Categories
Uncategorised

A REAL SUCCESS. HARVEST 2021

A REAL SUCCESS. HARVEST 2021

The 2021 grape harvest has been an intensive harvest, as almost always, but this year even more. There are usually two phases in a harvest. The first one takes place at the end of August – beginning of September, when the weather is a bit hot, a bit dry… depending on the summer. During the second phase, in mid-September, it starts to rain, and temperatures drop. Some years, we get some rain, other years it doesn’t rain… but there is a temperature drop, autumn begins, with more humidity in the soil, some rain… Two types of wine, the one from the heat and the one from later.


However, there have been 3 phases this year: a short one before the rain, a very long one with a lot of rain, and the end of the harvest with no rain and higher temperatures. An atypical year! A change of weather which has come very early. At the beginning of September, the plants were in full swing, with new leaves… September is usually the moment when the plant is focused on transporting all the sugars to the grapes (the sugar content, which later will be the alcohol content). This year, as the plant was growing and, in a rather young state, the concentration of sugars was low, and so was the alcohol strength. Therefore, this year’s vintage will be marked by an alcoholic strength content. “A year which came difficult and changing, and which, in order to understand it, we needed to have our minds wide open, and also a year which we have tried to take as well as we could and knew” says Sara.


But, despite the difficulties, we feel grateful. A year with a high production is a gift from nature. After some difficult years, especially last year, in which we lost 85% of the harvest, this rain, this youth willingness of the plants, this humidity, this heat, made all the grapes of the plant keep ripening. We only need to understand where the year is going from now on, and we hope to be able to present you a spectacular wine later.
This year, the harvested estates during the rains have a feeling of overwhelming fineness, openness, generosity, they are estates which breath upwards. However, the last ones… concentration, depth. They seem different vintages depending on when they were harvested, the differences in alcoholic strength, expressions, acidity… these are Sara’s words describing the year.


The red wines before the rains, Clos Martinet, Escurçons, Camí Pesseroles and Pesseroles Brisat, during the rains… and Martinet Bru, after the rains, with a higher alcoholic strength.


Clos Martinet 2021 versus Martinet Bru 2021, they will seem wines from different vintages although they come from the same vintage. The Clos has a marked acidity, it doesn’t have too much colour, and it is also of great elegance and complexity. But on the other hand, Martinet Bru will be warmer and less acid, more like a candy…


It is still soon to fully understand it… but someday and with a bit of distance…


And we want to share that day with you, as we did last year. A live tasting, and this time we will be able to send wines to your houses so that you can taste them with us. Save the day in your calendar: 15th December, at 7 p.m.


The wines will be more balanced, and we will enjoy tasting them with you so that you can understand this 2021 vintage from another perspective, our perspective, despite the long way ahead with respect to ageing.

Categories
Uncategorised

WE START, HARVEST 2021

WE START! HARVEST 2021

3, 2, 1, …0!!!

Let’s harvest!! We harvest the fruit that we have taken care of very carefully throughout the year. Healthy and sweet grapes which are abundant this year if we consider the fact that, last year, we gleaned the few remaining grapes after the mildew grew strongly.

Intensive days begin, hours of working, crossing our fingers so that everything gets to the winery, checking the weather forecast to see whether it is going to rain or not, testing, weighing, treading, fermenting, checking densities…

We begin the notebook of the 2021 harvest with pleasure and a lot of enthusiasm
Join us through our social networks @masmartinet (Facebook and Instagram), and you will stay informed of everything that happens.

¡¡Happy harvest to everyone!!!

Categories
Uncategorised

BLUEBERRIES: ARE THEY AS GOOD AS PEOPLE SAY?

CARMEN ITURBE, DIETISTA

Carmen Iturbe, the dietician of dietistarural.com, help us learn more about this fruit native to North America whose commercialisation and growing has expanded in many other regions of the world due to its excellent properties.

Blueberries (different from cranberries, both belonging to the same family) are considered to be one the fruits with the highest antioxidants content (substances which protect the body from the damage caused by oxidising agents such as ultraviolet rays, environmental pollution, harmful chemical substances in food…), and it is fundamental to prevent cellular ageing and some types of cancer. Many studies have proved that the quantity of antioxidants of blueberries is affected by different factors, such as the growing method, the soil composition and the use of pesticides and fertilisers, but in the case of Mas Martinet’s blueberries, as they are organically grown, the maximum quantity of antioxidants is kept.

