WSET4 Upper Ebro Flashcards

Learn the wines of the Upper Ebro regions of La Rioja, Navarra and Aragon to the "WSET-4 diploma" level, an expert level qualification for professionals working in the wine industry. Wine & Spirit Education Trust (WSET) is generally regarded as the world's leading provider of wine education.

1
Q

What are the 3 autonomias of the Upper Ebro area

A

La Rioja
Navarra
Aragon

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2
Q

What are the DOs of the autonomous community La Rioja?

A

Rioja (DOCa)

Cava (multi-regional)

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3
Q

What are the DOs of the autonomous community Navarre?

A

Navarra
Rioja (DOCa)
Cava (multi-regional)

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4
Q

What are the DOs of the autonomous community Aragon?

A

Calatayud
Campo de Borja
Cariñena
Somontano

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5
Q

What are the Pagos DOs of the autonomous community Navarre?

A

Pago de Arínzano (Vino de Pago)
Pago de Otazu (Vino de Pago)
Prado de Irache (Vino de Pago)

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6
Q

What are the Pagos DOs of the autonomous community Aragon?

A

Ayles, 2011, Carineña

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7
Q

Describe the Rioja region in general terms…

A

Area protected by mountains on all sides. Importance first increased when large numbers of Bordeaux winemakers, growers and merchants relocated here after the phylloxera devastation in Bordeaux. Periods of ageing in oak and bottle longer than other regions. Move towards single estate or single vineyard production rather than co-operative cellars.

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8
Q

Describe the Climate and Geography of Rioja…

A

Sheltered by the Sierra de Cantabria to the north and west, it is well protected from the rain-bearing Atlantic winds that drench the Basque coast immediately to the north. Yet Rioja’s wine producers rarely experience the climatic extremes that burden growers in so much of central and southern Spain. It is difficult to make climatic generalizations, however, about a region that stretches about 120 km from north west to south east. Indeed, Spanish critics argue that within this single DO there are several entirely different wine-producing regions. The vineyards range in elevation from 300 m above sea level at Alfaro in the east to nearly 800 m on the slopes of the Sierra de Cantabria to the north west. Average annual rainfall increases correspondingly from less than 300 mm in parts of Rioja Baja to over 500 mm in the upper zones of Rioja Alta and Rioja Alavesa. Rioja Alta and Rioja Alavesa share a similar climate and are distinct from each other for mainly administrative reasons, although there are soil differences between the two. Many of the best grapes are grown here on the cooler slopes to the north west around the towns and villages of Haro, Labastida, San Vicente, Laguardia, Elciego, Fuenmayor, Cenicero, and Briones. These zones share similar clay soils based on limestone. Downstream to the east, the climate becomes gradually warmer with rainfall decreasing to less than 400 mm at Logroño. Where the valley broadens, there is a higher incidence of fertile, alluvial soils composed chiefly of silt. Around Calahorra and Alfaro in Rioja Baja the climate is more mediterranean. In summer, drought is often a problem here, and temperatures frequently reach 30 to 35C.

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9
Q

Describe Rioja Alavesa in general terms…

A

Rioja Alavesa is the name given to the area north of the river Ebro which falls in the Basque province of Alava, West of Logono on the river Ebro. Cool maritime influence from the Atlantic. Relatively high rainfall. Chalk rich soils produce lighter bodied wine with finesse. Smallest - Temp here often produces vino joven for early consumption- Carbonic Maceration may be employed for such wines

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10
Q

Describe Rioja Alta in general terms…

A

Rioja Alta occupies the part of the Ebro valley west of Logroño, south of the river Ebro and includes the winemaking town of Haro. Clay soils or red soils with high iron content. Viura suited to clay, Tempranillo to the iron rich soils. Small area of alluvial soil where Malvasia is grown. Warmer and drier than Alavesa, but still maritime.

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11
Q

Describe Rioja Baja in general terms…

A

Rioja Baja extends from the suburbs of Logroño south and east to include the towns of Calahorra and Alfaro, south bank of the Ebro. Continental climate with hot summers and severe winters. Heavy clay soils, Garnacha dominant, largest producer of Vino Joven wine. Hottest subregion- More alluvial soils and ferrous clay- Garnacha performs best.

