Gregory Perez Mengoba Tinto 2019
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This wine is an electric vino tinto with a mix of blue, black and red fruits, pepper spice, purple flowers, and a lovely freshness.
A beautiful wine to pair with herb roasted pork or lamb.
Grégory Pérez is a terroir-focused winemaker seen as one of the most forward-thinking winemakers in Spain according to his peers.
As a Bordeaux native, Gregory Pérez’s career launched with Château Grand-Puy-Lacoste, and he also worked at Château Cos d’Estournel during and after his studies at the Bordeaux-Blanquefort School of Enology and Viticulture between 1997 and 2000.
Pérez went to Bierzo in Spain on the advice of his friend where he worked for several years before establishing Mengoba in 2007. He also established a second label, Brezo, for the wines he makes as a negociant, still guided by the same principles of amplifying terroir, biodiversity, and traditional winemaking.
The steeply sloped vineyards are situated at the head of River Cúa in the town of Espanillo ranging 600 to 850 meters above sea level. Pérez deeply committed to the treatment of vineyards based on holistic and ethical principles. He only grows native varietals that evolved to grow on the various soils of his vineyard plots and uses the native yeasts that come out of those plots.
The clay and decomposed slate soils are plowed, dug up, piled and aerated to enhance the health and biodiversity of the earth. He also strictly limits the use of fertilizers, though exclusively organic, and never uses herbicides. Pérez has a strong belief in protecting the biodiversity of his land. The presence of various bees and surrounding vegetation are a testament to the viability of the vineyards’ ecosystems.
The winery is in San Juan de Carracedo near the Monastery of Saint Mary of Carracedo, a semi-restored twelfth century monastery near the Camino de Santiago. Pérez’s cellar contains a mix of steel tanks, foudres, and French oak barrels. His goal is to great a wine that is authentic. To this end, he vinifies in a non-interventionist manner that allows the origin to shine through.
Primarily found in the Bierzo, Ribeira Sacra and Valdeorras regions of Spain and in the Dão of Portugal (where it is called Jaen), Mencia is an early ripening, low acid grape that can produce wines of great concentration, complexity and ageability. And yet Mencia once suffered from a poor reputation and deemed capable of producing simple and light red wines. Post-phylloxera growers would grow this variety on low, fertile plains, which produced high yields and uncomplicated finished wines. Somm Secret—The recent rediscovery of the ancient, abandoned vines planted on rugged hillsides of deep schist has unveiled the potential of Mencia and added discredit to its old reputation.
One of the few northwestern Spanish regions with a focus on a red variety, Bierzo, part of Castilla y León, is home to the flowery and fruity Mencia grape. Mencia produces balanced and bright red wines full of strawberry, raspberry, pomegranate, baking spice, pepper and black licorice. The well-drained soils of Bierzo are slate and granite.