Among their many benefits, there is the increase of blood flow, which makes them good to prevent cardiovascular problems, precisely for their dilating effect on the blood vessels. Furthermore, blueberries have a very low glycaemic index, they have a very low sugars content, which makes them ideal for people with diabetes.

Their characteristic colour is due to the presence of anthocyanins, which are natural pigments that protect the body. Their role is to absorb ultraviolet light and create this dark blue/purple colour. The longer they stay under the sun, the bigger the amount of pigment will be, and the darker their colour will be. Their large anthocyanins and vitamin C content also makes them ideal to strengthen the visual system.
Harvesting at their optimal ripeness moment is fundamental for a higher concentration of this element. This is why their local consumption is important, to ensure that they are consumed as near the harvesting time as possible and, consequently, that they come to us in the best possible conditions.

They can be consumed fresh and dehydrated. They are perfect for salads, frozen for desserts and milkshakes/smoothies, in a juice or as a jam. The best way to consume them and get the maximum benefit for our health is, without a doubt, fresh, because when they are cooked, their antioxidants are gradually destroyed. In a milkshake/smoothie or juice, we cannot wait too much to drink them. What is evident in apples and pears, which from their colour we can detect immediately the oxidation caused by the contact of the flesh with the air, with blueberries it is more difficult to see, but the same reaction is caused. Therefore, they can stay 24 hours in the fridge covered, but we need to be careful if we keep them outside. It is important to dehydrate them, because this way, we concentrate the greatest number of nutrients in the fruit, and we can preserve it longer in optimal conditions. Otherwise, they must be frozen to preserve them up to 5/6 months in perfect conditions.
Blueberries are fruits, so as such, it is recommended to eat at least 5 portions a day, together with vegetables. We consider 1 portion the amount that fits in the palm of our hand.

Their great versatility in the kitchen makes them perfect for both salty and sweet dishes. They can be used in sauces, fresh, in milkshakes/smoothies… So, we invite you to try to find which is your favourite recipe, and also to include this fruit in your diet. There are many possibilities to choose.

Thank you so much, Camen, for sharing this information with us.

Categories
Uncategorised

WHY GROW BLUEBERRIES?

WHY GROW BLUEBERRIES?

Some years ago, after observing the difficulty of getting permits for new vineyards, I thought that there were still many hectares of forest in Priorat from neglected crops, which were not good for any profitable crop, and which were a fire danger in summer.

I thought that those neglected areas could be used to increase the beauty of the vineyard. Therefore, if we changed those neglected small forests understory of gorse, rosemary, kermes oak…, replacing them with plants which produced fruits of the forest, like blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, or others… we would turn the neglected forests into profitable gardens. And when visitors came to try our great wines and see our vineyards where these wines are produced, we would also show them that here, vine growers, apart from growing the vineyard in a sustainable manner, we can also turn neglected areas into profitable ones by turning them into small supplementary crops.

Nowadays, blueberries are becoming popular because it is a very healthy fruit that provides nutrients which boost the immune system, in addition to many other properties. So why do we have to import them from Chile or Huelva if we can produce them here and save ourselves the transportation costs?

We worked on the idea and, of course, we had to know first if this kind of crop was viable.

In order to make it work, the first thing that we did was to take all the possible information about this kind of crop. We started by searching on the Internet, and among other things, we found the contact of a technician from the SERIDA (Regional Agrifood Research and Development Service of Asturias) who was in charge of the investigation that, 15 or 20 years ago, started to study the cultivation of fruits of the forest, but especially blueberries, in order to make it possible in that region. We went on a trip to see the experimental crops and learn more about the possibility of applying, in Priorat, what they had carried out in Asturias.

Their willingness and cooperation have been very positive, and we have travelled there three more times. This way, in 2017, we could start growing blueberries in Priorat.

Now we are studying their viability, because their growing is a bit special, and it requires very specific and particular conditions. At the same time, and in the long run, we will see if their growing is economically viable in this region.

There is another thing that we discovered when we started their commercialisation, which is the relationship between their degree of ripeness and their quality. Everyone knows that the optimal quality of the fruit is when we eat it ripe, this is the moment when can fully benefit from its properties. But the anatomy and physiology of this plant makes it difficult to harvest.

Blueberries are an inflorescence (like grape bunches), but in this case, each blueberry ripens independently of the other blueberries around. This means that they must be selected and harvested one by one. The blue colour marks the beginning of their ripeness, but not their optimal ripeness, and in order to harvest the blueberries in an optimal ripeness state, you must have tried many, with a lot of patience and enthusiasm.