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12
Q

Navarra

A

Known in English as Navarre, autonomous region in north east spain which also lends its name to a denominated wine zone with 11,500 ha/27,500 acres of vineyard in 2012. The kingdom of Navarra once stretched from bordeaux to Barcelona but today this extensive denomination is overshadowed by the neighbouring do zone rioja, a small part of which extends into the province of Navarra (see map under spain). The wines share a common history.Pilgrims en route to Santiago de Compostela fuelled the demand for wine in the Middle Ages. Later, in the mid 19th century, both Rioja and Navarra benefited greatly from their proximity to France after it was invaded by the phylloxera louse. Because northern Spain was affected considerably later than south west France, vineyards here were expanded and large quantities of Navarran wine were sold to producers in France until phylloxera arrived in Navarra itself in 1892. The region recovered fairly quickly but the area under vine in 1990 was less than a third of that a century before.The region splits into five subzones according to climate, from the cooler slopes of the Baja Montaña close to the Pyrenean foothills and the slightly warmer Valdizarbe and Tierra Estella districts in the north of Navarra, to Ribera Alta in the centre of the region, and Ribera Baja round the city of Tudela in the south. Rainfall totals range between 600 mm (23 in) in the north and 400 mm in the south and east, while summer temperatures become correspondingly warmer. With over 30% of Navarra’s vineyards, Ribera Baja has traditionally been the most important of the five subzones, although most of the new planting in the late 1980s and early 1990s took place in the cooler north.The Garnacha grape (see grenache) has dominated Navarra’s vineyards but plantings of tempranillo increased considerably in the 1990s. Garnacha lends itself to good, dry rosé, which Navarra continues to make in large quantities. Some distinctive sweet whites are made from Moscatel de Grano Menudo (Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains) grown in the south. This century the region’s wines have suffered on both domestic and foreign markets, being penalized for the widespread planting of imported varieties, which include Tempranillo in these parts, plus a reliance on high-yielding young vineyards. The new varieties and technical improvements have been largely promoted by the oenological research station, EVENA, set up at Olite by the consejo regulador and the regional government.

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13
Q

What region is Rioja Baja shared with?

A

Navarra

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14
Q

Describe the Navara region in general terms…

A

Stretches from Ebro river valley to the foothills of the Pyrenees, broad range of soil types and microclimates. Important region for Rosado in a light fresh style and modern high- quality reds. White production limited. Similar varieties to Rioja, with Garnacha dominating. More open to non local varieties with plantings of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay and Moscatel. EVENA (research centre) has encouraged wire training and mechanical harvesting so these methods are increasing, allowing better canopy and disease management. Recent investment in winery equipment. Temperature controlled fermentation tanks and small new oak barrels now used. Traditional wines are similar to Rioja, some with more colour and black berry fruit from permitted addition of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. Varietal wines from local or international varieties permitted.

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15
Q

Describe the Aragon region in general terms…

A

Known as Aragon in English. Once a powerful kingdom whose sphere of influence stretched from the levante in the west as far as naples and sicily in the east, Aragón is now one of Spain’s 17 autonomous regions. In the north east of the country, it spans the broad valley of the River Ebro which is flanked by mountains on either side (see map under spain). The north is dominated by the Pyrenees, which feed water on to the arid Ebro plain. To the south and east the climate becomes progressively extreme as the land rises towards the central Spanish plateau.The wines of Aragón used to be strapping potions with natural alcohol reaching levels as high as 17 or 18%. Red wines, made predominantly from the garnacha grape, were mostly sold in bulk for blending. However, four do regions designated between 1980 and 1990 changed the profile of Aragón wines. somontano in the lush Pyrenean foothills east of the city of Huesca chose to almost entirely forgo indigenous grape varieties, a choice which has proven controversial and not always fruitful in terms of sales, but south of the Ebro wines from the DOs of campo de borja, cariñena, and calatayud have benefited from investment in modern winemaking technology, which has revolutionized the style of modern-day Garnacha, sometimes blended with Tempranillo or Syrah. Throughout much of Aragón, large co-operatives continue to dominate production, buying in grapes from smallholders.

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16
Q

Describe the Somontano region in general terms…

A

Foothills of the Pyrenees in Aragón, north of Zaragoza. Cool climate with significant rainfall. Predominately international varieties, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Chenin Blanc and Gewürztraminer. Local grapes have been almost replaced. Generally modern, clean varietally- labelled wines, white production more common than red.

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17
Q

Describe the Carinena region in general terms…

A

Red/ brown limestone with rocky sub soil. High levels of calcium carbonate and slate in places. Mainly red wines, usually a blend including Tempranillo and Garnacha. Some good quality, inexpensive Reservas and Gran Reservas.

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18
Q

Describe the Calatayud region in general terms…

A

North east Spain, both banks of the Jalon river, a tributary to the Ebro. Continental, arid environment. Brown limestone and loam over slate and gypsum. Garnacha (80% of production) and Tempranillo are the main varieties for rich, powerful reds. Stainless steel, temperature control and new barrel ageing contributing to a more international style.dynamic denominated wine zone with 5,000 ha/12,000 acres of vines in aragón in north-east Spain, in arid country on either side of the River Jalón, a tributary of the Ebro (see map under spain). As in much of central Spain, yields rarely rise above 20 hl/ha (1 ton/acre). Most grapes are sold to one of nine local co-operatives. The garnacha grape, which accounts for around two-thirds of Calatayud’s production, makes heady, potent red wine, although tempranillo and various international varieties are now also planted. Investment in new technology, particularly stainless steel and refrigeration, is increasing the proportion of Garnacha-based rosés and crisp white wines made from viura. El Escocés Volante (Norrel Robertson MW), Bodegas y Viñedos del Jalón, and Ateca are the top

