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Traditional Rioja Done Right

by Andrew John Chalk

Bodegas Franco Espanolas is a wine maker founded in 1896 in the town of Logroño by Spanish and French vignerons to produce Rioja wine. Today, the winery is totally under Spanish ownership and committed to producing quality wines in the traditional Rioja style. Last week, export director John Perry came through town to show the latest vintages of the company’s wine and I was an invited guest at a trade tasting. Franco Espanolas wines’ intrigued me not least because they appeared to be such good values. Furthermore, most Rioja nowadays is in what is called the ‘modern’ style of forward fruit and French oak. By contrast, Franco Espanolas expressly adheres to the traditional style of using American oak for ageing. Also, a winery characteristic is that they age their wines longer in oak and in bottle than is legally required. The result is a better consumer experience on purchase as a result of finding the wines nearer peak ageing. At our tasting we went through the wines in normal way of tasting Rioja as listed in the table below: white before red. Reds in increasing order of quality.WINEPRICETASTING NOTES2012 Royal White$10100% Viura. Light, good acidic, lemon flavors. A good match for oysters, most shellfish, simple fish dishes. 2010 Royal Red$1080% Tempranillo/20% Garnacha. Part of the Tempranillo underwent ‘carbonic maceration’. Aged with just 6 months in white American oak and 6 months in bottle. A fruit-forward red exhibiting red fruit (raspberries) and low tannins. Serve as a party wine or with red sauce pasta or barbeque.2009 Rioja Bordon Crianza$13Serious reds start here. 80% Tempranillo/20% Garnacha. Aged for 15 months in American oak and 15 months in bottle. This wine qualifies to be labelled a reserva but gets the lesser Crianza label.This wine showed some complexity, especially in the nose. Early notes were fruit and wood. Later coffee and chocolate came through. This wine would pair well with pork, duck or veal and reward an hour’s breathing before serving.2007 Rioja Bordon Reserva$1580% Tempranillo/15% Garnacha/5% Mazuelo. 20 months in American oak, two years in bottle. Intense red fruit wrapped in sweet tannins. Will age several years if desired. Serve with hearty red meat dishes (e.g. steak, lamb, game). A true bargain for a wine that noted critic Robert Parker rated 90 points.2004 Rioja Bordon Gran Reserva$2580% Tempranillo/10% Garnacha/5% Mazuelo/5% Graciano. A complex and brooding wine that has fruity, earthy and spicy notes in equal proportion. Can be drunk now but will keep several more years and likely improve. Great value.


About the Author

Andrew John Chalk - Andrew Chalk is an Editor at CraveDFW, a food, drink and entertainment blog serving the Dallas/Fort Worth area. He is the primary wine writer at CraveDFW and writes in-depth articles on wines, wine makers and wineries. His recent work has has spanned Huneeus Chile, Banfi in Brunello, Sartori Winery in the Veneto, Robert Mondavi's 100th anniversary, Long Shadows Winery, and Gandona Winery.

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