This product is usually produced and commercialised by big international companies. These groups have very large crops where they hire seasonal workers. The main cost in this kind of crop is its harvest, and in order to reduce it they need to harvest as quickly as possible. We said before that blueberries must be ripe to taste good and show all their properties, they must be ripe, and this is not something easy to achieve if they must be harvested very quickly. This is exactly why it is difficult to find sweet blueberries on the market.

On the other hand, small producers can do things well. We have seen it with the vine here in Priorat, the plots are not too big, and the producer works for him/herself and makes a quality product. Therefore, the land has been valorised, and blueberries can be an opportunity to complement the profits of the grapes, the wine, or other crops.

We must think that, in Priorat, we can make a good living from agriculture, if we produce little fruit, and which is especially good and of great quality.

Nowadays, only a person with the ability to provide richness to the crops can be a farmer.

Josep Lluís Pérez

Categories
Uncategorised

RUSTIC BLUEBERRIES, LEMON AND THYME GALETTE, GLUTEN AND SUGAR FREE

RUSTIC BLUEBERRIES, LEMON AND THYME GALETTE, GLUTEN AND SUGAR FREE

Ingredients for the base:

– 75 g almond flour (or ground almonds)
– 75 g buckwheat flour (and approximately 50 additional grams to work the dough if it is necessary)
– 50 g ghee butter (refrigerated to keep it in a solid state; you can also use normal butter or coconut oil -solid too- for a vegan option, although the result may vary slightly)
– 50 g date paste* (dates soaked in hot water and ground with a bit of the soaking water)
– A pinch of salt
– 1 teaspoon of thyme powder
– 50 ml water at room temperature

Ingredients for the filling:

– 300 g blueberries (fresh or frozen)
– The juice of 1/2 lemon
– The zest of 1 lemon (organic and washed)
– 2 tbsp date paste
– 1 level tbsp tapioca starch (or cornflour)

For the decoration:

– 3 dehydrated-lemon slices with no sugar
– Lemon zest
– Violets or other edible flowers

*For the date paste, I used 6 Medjool dates and 6 tbsp of the soaking water, and with this amount there was paste left.

Directions for the filling:

– Put all the ingredients except the starch in a pan, cook them over a low heat, and stir them until you see that the blueberries start releasing a bit of juice.

– Add the starch and continue stirring for 1-2 minutes more (just enough to dilute the starch and combine all the ingredients well).

– Remove the pan from heat and let it stand.

Directions for the galette:

– Put the flours, the salt, the thyme, the butter and the date paste in a bowl, and mix them; add the water, and continue mixing (you can also do it with a food processor if you have one).

– Put a bit of flour on the worktop, place the dough on it and gradually add more flour while you knead the dough with your hands until all the ingredients are well combined, and you see a pliable dough; make a ball.

– Put the dough back in the bowl, cover it, and leave it in the fridge for 30 minutes.

– Put the dough ball on baking paper and roll it with a floured rolling pin, giving it a circle shape with a thickness of 2-3 mm (there is no need to make a perfect circle).

– Change to a round tart tin (I used a 23 cm diameter one) and flatten the dough down carefully from the sides with your fingers so that it touches the whole inside part of the tin (there should be 3-4 cm of dough out of the tin).

– Pour the filling in the middle of the base and spread it, leaving the outside part with a smaller amount of it.

– Lower the edges folding them up carefully so that they cover the outside part of the galette.

Baking and decoration:

– With the oven preheated, bake at 180º for 30-40 minutes approximately, or until you see that the galette is firm and golden.

– Put the lemon slices, the flowers, the lemon zest, and fresh thyme if you have.

– Put the galette on a plate, let it rest for some minutes so that it settles, and eat it tempered.

Advice:

– You can make the dough first, and then the filling while it is in the fridge. After that, when you are going to roll the dough, you can turn on the oven and, when you finish making the tart, it will be ready to introduce it.