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19
Q

Describe the Somontano region in general terms…

A

Somontano is one of Spain’s newer wine regions with currently some 4,750 ha/11,400 acres under vines. In stark contrast to much of inland Spain, Somontano looks like winemaking country. The heavy winter rains are supplemented by a network of rivers and streams flowing off the mountains. Even in summer, when temperatures can easily reach 35 °C/95 °F, the fields remain green and productive.Bodega Pirineos, once the region’s co-operative, together with the ultra-modern, recently created wineries Viñas del Vero (vintage 1986) and Enate (1991), make most of Somontano’s wine. The main early selling point of Somontano in the early 1990s was its dedication to international varieties but by 2010 this had become its main problem as competing on a varietal basis with Cabernets and Syrahs made all over the world proved an arduous task. The native moristel and Parraleta varieties represent only 3.5% of the vineyard surface. Tempranillo, with 15%, is the only significant Spanish variety. The native Garnacha was on the wane, and mainly used for rosés, until Viñas del Vero discovered and relaunched the impressive old vineyards at Secastilla with a very distinctive single-estate Garnacha red. Some 160 ha of Garnacha remain. For whites, the traditional Macabeo and almost extinct Alcañón have been joined by Chardonnay and Gewürztraminer, which together represent 81% of the 870 ha/2,090 acres planted to white wine varieties.

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20
Q

Describe the Campo da Borja in general terms…

A

promising Spanish wine zone in the undulating plains around the town of Borja (after which the Borgia family was named) in the aragón region in the north east (see map under spain), producing fairly alcoholic red wines. This is one of the most arid parts of the country and the 6,800 ha/16,300 acres of low-yielding vineyards, planted predominantly with garnacha vines, produce intensely sweet, dark grapes which are made into heady red wines. The Borsao Borja co-operative has revolutionized the region with its young, intensely fruity reds that have won a large following on export markets and shown the way to the future for the do. The best wines, notably the result of an Australo-American joint venture, can command prices that would not even have been dreamt of in the late 1990s.

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21
Q

What shelters the North Central regions of Spain?

A

The Pyrenees to the Northeast (divides Spain and France) and the Cantabrian Mountains (Northwest)- provides rain shadow and summer temps rise further inland

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22
Q

What geographical feature separates La Rioja from País Vasco?

A

Cantabrian Mountains

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23
Q

What is the effect of the Cantabrain Mountains on Rioja?

A

It create a rain shadow in Rioja.

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24
Q

What is the capital of Rioja Alta?

A

Haro

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25
Q

Which river emerges from the Western Cantabrian Mountains and heads towards Rioja DOCa?

A

The Ebro River

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26
Q

What river was Rioja named after?

A

The Oja, a tributary of the Ebro

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27
Q

Which body of water most influences Rioja?

A

Ebro River

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28
Q

What are the three different zones of Rioja?

A

Rioja Alta, Rioja Alavesa, Rioja Oriental (formerly Rioja Baja)

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29
Q

Which grape varieties are allowed in a Rioja white blend?

A

There are 6 indigenous wine grapes and 3 other wine grapes allowed in Rioja Blanco. The indigenous grapes include VIURA (a minimum of 51% of the blend), MALVASIA de Rioja, Garnacha Blanca, Tempranillo Blanco, Maturana Blanca and Turruntés de Rioja. The other grapes allowed include Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Verdejo and may be added up to 49% of the blend.

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30
Q

Characterize the grape variety VIURA?

A

Often underestimated, widely grown variety that can make ageworthy whites as VIURA in Rioja and MACCABEU in Roussillon. Good fruit and acidity when grown with low yields. Blended in Rioja, and used in the blend for Cava production in Catalunya.

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31
Q

What are synonyms for MACABEO (and where)?

A

Macabeu (Catalunya), Maccabeu (Roussillon), Viura (Rioja, Rueda)

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32
Q

What does MACABEO varietal wine taste like?

A

Varietal wines are typically lightly floral and relatively aromatic when young and unoaked but acidity tends to be low and they can soon lose their aroma or develop certain bitter-almond character. Low-cropped Macabeo responds well to barrel fermentation and oak ageing. In both Rioja and Catalunya it seems to be shown to best advantage in a blend.

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33
Q

What are the viticultural characteristics of MACABEO?

A

Big, compact bunches of medium-sized, thick-skinned berries. Late budding and late ripening. Productive, shoots sometimes broken off by wind. Cool, damp sites are unsuitable. Very susceptible to botrytis bunch rot and vine bacterial necrosis, less so to downy mildew. Responds well to low yields and relatively early picking.

