Spain

"I would sooner be a foreigner in Spain than in most countries. How easy it is to make friends in Spain!"- George Orwell, "Homage to Catalonia," 1938

Contents

  1. History of Spain
  2. Land & Climate
  3. Spanish Wine Law
  4. The Grapes of Spain
  5. Atlantic Coast
  6. Duero River Valley
  7. Ebro River Valley
  8. Mediterranean Coast
  9. Central Plateau
  10. Andalucía
  11. The Islands
  12. Bibliography

Home to the world’s largest vineyard area, Spain boasts a winegrowing history that is ancient and discontinuous. Several events throughout its three millennia of viticulture have threatened the industry, including the Moorish conquest of Iberia, the phylloxera crisis, a devastating Civil War, and several decades under a fascist regime, during which winemaking customs lost favor to bulk production and cooperatives. Today, Spain’s languages, cultures, and food and wine traditions remain distinct—long after the country's unification in the late 15th and early 16th centuries.

Spain’s heritage styles—its deep-hued rosados, nutty rancios, and slowly aged gran reservas—are now joined by more contemporary aesthetics. While some growers have adapted to a modern palate, others hold to tradition. Others still seek to reimagine classic Spanish wines for the 21st century, reclaiming indigenous grape varieties and marrying innovation to ancestry. Born from these varied philosophical approaches is a Spanish wine industry equipped with the diversity and talent to capture new generations of consumers while safeguarding a long-cherished identity.

History of Spain

Ancient History

Anthropological studies have found trace evidence of Vitis vinifera in Spain dating as early as 3000 BCE. Fragments of vine wood and other vestiges of ancient grapes have been identified at three sites in Southern Spain. The introduction of viticulture to Iberia, however, is widely attributed to the Phoenicians, who arrived and established what would become Cádiz in today’s Andalucía approximately

Anonymous
Parents
  • So, most other online resources list the name of the soil of Lanzarote as 'Picon.' Is this a synonym for 'Ceniza?' Or does one refer to the volcanic/sandy topsoil and the other the base soil under the black sand? 

  • Hey Christian! Ceniza is volcanic ash-based soil, whereas Picon is a synonym for lapilli which are little stones that are erupted by volcanos. For some more context, the DO has a few paragraphs on the difference here.

Comment
  • Hey Christian! Ceniza is volcanic ash-based soil, whereas Picon is a synonym for lapilli which are little stones that are erupted by volcanos. For some more context, the DO has a few paragraphs on the difference here.

Children
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