Argentina: The Cool Years (Mar 2016)

(these vines on shallow limestone soil are protected from the worst of the afternoon sun; there’s huge organic material in the soil by Argentine standards, notes Alejandro Vigil): Bright saturated ruby to the rim. Crushed blackberry and smoky, saline soil tones on the nose. Utterly imploded on the palate, with penetrating acidity and saline minerality contributing to the wine’s great inner-mouth tension. Powerfully structured, juicy, tannic wine with a long life ahead of it. In a more Nebbiolo style, notes Vigil, who fermented the wine in old barrels and aged it in 2,000-liter barrels, none new. With a pH of 3.4, this wine should age at a snail’s pace and may ultimately be the best of these 2013s. According to Vigil this 1994 planting was the first in Gualtallary.