Twelve families visit Beijing for first hand look
Tasted at the dinner were wines from each of the 12 families. Highlights included Henschke's Cyril Henschke Cabernet Sauvignon 2009, a big South Australian red with lots of dark berry flavors and a lovely long finish and Tyrrell's Winemakers selection Vat 1 Hunter Semillon 2007, an easy to love crisp white with lovely citrus notes and pleasant finish.
Abadia Retuerta hosted the poshest of posh of wine lunches at the Park Hyatt in Beijing recently, showcasing their very fine reds from their vineyard a two-hour drive north-west of Madrid.
Like the Australians, Abadia Retuerta are also hoping to lure visitors to their winery in Spain, having developed a wine tourism destination that will immerse visitors in the heart of Spanish wine country.
Their vineyard, according to a slightly over-the-top coffee table book handed to guests at the lunch (you know the type, lots of photos of bucolic vineyards and soft focus grapes) sits alongside a restored 12th-century Abby where guests can eat Spanish food, drink great wine, and generally soak up the atmosphere in decidedly less austere conditions than the original resident monks did.
The vineyard was established in 1996 but it lies in the heart of a traditional wine growing area and Abadia Retuerta has spared no expense in developing world-class wines that draw from the traditions of Spanish winemaking with an eye to the modern market. This is a slick outfit, the challenge is - can the wine live up to the gloss of its marketing? If what was served at the lunch is any indication, yes.
Their best-known wine, the Abadia Retuerta Seleccion Especial is an easy drinking, rich fruity red, perfect when paired with big flavor, tomato based dishes. Notable also is the single-variety Petit Verdot, only 1,000 bottles of the stuff are produced every year. It is certainly a luxury wine, packed with rich, Spanish flavors of coffee and chocolate, but for all its exclusivity Tipple Talk was expecting something a bit more exciting than simply another, (albeit very good) Spanish red.
The pick would have to be the Pago Valdebellon, made entirely from Cabernet Sauvignon grapes it is a lively, complex wine that works well with lovely dark berry characteristics. Surely the monks would have approved.