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34
Q

Describe the grape variety Malvasia…

A

White grape, makes full- bodied heavy whites, usually main component of very best, traditional style Riojas, it’s richness can balance lightness of Viura.

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35
Q

What grape varieties are allowed in a Rioja red blend?

A

TEMPRANILLO plus MAZUELO, GRACIANO, GARNACHA. These four grapes (along with Maturana Tinta- 2007 authorisation), must comprise 85% of the red Rioja, or 95% if destemmed. Experimental Cabernet Sauvignon make up the remainder

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36
Q

Characterize the grape variety TEMPRANILLO?

A

Spain’s most famous grape, responsible for the majority of its most famous reds.

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37
Q

What are synonyms for TEMPRANILLO (and where)?

A

Aragon (Alentejo, Portugal), Cencibel (Castilla-la-Mancha, Madrid, Aragon, Extremadura, Murcia), Tinta del Pais or Tinto Fino (Ribera del Duero), Tinta Roriz (Duoro), Ull de Llebre (Catalunya), Valdepenas (Napa), and many, many more.

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38
Q

What does TEMPRANILLO varietal wine taste like?

A

Medium-sized to large compact bunches of small berries rich in tannin and anthocyans. Relatively fertile. Early budding and ripening. Yields range from medium to high according to site. Sensitive to wind and extreme drought. Susceptible to powerdery mildew but generally resistant to botrytis bunch rot. High yields reduce color and fruit intensity as well as acidity.

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39
Q

What are the viticultural characteristics of TEMPRANILLO?

A

Tempranillo produces wines with considerable less alcohol than garnacha and such other Spanish stalwarts as monastrell and bobal. It has marked tannin, sometimes slightly low acidity and flavours that range over spice, leather, tabacco leaves, sometimes strawberry when it has been given extended ageing in American oak (Rioja). The most concentrated, alcoholic examples are produced in Toro.

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40
Q

Characterize the grape variety MAZUELO?

A

Black variety from North-East Spain high in tannin and acidity that can make fine wine from old vines, but has in its time as Carignan blighted Languedoc-Roussillon.

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41
Q

What are synonyms for MAZUELO (and where)?

A

Carignane (Languedoc-Roussillon), Cariñena (Aragon), Mazuela (Rioja), Samso (Catalunya)

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42
Q

What are the viticultural characteristics of MAZUELO?

A

Vigorous and highly productive (upto 200hl/ha), late budding and very late ripening, so that it needs the heat of a Mediterranean climate to thrive. It is highly prone to powdery mildew, less so to botrytis bunch rot and downy mildew. Bunches cling firmly to the vine, making it less suitable for mechanical harvesting.

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43
Q

What does MAZUELO varietal wine tastes like?

A

Mazuelo/Carignan is an extreme variety in every way: high yielding and high in acid, color and generally tough tannin, occassionally bitter. Even the best examples, the product of old bush vines or softened by carbonic maceration and blended with finer varieties, can provoke mixed responses in wine drinkers. It is not a subservient partner for oak.

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44
Q

Describe the grape variety Graciano…

A

Black grape, Plantings now very limited because of low yields. Grown mainly in Rioja, used for finest wines. Small quantities used for powerful aromas, body and tannins help wines age.

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45
Q

Characterize the grape variety GRACIANO?

A

Low-yielding, richly coloured, perfumed variety that retains acidity and is regaining favour in Rioja.

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46
Q

What are synonyms for GRACIANO (and where)?

A

Cagnulari (Sardegna, Italy), Monastrell Menudo or Monastrell Verdadero (Spain), often Graciano is mistaken for Monastrell

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47
Q

What are the viticultural characteristics of GRACIANO?

A

Mid to late budding, late ripening. Vigorous, drought resistant but difficult to grow due to low fertility and yields, susceptible to downy mildew and rot. Its wine is valued for its acidity and perfume. Best suited to clay and limestone soils, cooler sites and short pruning.

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48
Q

What does GRACIANO varietal wine tastes like?

A

Fragant, fresh, potentially powerful and occassionaly spicy. Increasing appreciation of its fresh and aromatic contribution to Rioja blends. As Cagnulari in Sardegna it is full bodied and well-structured with intense aromas of crushed red fruits, fresh mint leaves, pepper, ink, dry but rounded tannin and an attractive after taste of black cherries.

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49
Q

Characterize the grape variety GARNACHA?

A

Very widely planted, long-lived vine making strong, sweetish reds and some successful roses.

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50
Q

What are synonyms for GARNACHA (and where)?

A

Garnacha is an old variety that has undergone several mutations and has many synonyms. Grenache, Grenache Noir (France), Cannonau (Sardegna), Garnaxa (Catalunya), Garnacha Tinta (Spain), Roussillon (Roussillon), Vernaccia Nera (Marche, Italy).

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51
Q

What are the viticultural characteristics of GARNACHA?

