The Long Age: Unraveling the History of the Rioja Throne and Its Resilient Winemaking Soul Wine, like memory, ages with stories. In the sunlit valleys of northern Spain, Rioja stands as a patient sovereign, its throne earned not by speed but by centuries of climate, craft, and an unyielding respect for time. The Long Age is a narrative of patience—of vines that remember droughts and floods, of barrels that learn the whispers of oak, and of a cultural palate that values balance over boast. To understand Rioja is to taste a lineage that has survived invasions, plagues, phylloxera, and fashion—emerging, always, with renewed poise. At the heart of Rioja’s identity is its grape—Tempranillo. Known for its ruby to garnet hues and its capacity to shed exuberant fruit for deeper, truer expression, Tempranillo anchors the region’s red wines with a core of red cherry, plum, tobacco, and a mineral backbone that speaks of calcareous soils and the old riverbeds that cradle the vineyards. Yet Rioja...
Vines Across Time: Tracing the Long, Winding History of Bordeaux's Winemaking Legacy From the chalky soils of the Left Bank to the gravelly terraces of the Right Bank, Bordeaux stands as a masterclass in how climate, language, and legend intertwine to shape a wine culture. The story begins long before modern labels and consumer reviews, with monks tending vines along the riverside abbeys, and local vintners learning to coax character from a remarkably diverse terroir. In Bordeaux, the arc of wine history curves around two intertwined questions: what grapes to plant, and how to blend them for balance, age, and identity. Grapes that define Bordeaux—primarily Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and their regional partners—were not discovered in a single moment, but codified through centuries of selection and adaptation. The Left Bank’s Cabernet Sauvignon thrives on the region’s mineral-rich soils and long growing season, producing wines that gain bark and spine with age. The Right Bank favo...