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 Vintage2004 Label 1 of 6 
TypeRed
ProducerViñedos y Bodegas Muñoz (web)
VarietyTempranillo Blend
DesignationFinca Muñoz Reserva de Familia
Vineyardn/a
CountrySpain
RegionCastilla-La Mancha
SubRegionn/a
AppellationVino de la Tierra de Castilla

Drinking Windows and Values
Drinking window: Drink between 2012 and 2014 (based on 3 user opinions)

Community Tasting History

Community Tasting Notes (average 89 pts. and median of 89 pts. in 1 note) - hiding notes with no text

 Tasted by jamieirving on 12/29/2006 & rated 89 points: Having recently been voted the Number 1 wine producer in La Mancha, I was looking forward to trying the 2004 release of the Muñoz family's Reserva... and I wasn't disappointed! I first came across this wine a couple of years ago, and thought it was so good that a bought a whole case of it. Using old vines, Finca Muñoz only make about 80 barrels of this wine every year. This year's release is deep purple in colour. The nose shows ripe aromas of plum and an earthy, oaky character. The palate is rich, showing raspberry fruit and black cherry jam. Cigar box on the finish completes this excellent wine. (1627 views)

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Viñedos y Bodegas Muñoz

Producer Website

Tempranillo Blend

Tempranillo is the backbone of wines made ihvhhcn the best well-known Spanish regions Rioja and Ribera del Duero, but is also grown as far afield as Mexico and Australia.

As a flavor profile, red fruits like strawberries and cherries can predominate - but with a rustic edge. The Many wines made from Tempranillo will spend a few years in barrel and bottle before reaching the consumers . Many Tempranillo-based wines see a few years of oak - add that to a few years of bottle and the wine can give a subtle - and occasionaly not-so-subtle - leathery mouthfeel. The combination of the tart fruit and tannins make this wine very food friendly.

Spain

Vinos de España - Wines of Spain (Instituto Español de Comercio Exterior) | Wikipedia
Wine Map on weinlagen-info

Spain is the third largest wine producing nation in the world, occupying the majority of the Iberian Peninsula with vast diversity in climate, culture, and of course, wine. From inky, dark reds of the [Priorat] to dry, white Finos from Andalusia, Spain can easily boast of elaborating a wide variety of notable styles. Within Spain there are currently 62 demarcated wine regions, of which a handful have gained international recognition: [Rioja], Priorat and [Ribera del Duero]. Yet these regions are only a small sample of the high quality wines Spain produces. Regions such as Cava, Penedes, Somontano, Galicia, Rueda and Jerez are only a few of the numerous regions worthy of exploration throughout Spain. Spain can also lay claim to having the most land under vine in the world, growing up to, by some accounts, 600 indigenous varietals of which Tempranillo is their most well known. Other popular varietals include [Garnacha], Bobal and Monastrell for reds and for whites; the infamous [sic] Palomino Fino grape which is used in the production of sherry wine, Pedro Ximenez in Montilla Morilles, Albarino used in the creation of the bright, effervescent wines of Galicia, and Verdejo in Rueda. - Source: - Catavino.net

Spain is not in the forefront of winemaking for its dessert wines, other than for its sweet wines from Sherry country including the highly revered Olorosos (when sweetened). But apart from Sherry Spain has a range of styles of dessert wines, ranging from the those made from the Pedro Ximenez grape primarily in Jerez and Montilla-Moriles) to luscious, red dessert wines made in the Mediterranean from the Garnacha (Grenache) grape. Some good Moscatels are made in Mallorca, Alicante and Navarre. The northwest corner of Spain, Galicia, with its bitter Atlantic climate, is even making dessert wines, called “Tostadillos” in the village of Ribadivia (similar to France’s “Vin de Paille”). The Canary Islands have made interesting dessert wines for centuries (they are mentioned by Shakespeare, for example) and in recent years the quality of winemaking has been improved and the Canary Islands wines are being better marketed now. The winemaking styles for “Vinos Dulces” are also diverse, from “Late Harvest” (Vendimia Tardía) to “Fortified Wines” (Fermentación Parcial). Based on in-spain.info.

Castilla-La Mancha

Castilla-La Mancha (Fundación Ínsula Barataria)

Vino de la Tierra de Castilla

Web del Gobierno Regional de Castilla La Mancha

 
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