A

Relatively early budding but late ripening so has to be grown in fairly warm climates. Vigorous (less on sandy soils), susceptible to downy mildew, botrytis bunch rot and may suffer from millerandage. Potential very high sugar levels in the berries, which lose colour if yields are too high. Acidity tends to be moderate at best. Equally well suited to lightly acid, gravelly or stony soils and to soils high in limestone. Best pruned short and trained as bushvines. Good draught resistance. Good resistance to diseases of the woord, which may explain its longevity.

52
Q

What does GARNACHA varietal wine tastes like?

A

Varietal Grenache Noir is a relative rarity, but has its best examples in the dry vineyards of Chateau-neuf-du-pape berries are small, grape skins are thick and resulting wines are deep-coloured and often tannic in yought. They dance along the spectrum between herby and spicy. If yields are too high and the land unpromosing, Grenache can taste a little too jammy. From old bushvines in Priorat it is valued for the concentrated, sweet fruit.

53
Q

What is Rioja Alta known to bring to red Rioja?

A

Acidity and structure

54
Q

What is Rioja Baja known to bring to red Rioja?

A

Extract and alcoholic warmth

55
Q

What is Rioja Alavesa known to bring to red Rioja?

A

Freshness and Finesse

56
Q

Red wines from Rioja are made from which varietal?

A

Tempranillo

57
Q

What grape dominates Plantings in Rioja Baja?

A

Garnacha

58
Q

What is the main white varietal of Navarra?

A

Viura

59
Q

What are the two major red varietals of Navarra? White varietals?

A

Red - Garnacha and TempranilloWhite - Viura

60
Q

What is the main grape of Calatayud and Cariñena?

A

Garnacha

61
Q

What is the main grape of Campo de Borja?

A

Garnacha

62
Q

What indigenous grapes are mainly used to produce white and red wines in Somontano?

A

Alcanon (white), Parraleta (red)

63
Q

What DO of Spain is said to be the ancestral home for Mazuelo?

A

Cariñena

64
Q

What grape varieties are used in premium quality Rioja red wines?

A

Tempranillo dominates with Graciano and Mazuelo (Carignan) for expensive reds, Garnacha a large component in the cheaper wines.

65
Q

What was the traditional style of Rioja red wine?

A

In American oak, soft with muted red fruit, firm acidity and oak aromas of dill, vanilla, cedar. Traditional Riserva and Gran Reserva have a long ageing period, resulting in development of savoury characters such as meat and caramel that complement soft strawberry fruit. Pale red in colour with a brown rim.

66
Q

What is the modern style of Rioja red wine?

A

Modern wines are darker with more pronounced fruit character of strawberries and plums riper and darker fruit. Less oxidative character and more obvious oak flavours of vanilla, toast and coconut. French oak, more extraction

67
Q

What is the traditional style of Rioja Blanco?

A

This white wine ranges from light to full-bodied and is treasured for its ability to age for 10 or more years. Rioja Blanco wines are exceptionally rare, making up only about 10% of the region’s production. Traditionally deliberately oxidised and extended oak ageing in American Oak, creating savoury, nutty characters. Only one producer (Lopez de Heredia) still makes this style, though some make a moderately oxidative, oak-aged white. Experimentation with ageing in French oak. Aromas are bold and heady with notes of roasted pineapple, caramelized honey, preserved lime, candied tarragon, hazelnut, whisky and horehound candies. On the palate, wines are dry and subtly reveal layers of lemon curd, creamed pine nuts, praline, tarragon and lemonade with a long finish of oily minerals, saline and mouth-watering acidity.

68
Q

What is the modern style of Rioja Blanco?

A

Most white Rioja wines are released a year after vintage in a ‘fresh’ style, clean and fruity. Modern whites fermented at low temperatures in stainless steel to preserve fruit. Aromas are lean and citrusy with notes of lime peel, lemon verbana, honeydew melon, fresh tarragon, marjoram and a chalky mineral note. On the palate, wines are dry and burst with ample acidity and sweeter fruit flavors of honeydew melon, lemon curd, and honeycomb with a long finish of minerals, saline, and tingly acidity.

69
Q

Rioja- Rosado

A

15% production. Mainly Garnacha, and most unaged.

70
Q

What type of wines are made in Navarra DO?

A

Famous for Rosado (received recognition in 15th Century)- Red wine now accounts for 60% of production. Rosado now is 1/4 of production- Garnacha and Tempranillo are the major grapes. Chardonnay is biggest white grape (huge spike after the last few years). Only 6%- Red grapes of French origin (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Pinot Noir) on the rise

71
Q

What are the ageing requirements for Rioja White?

A

Crianza wines aged for 12 months, Reserva wines aged for 24 months, Gran Reserva wines aged for 48 months. All three levels need a minimum 6 months in cask. Producers may age white and Rosado crianza wines in a non- oxidative environment like stainless steel, Reserva Wines must remain in oak or bottle for the minimum period of aging.