Categories
Uncategorised

ARÁNDANOS EL CIERRÓN

ARÁNDANOS EL CIERRÓN

José Carlos García Rubio has worked with blueberries for more than 30 years. When he started, he worked for the SERIDA (Regional Agrifood Research and Development Service) and on a project about “growing and adaptation of kiwis and small fruits on the Cantabrian coast”, in which they wanted to include a real economic study of a 1-hectare blueberry plantation. They looked for a farmer who wanted to take part in the study, but they did not find it, so finally he decided to do it himself. He did it in a state of his father, a livestock farmer who was about to retire, and he became involved in the project. In return for providing real data of the farming in that state, the SERIDA supplied him with the plants. He cultivated the plantation in 1989 and, 10 years later, the economic study was published and submitted in a congress in Chile.
Obviously, since then, things have changed a lot: the technology used, the plant densities, the varieties… The plants have been growing and producing more. He tells us that they produced 500 kg in the first harvest (the third year of planting), and that today, we should multiply this amount by 6. But he adds in a fun way: “even better this way, because I sold the 500 kg, but I wouldn’t have been able to sell 1 kg more.” In the second year, they produced 1500 kg. They sold 500 kg fresh, and the rest were frozen, and he kept them at home until a small company which produced jams and other processed products appeared. No one knew blueberries at that time. However, he continued, producing every year more and more until reaching 12 000 kg/hectare in the 10th year, the year when they finished the economic study.
Then, he installed the irrigation system, he covered part of the lands in order to advance the harvest of some varieties and stay longer in the market. By the end of the 1990s, the sales increased significantly (although they were nothing compared to the sales data nowadays), and they continued increasing until: “at the beginning, you don’t know where to sell them, and later, you have little fruit to sell. It is impossible to have the right measure,” he tells us.
Along the way, the varieties are not the same as those initially planted. Juan Carlos used grafting to make the change. This technology had not been used before for blueberries because, unlike fruit trees and other species for which it is used, the blueberry plant is a shrub with many branches. He did not want to throw away all those years of farming by pulling out and planting new plants. “My religion didn’t allow me to do it,” he tells us. And although it was complicated, he succeeded. Economically, it was a big success, because it avoided moving the earth, preparing the soil again, reinstalling the irrigation system, planting… the difference was very important, with grafting it was only necessary to cut the plants, engraft and lose only a harvest year. The following year, they recovered the amount of crop previous to the change. The data collected were written down in a study that he published on the SERIDA website, and which caught the attention of countries like Chile and the USA. In fact, the biggest nursery in the world, Fall Creek, which has its home office in Oregon, was so surprised with the results that they wanted to see it in situ, and surprised, they could not stop asking themselves: How didn’t we come up with this idea?
Since then, this technology has been used for genetic improvement, to speed up the process of putting varieties on the market, like this nursery in the USA, and also in variety changes, adapting them to the needs and tastes of the current markets, such as for example, in Chile. In fact, Juan Carlos has been invited to present his study at the 18th International Blueberries Seminar of Chile 2021.
Arándanos El Cierrón is also a nursery, because it was an activity which did not exist at a national level. Juan Carlos started to provide this service while his plantations were progressing. Nowadays it is his son, Adrián, who takes his place and manages the nursery. Now, the activity is not only focused on the business customer, to whom he sells a small plant, with an adjusted price. He also considers enthusiasts, private customers and small vegetable gardens, through online sale, and he grows for them bigger plants which are about to produce the following year of their purchase. In addition to this, he has applied for the organic farming logo/certification, which they are going to get next year.
And it works, it works so well that they need to expand, and they are looking for estates where they can do it. Another activity in which they are expanding is advice. Advisory projects in China, Azerbaijan, Spain (in other regions): “I wanted to retire, but I have more and more work.”
And when we ask him if blueberries consumption has changed in recent years, he tells us that, in 2000, Spain consumption was at 5 g per capita. Today, we exceed 200 g. The average in Northern Europe is currently at 250g. But the most surprising finding is the data in the USA, the country that has been eating blueberries all its life (even the Indians ate wild blueberries) and that domesticated this farming just over a century ago. In 2000, the country was at 250 g per capita, but today it exceeds 1 kg. Germany and England are close to this data, they must be over 700 gr, and many countries are increasing their blueberries consumption. There is no other fruit in the world so young and with such a fast growth “It is so good for everything. No one wants to die early, so everybody eats blueberries,” he smiles.
Thank you Juan Carlos García and Arándanos El Cierrón, for being so close, for teaching us and join us in our adventure of planting blueberries in Priorat.

Categories
Uncategorised

THANK YOU

THANKS

Thank you for your loyalty. Thank you for being by our side.

We could not have expected a better company than yours to make this journey. A journey which we started 35 years ago with the acquisition of the estate where the winery Mas Martinet and the vineyards of our Clos Martinet are located.

An anniversary that we wanted to share with the family, but specially with you, friends and clients. Hope we can continue producing our wines and drink together for many years to come!

