30/35 years ago; there are no doubt many more exciting varieties to be unearthed and fashioned into drinkable wines.

All this allied, however, to the constant frustration of seeing the quality of fruit sacrificed in the search to drive up perceived ‘value’ with flashy winemaking. There was the relief my throat felt as we both crossed the border into France at Le Boulou and the prospect of some fresher fruit flavours.

Nowadays, however, I can taste the true flavours of varieties like Bobal, Tintilla, Mandó, Verdejo, Xarel.lo not to mention Garnacha and Tempranillo and how their vines interact with different soils and different winemakers. The cool vibrant fruit of Garnacha from Baja Montana in Navarra against the piercing minerality and grace of Garnacha from Gredos – and while talking of graceful wines, what about Pintaillo found in the odd spot in Manchuela, or the 2018 Tintilla from Bodegas Forlong in El Puerto de Santa María. How can this be? Graceful red from Cadiz?

No longer are growers constrained by the old clichés of Spanish winemaking – age and oak.

So much of Spanish wine culture has been bound up with what happens in the winery and the reverence for ageing in small oak barrels. The traditional classification system rewards extended elaboration with words like Reserva or better still, Gran Reserva. What has often been the result? Can you tell the difference between a regular wine aged for 2 years in a barrel in Laguardia and a wine aged for 2 years in a barrel in Alfaro or even Toledo? As winemakers move out of the bodega and into the vineyard, throwing away the crutches of oak barrels that have not just supported wines but at the same time moulded them all into a certain sameness, they reveal the underlying character of a region and its grapes. Alongside this courage to lay bare unadorned flavours comes a greater distinction between regions, winemakers and grape varieties.

I am excited that we see producers like Contreras Ruiz in Rociana del Condado in Huelva extracting as much from Zalema as the chef Fergus Henderson might from a pig, or to see the afore-mentioned Forlong playing up Palomino in Cádiz. What a discovery is Mandó in the hands (or more correctly the tinajas or amphoras) of Pablo Calatayud at Celler del Roure in Valencia. And what about those tantalising Galician grapes like Souson and especially Merenzao that give you bracing acidity with such purity and intensity of flavour! What a difference the current state of Spanish wine making is in compared to 30/35 years ago; there are no doubt many more exciting varieties to be unearthed and fashioned into drinkable wines. Some are already on their way, to name a few  –  Arcos, Tardana, Rufete, Juan García – and all with individuality, personality and vibrancy. 

A vibrant world of Spanish wine!

This blog was written by: Paul Shinnie, buyer at Alliance Wine and who became a GOCV member in March 2019.

Vintage report 2018

Wines from Spain in UK Releases 2018 Vintage Report for Spain
2018 Harvest Report by Wines from Spain

The annual Vintage Report for Spain is published by Wines From Spain’s London office and kindly supplied to the GOCV for publication.

2018 Vintage Report for Spain

After several dry, hot vintages this year the rain came to Spain and in some regions the rainy spell lasted until early summer. It was also a much cooler year with more gradual vine development and one where intense work in the vineyard was often necessary to keep yields in check and vineyard diseases at bay.

The harvest began later and, with the benefit of fine weather in most of the country, picking took place steadily and well into the autumn. Yields were far more generous than last year and this should leave Spain in a strong competitive position.

As regards quality, the best wines will be found where there was careful management of vines and selection of grapes in both the vineyard and the bodega. Wine styles are often described as ‘more Atlantic’: fresher, with good aromas, slightly lower alcohol levels and good varietal definition. This bodes well for youthful wines as well as those destined for barrel ageing.

In brief:

  • Weather: a cooler year with far more rain; fine harvest weather for most regions
  • Regional highlights: a far better year for Ribera del Duero, Bierzo, most areas of Castilla y León and Valdeorras.  Record crops for Campo de Borja and Monterrei and more generous for Rioja and Cariñena
  • Wine character: fresher wines with moderate alcohol levels and strong varietal character.
  • Estimate harvest yield: 48 million hl(wine and must) (source: OEMV)

Our report of Spain’s 2018 harvest is divided into the following regional sections:

  1. Galicia: Rías Baixas, Monterrei, Ribeiro, Ribeira Sacra and Valdeorras
  2. Castilla y Leόn: Bierzo, Cigales, Tierra del Vino de Zamora, Tierra de León, Ribera del Duero, Rueda and Toro
  3. The north: Rioja and Navarra
  4. Aragón: Campo de Borja, Calatayud, Cariñena and Somontano
  5. Castilla-La Mancha
  6. Catalonia, Majorca and Eastern Spain
  7. Jerez-Xérès-Sherry

Wines from Spain Awards 2018

Led by GOCV member Tim Atkin MW, one hundred and six award-winning Spanish wines were announced at the annual Wines from Spain Awards in November 2018. The results followed an extensive tasting conducted by Wines from Spain and a select group of wine trade professionals.

The Wines from Spain Awards represent everything that is best about one of the world’s most exciting wine-producing countries: quality, diversity and value for money. After a day’s very enjoyable judging, an experienced group of retailers, importers, sommeliers and journalists had the enviable task of selecting the best of the best: 106 wines from every corner of Spain.

I think it’s the best Wines from Spain Awards line up yet and I hope you agree with me.

Tim Atkin MW, GOCV Member and chair of judges for the Wines from Spain Awards.

The 2018 judges

  • TIM ATKIN MW* Chair of Judges
  • SARAH ABBOTT MW, Wine Consultant
  • SARAH BENSON, Wine Buyer Co-op
  • PETER MCCOMBIE MW Wine Consultant
  • CHARLES METCALFE* Wine Writer
  • CHRISTINE PARKINSON Head of Wine at Hakkasan Group
  • NICK ROOM* Wine Buyer Waitrose
  • ANTHONY ROSE Wine Writer
  • ANA SAPUNGIU MW Wine Buyer Oddbins
  • ANNETTE SCARFE MW Wine Consultant
  • BETH WILLARD* Wine Buyer Laithwaite ́s Wine
  • SIMON WOODS Wine Writer
  • NOEL YOUNG Noel Young Fine Wines Cambridge

*GOCV member

You can download the full list of award-winning wines below.