72
Q

What are the ageing requirements for Rioja Red?

A

Red Crianza- 2 years aging prior to release (1 year minimum in oak) Red Reserva- 3 years aging (1 year in oak prior to release) Red Gran Reserva- 2 years in cask (2 years in bottle) total aging 60 months

73
Q

Which Benedictine Clergyman realised Rioja’s potential in the 13th Century?

A

Conzalo de Berceo (Berceo has reserva and gran Reserva named after him)

74
Q

What percentage of Red grapes must be in rosado from Rioja?

A

25% minimum

75
Q

Is a blend of different subregions of Rioja common?

A

Yes it is, however single vineyards are common to producers like Lopez De Heredia from estate v/yards like Bosconia and Tondonia

76
Q

What is the offical classification for single v/yard from Rioja?

A

Vinedos Singulares, which was introduced in 2017. For it to be passed it must have been around for 35 years old, soil assessed proof it has been working with the v/yard for at least 10 years, and tasted by a tasting panel.

77
Q

What is Vino Espumoso De Calidad?

A
  • 2018 classification- Traditional sparkling wine- Must be hand harvested, and all the Winemaking must be done at the same facility- Brut nature, Extra Brut and Brut styles are allowed- Minimum 15 months aging (on lees). Reserve and Gran Reserve requires 24 and 36 months respectively
78
Q

In which DO would you be most likely to find old vine Garnacha?

A

Calatayud

79
Q

What region lies to the east of Rioja and Navarra?

A

Aragon

80
Q

What size casks must Rioja wines be aged in?

A

225 Litres (same as a barrique)

81
Q

What soil structure defines Rioja Alavesa? Alta? Baja?

A

Alavesa and Alta – calcerous clay. Baja – Alluvial soils and ferrous clay

82
Q

What region is adjacent to the northern and eastern borders of Rioja?

A

Navarra

83
Q

In what region of Rioja is carbonic maceration most often employed?

A

Rioja Alavesa

84
Q

What are the names of the towns that bookend Rioja?

A

Haro to the NW and Alfaro in the SE

85
Q

In what region of Rioja does Tempranillo ripen the earliest?

A

Rioja Alavesa

86
Q

From north to south, what are the three sub-zones of Rioja?

A

Rioja Alavesa, Rioja Alta, Rioja Baja

87
Q

For Rosado wines in Rioja, what is the minimum amount of red grapes that has to be used?

A

25%

88
Q

What are the four DO zones of Aragon?

A

Campo de Borja, Calatayud, Carinena, Somotano

89
Q

What Spanish DO is called ‘beneath the mountain’?

A

Somontano

90
Q

What are the 3 DO Pago regions of Navarra?

A

Señorio de Arínzano (Tierra Estrella)Prado Iraene (Tierra Estrella)Bodegas Otazu (Valdizarbe)

91
Q

What DO is covered by the provinces Valladolid and Zamora?

A

Toro

92
Q

How was the introduction of Barrcas different in Rioja?

A

Because Of their American colonies, Spainards bought back American oak.

93
Q

When was Rioja elevated to DOCa?

A

1991

94
Q

What are the most highly rated wines of Navarra DO and which varietals are used in its production?

A

Roses made mostly from Grenache

95
Q

What is the Capital city of Province Rioja?

A

Logroño

96
Q

Where do you find the Navarra vineyards and what is the climate?

A

Downstream from Rioja, extend from the valley floor to foothills of the Pyrenees, results: broad variation in soil and climate

97
Q

Explain training in Rioja

A

Generally bush vines, wires- training only permitted for experimental purposes only.