Categories
Uncategorised

MAS MARTINET ASSESSORAMENTS

MAS MARTINET ASSESSORAMENTS

In 2001, Josep Lluís turned 65 years old, and he took a decision that drastically changed his life: he decided to retire from the project that he had founded in 1986, Mas Martinet Viticultors, and he left it to his daughter Sara, with whom he had already worked for some years (since 1996) in the winery.

“Dad, I want to make wine, I want to make it myself” he says that his daughter told him. And he answered: “Ok, so you can start tomorrow then.” “What if I do a bad job?” Sara said. And Josep Lluís remembers that he told her: “We will throw the wine down the ravine, but you are the most important thing. You must be yourself. Therefore, I will always be there, but you must do things in your own way”. This was something difficult to accept, and even now, depending on the situation, it is still difficult for him. Because they do things in a different way, different from how he would do them, and when people ask him how he is dealing with all this, he says: “I am very happy with the way my children are working. I am really happy with it”.

His decision of leaving Mas Martinet Viticultors was a shock for him, a hurried retirement for an active character longing to work so much like him. He was getting older, and it was difficult for him to accept it, so he decided to start doing some exercise every morning. He planned his own routine with exercises which would be right for him, and he hasn’t stopped doing them since then. However, something was missing: a project to be created and worked on.

For this reason, Montse Ovejero and Josep Lluís Pérez created Mas Martinet Assessoraments. And they did it together, as they have always done, working as a team. As they had already advised some companies like Rovellats and Peralada, they decided to focus on this, and advise. However, they followed their own style, they did things in their own way. Josep Lluís has always based his work on experimenting, both in the vineyard and in the winery. Therefore, they decided to buy Cal Milionari, an old winery located in Porrera. It was a place that allowed them to do things without obstructing the activity of the winery that they left.

They started to advise with their characteristic experimental basis, and they also started to make the Degustació wine and the wine without additives. They could make comparisons with few bottles: from the vigour of the plants, from the pruning, from the making process… In 1993, from the Viticultors winery, they had already carried out 40 different vinifications, different fermentations in barrels (in order to compare the fermentation in wood, without wood, in stainless steel, with 1o days of maceration, with 2o days of maceration…). They always had the idea of learning. Josep Lluís reminds us that: “I had no idea about wines”. He tells us that they gave nearly 50% of the grapes that they produced for tasting, talking about the experiences at the school for sommeliers, or telling them to sommeliers of restaurants like El Bulli or El Celler de Can Roca.

During this period, Mas Martinet Assessoraments advised more than 30 different companies, most of them located in Catalonia and Spain, in areas like Andalusia, La Mancha or Valencia. But they also advised companies in Sweden and Egypt, which are two opposed places because they are not located in a typical vineyard territory. Their climate is, by far, much colder or much hotter.

But in 2018 this period was closed, and both parents decided to transfer everything to their children. Then, their children decided to change things, because they were not going to make wine, at least not initially. The company was born with a service objective that the children have not taken literally. Mas Martinet Assessoraments became, since then, a platform for the different projects that the siblings, Sara, Adrià, Núria and Jordi decided to start.

Initiatives related to education and experimentation, because it has always been one of the bases of Assessoraments. It is a place for all those activities developed in a rather selfless way, non-profit oriented, only for the pleasure of doing what they like and activities on which they have a special interest. And, in order to support it, there is the website www.familywines.cat, an online store for all the family winemaking projects and their wines, from both, average vintages and old vintages or special winemaking.

An eclectic organisation with the ideas, hopes and outlooks on life of the 4 siblings and, maybe in the future, of their children. A place with room for blueberry growing, which was born as a project to try to balance the agroforestry/land use management in the plots cultivated by Mas Martinet Viticultors, and a wine without additives made in Cal Milionari.

Assessoraments is now a chance to be and take risks.

Categories
Uncategorised

ESCABECES

ESCABECES

A place: Vilabella. A vineyard: Cartoixà Vermell. Two couples and a common project to pay tribute to the Mediterranean rosés with a low alcohol content.

After long table talks and discussions between Oriol Pérez de Tudela, Mercè Salvat, René Barbier and Sara Pérez, they wanted to prove that rosés with a low alcohol content had their own personality, and they proved it by recovering some varieties, like the Sumoll (Montmell), the Trepat (Conca de Barberà) and the Cartoixà Vermell (Vilabella). Unfortunately, out of all the projects, only the last one was successful, and with it the Escabeces wine was born.