98
Q

Rioja- Viticulture and vine varieties

A

The number of permitted grape varieties was increased in 2009 to 14 (five red, nine white), and their distribution varies in different parts of the region. The most widely planted variety is the dark-skinned tempranillo, which ripens well on the clay and limestone slopes of Rioja Alta and Rioja Alavesa, where it forms the basis for the region’s best wines and in 2012 was planted on 48,000 ha/115,000 ha, more than thee-quarters of the total vineyard surface.Most Riojas are blends of more than one variety, however, and wines made from the garnacha vine, which after phylloxera superseded native varieties in the Rioja Baja, are often used to add body to Tempranillo, which can taste thin on its own in cooler vintages. Two further red varieties, Mazuelo (Cariñena or carignan) and graciano, are of relatively minor importance. Owing to its susceptibility to disease and its low productivity, Graciano fell from favour with Rioja’s vine-growers before a strong revival in the 1990s, when the area devoted to this variety grew back to 200 ha/500 acres and varietal versions are no longer oddities.The cabernet sauvignon vines which arrived with the French in the 19th century are allowed as ‘experimental’ grapes and may be used, as merlot is too, in blends as minority components, but may not be mentioned on the label except as ‘other varieties’.The fifth red wine variety, authorized in 2009, was Maturana Tinta. But, in a chaotic turn of events, a different variety has actually been planted under that name which can be found on labels. When regional viticulturists began recovering old, minority grape varieties around the turn of the 21st century, several red ones showed good potential. Maturana was one. It was later identified through dna profiling as Galicia’s Merenzao, which, in turn, is the Jura’s trousseau—present for centuries, under several names in Spain, Portugal, and the Canary Islands. Another red grape was named Maturana Tinta de Navarrete, as it was recovered and reproduced from a few vines in that Rioja village. Although the ‘Trousseau’ Maturana was the one registered with the Ministry of Agriculture, the deep-coloured, peppery one from Navarrete was preferred by growers and planted commercially. The Consejo Regulador looked the other way when it was identified as just ‘Maturana Tinta’ on labels. In 2011 it was shown to be Castets, an almost extinct member of the Bordeaux grape family.Historically, until phylloxera arrived, Rioja’s chief white grape variety was called malvasía, a synonym for the lowly alarije of west central Spain. On its own, it produced rich, alcoholic, dry white wines which responded well to ageing in oak. However, Viura (known elsewhere in Spain as macabeo) took over as the most planted light-berried variety in the region and from the early 1970s, fresher-tasting, cool-fermented, early-bottled white wines were in fashion all over Spain. By the 1990s, most white Riojas were made exclusively from Viura, and Malvasía vines were extremely difficult to find, although some of the traditional oak-aged whites and new barrel-fermented wines are blends of Malvasía and Viura.A third traditional grape, Garnacha Blanca, was legal but rare. In 2009, Verdejo, Sauvignon Blanc, and Chardonnay were also permitted but may not be a majority component of blends. There has been very little interest in them. Also legalized then were three recovered white local varieties that have attracted considerably more attention: Tempranillo Blanco, a relatively recent mutation of Tempranillo. Maturana Blanca, which is not related to either one of the Maturana Tintas. and Turruntés, a local name for the albillo Mayor which is more common further south, around the Duero/Douro River.Vineyards in Rioja tend to be small, especially in Rioja Alta and Rioja Alavesa, where vines are often interspersed with other crops. Vines used to be free-standing bush vines trained into low goblet shapes (see gobelet), but of the thousands of hectares of new vineyard which have been planted since the 1970s, most are trained on wires. This resulted in a marked and alarming increase in yields in the region in the 1990s, even before irrigation was legalized in the late 1990s. Official DO limits are 63 hl/ha (3.5 tons/acre) for white wines and 45 hl/ha for reds.

99
Q

Rioja- Winemaking

A

Grapes are usually delivered to large, central wineries belonging either to one of the co-operatives or to a merchant’s bodega. Most wineries in Rioja are reasonably well equipped with a modern stainless steel plant and facilities for temperature control.Rioja winemaking is characterized not by fermentation techniques but by barrel maturation, however, and the shape and size of the 225-l barrica bordelesa introduced by the French in the mid 19th century is laid down by law. The regulations also specify the minimum ageing period for each officially recognized category of wine. In Rioja, red wines labelled crianza and reserva must spend at least a year in oak, while a gran reserva must spend at least two years. In common with other Spanish wine regions, American oak has been the favoured wood type for wine maturation. New American oak barrels give the soft, vanilla flavour that has become accepted as typical of Rioja, but a similar effect can also be achieved by slow, oxidative maturation in older barrels. French oak is used increasingly, however. Over 40% of all Rioja falls into one of the three oak-aged categories above (the rest is either white, rosé, or sold as young, unoaked joven red, much of it within Spain), and the larger bodegas therefore need tens of thousands of casks. Most bodegas renew their barricas on a regular basis. new oak use is on the increase and the number of traditional producers who pride themselves on the age of their casks is dwindling. Some new producers are also spurning the tradional categories and bottling their oak-aged wine with a basic, generic Rioja back label. This enables them, among other things, to use different sized barrels or larger oak vats.After the widespread adoption of cool fermentation techniques in the 1970s, the amount of oak-aged white Rioja progressively diminished. López de Heredia, Marqués de Murrieta, and only a few other bodegas upheld the traditional style by ageing their white wines in oak barricas. For whites labelled Crianza, Reserva, or Gran Reserva, the minimum wood-ageing period is just six months with a further year, two years, or four years respectively before the wines may be released for sale. By the mid 1990s, a large number of producers had switched to fashionable barrel fermentation, however, in effect reviving the region’s traditional white wine vinification method.Some reds as well as whites may occasionally need acidification.

100
Q

Rioja- Organisation of Trade

A

Rioja’s vineyards are split among nearly 20,000 growers, most of whom tend their plots as a sideline and have no winemaking facilities of their own, although in Rioja Alavesa they have been financially encouraged by the Basque regional government to acquire them. Many growers have an established contract with one of the merchant bodegas, whose numbers rocketed from about 100 in the mid 1990s to more than 500 a decade later. Others belong to one of the 30 co-operatives that serve the region and receive around 45% of the grapes. Most co-operatives sell their produce, either as must or as newly made wine, to the merchant bodegas, who blend, bottle, and market the wine under their own labels.In the 1980s, a number of bodegas bought up large tracts of land to plant their own vineyards, although few have sufficient to supply their entire needs. A number of single estates, such as Contino and Remelluri, have also emerged, with the distinction, rare for the region, of growing, vinifying, and marketing their own wines.Like other Spanish dos, Rioja is controlled by a consejo regulador. Based in Logroño, the Consejo keeps a register of all vineyards and bodegas and monitors the movement of stocks from the vineyard to the bottle. The Consejo also maintains laboratories at Haro and Laguardia where tests are carried out on all wines before they are approved for export. After a long debate dating from the 1970s, Rioja was granted doca status in 1991. The qualifications have little to do with absolute quality, the single most important being that Rioja’s grape prices are at least 200% above the national average. The Consejo Regulador set itself the target of mandatory bottling within the region, was defeated in the eu court in 1992, but finally won on appeal in 2000.

101
Q

Somontano DO is the only region of Spain that grows the variety…

A

Moristel

102
Q

Rioja synonym for Trousseau.

A

Maturana Tinta

103
Q

Maximum permitted yields (kg/ha) for Rioja wines (red and white).

A

White: 9000 kg/haRed: 6500 kg/ha

104
Q

When did Rioja became the first DOCa?

A

1991 (after being classified as DO in 1925)

105
Q

When was new varieties approved for Rioja, for the first time since 1925?

A

2007

106
Q

Name the two latest vintages that have been rated as excellent by the Regulatory Council in Rioja.

A

20112010

107
Q

Which type of training is the traditional one used in Rioja?

A

Bush training (Goblet)

108
Q

Which is the maximum elevation for the vineyards of Rioja?

A

700 m.

109
Q

Where is the Consejo Regulator of Rioja based?

A

Logroño

110
Q

Name the four distinct categories of classification for the bodegas in Rioja.

A

Winegrowers, Co-operatives, Wine keepers, Ageing Bodegas (to be classified as such, it must have minimum fifty 225lt. oak casks and 22500lt. of wine in stock)

111
Q

Rioja Baja accounts for ….% of Rioja’s wine production.

A

40%

112
Q

What is Macabeo known as in Rioja?

A

Viura

113
Q

Where is the DO Pago Bodegas Otazu?

A

Valdizarbe, Navarra

114
Q

What does Somontano mean?

A

Beneath the mountain

115
Q

Who makes ‘Monopole’? What is it?

A

CVNE (Compania Vinicola del Norte Espana). their white Rioja – can be stainless steel or oak aged

116
Q

Who makes Prado Enea Gran Reserva?

A

Muga, from Rioja Alta.

117
Q

Who makes Real de Asua and what is it?

A

CVNE. Reserva Rioja aged in French oak, more modern style

118
Q

Who makes Vina Ardanza?

A

La Rioja Alta

119
Q

Who makes ‘Corona ‘ and what is it?

A

100% Viura sweet wine fermented in American Oak made by CVNE.

120
Q

Who makes ‘Bosconia,’ ‘Tondonia,’ and ‘Gravonia?’

A

Bodegas López de Heredia

121
Q

Who makes Vina Cubillo and Vina Gravonia?

A

Lopez de Heredia’s Crianza wines – Cubillo is red. Gravonia is white

122
Q

Pernod Ricard

A

French spirits company whose wine portfolio is styled Pernod Ricard Winemakers. The company’s first significant wine acquisition was in 1989, the Orlando Wyndham Group of Australia which included the brand jacob’s creek. Etchart of Argentina, owner of Graffigna, followed in 1992, and then in 2005 Allied Domecq which included not just an array of spirits, but Montana (now brancott estate), and Stoneleigh in New Zealand, Campo Viejo in Rioja, and Mumm and Perrier-Jouët champagnes. In 2013 the company invested in the Chinese wine brand Helan Mountain of Ningxia and in 2014 acquired Kenwood Vineyards of California. A project in georgia begun in 1993 was abandoned.

123
Q

Where is Finca Allende producer located?

A

Briones, Rioja Alta

124
Q

What five iconic producers are located in Haro?

A

López de Heredia, La Rioja Alta, Bodegas Muga, Bodegas Roda, CVNE (Compana Vinicola del Norte de Espana)

125
Q

What two Bordeaux trained winemakers helped introduce new techniques in the 1850’s in Rioja?

A

Marques de Riscal, Marques de Murrieta

126
Q

Name two iconic producers that are in Logrono, Rioja Alta.

A

Marques de Murrieta, Artadi

127
Q

What iconic producer is located in Cenicero, Rioja Alta?

A

Marques de Caceres