A traditional local variety, from the Gaià river area, in the region of Tarragona, which has been gradually lost because of its low yielding and its rather thick skin. A very rustic grape variety which has been refined in order to show the varietal typicity in the finest and most balanced possible way.

The estate, which is very productive, and also one of the few remaining with this variety, has been worked in order to concentrate its low alcohol content production and with little chance of maturing. The first two vintages produced an extremely tannic and very diluted wine which was not put on the market. Finally, the 2016 vintage was made like if it was a black wine macerated with the skin during fermentation in order to obtain its pink colour and a noticeable minerality. Its ageing process in clay and wood finishes up and refines this wine with little fruit in the mouth, but which is also of an extreme fineness. A dry, botanic wine marked by the citrus emitted by the grape variety.
Maturity, complexity, concentration, infusion and freshness in balance. A chance to discover a grape variety and a landscape in Tarragona full of nuances and arguments of their own.

A picture chosen by its creator take us to the Balcó del Mediterrani in Tarragona with Lily Brick and the JJBertran studio. It evokes Tarragona in the 1950, René’s grandfather’s vinery and the wines that he made, the wines of that period… those memories…

Categories
Uncategorised

CIMS DE PORRERA

CIMS DE PORRERA

Let’s go to Cims… A project which dates back to the year 1996, when Josep Lluís Pérez experimented in Mas Martinet with hundreds of different options for maceration, alcohol content, varieties… And he discovered the Carinyena, the old Carinyena. After considering different options, he eventually ended up in Porrera, in the Cooperative, with Lluís Llach. The agreement: buy half of the harvest at 50 pts. per kilo of grapes, and the commitment to help them vinify the other half in order to sell it in bulk at weekends. The beginning. A couple of years later, they bought the whole harvest of the 35 vine growers who made up the Cooperative. A big challenge.

Now they are 20/22 vine growers. The wines: the Clàssic, Cims de Porrera, but also the red and white wines Vi de Vila and the Finques.

Wanting to see the development of the Carinyena, a barrel from each state was bottled from the very beginning. 100% old Carinyena. Now, instead of the father, there is his son, Adrià Pérez, and his cousin, Marc Pérez. And, instead of Lluís Llach, there is Perelada.

However, the most important thing is that the social project continues, the work with different vine growers, different ways of working, different varieties, different areas, different orientations. “A diversity that we love and on which we do not want to have any influence (…) everyone does as much as he/she can and has his/her own fears” says Adrià when he talks to us about the project.

Marc and Adrià do not believe in rankings, classifications, labels, ratings… They make wine because they like drinking it, so they make the wine that they like: aged, mature wine. “Here, everyone wanted to extract. And the Carinyena, even if you extract as much grapes as you can (…) they have more depth, they go unnoticed” tells us Marc, when he talks about 2004 and the reason why they stopped bringing wines to the main guides of the sector. Therefore, in 2005 they decided to change the Cims de Porrera and turn it into a 100% Carinyena wine. It had been called Clàssic because it was the picture of what they found in the vineyard, and they had decided to be faithful to it. For this reason, the harvest and the winemaking were done at the same time. “In 2004 we already separated the Garnatxa and we started to do tests with the harvested Garnatxa much earlier, and we fell in love with it!” says Adrià. They decided to raise the price of the Garnatxa so that the vine growers would come earlier on purpose, because this way “the Garnatxa stands the coolness, it has a lower pH, the alcohol content is still high (…) but…” this was their commitment, tells us Marc.

This is how the Garnatxa was born. The Cims could be changed, and with this change the possibility to age it more came too, because the Carinyena stands acidity, coolness.

And now, they are trying to encourage vine growers to change their way of working in the vineyard for an environmentally friendlier one. But it is complicated, so they have started to work a state themselves, the state of El Molí. With cover, working on the soil… “The state looks beautiful” says Marc, who is in love with it. And it can be an example for other people.

It is just like in the winery, where they have changed their way of working introducing concrete, demijohns…, shorter ageing periods, but longer ageing inside the bottle: Vi de Vila 2/3 years, Garnatxa 4 years, Cims 6 years and the Finques, 15 years. Working in the winery in the most environmentally friendly way possible with the minimum total amount of sulphur dioxide.

This is the way… going to find the most natural thing, they tell us. And they do it in a unique location: the restored mills of the old Cooperative in which today there are demijohns, barrels and bottles waiting to see the light of day at the right time.

Nuestra web usa cookies para mejorar la experiencia de usuario y le recomendamos aceptar su uso para aprovechar plenamente la navegación.