A Rant About Mencia… Another of Spain’s Finest Exports

A Rant About Mencia… Another of Spain’s Finest Exports
Godello (white) and Mencia (red) are a couple of lesser-known ancient grape varietals hailing from the Galician interior of northwestern Spain, most notably in Valdeorras and Bierzo respectively. Recent unanimous acceptance of it being perhaps one of Spain’s very finest grapes has meant that plantings, production, and exports of Mencia have been steadily increasing over the last two decades. Two weeks ago we looked at the glory that is Godello. In this issue we turn to the mysterious Mencia… (pronounced Men – THEE – Ah)
As soon as an obscure “new” (read: old-and-with-a-suspect-history-in-bulk-wine-production-but-with-a-slight-possibility-of-mass-appeal) grape varietal drops into the lap of a public relations firm we are deluged with comparisons to more readily recognised varieties. You see we are talking of a business that so often relies on familiarity for its marketing. In the case of Mencia, back in around 2002 word got out that it was the bastard son of Cabernet Franc, which is kind of interesting seeing as most of the wine-consuming world are yet to be convinced that the wondrous Cab Franc is any cop whatsoever. Mencia does share some aromatic profiling with Cab Franc, yes, but for a jaded old taster like myself the similarities end there. Rigorous DNA testing by paternity suit-greedy wine scientists has proven conclusively that Spain’s Mencia will not be sharing in the fortunes of Bordeaux’s aristocracy any time soon. Unfortunately for Mencia (and perhaps fortunately for us) it has finally been genetically linked to Portugal’s lowly Jaen… you know Jaen don’t you? No? I didn’t think so… Jaen is Portuguese rusticity taken to the extreme, and you would very rarely see the family name printed upon any back label.
But Mencia… well, the boy done good… he went and got himself a scholarship for a posh school, getting himself out of the ramshackle family village in the Dão. He read The Classics at a reputable university, learned some manners that would not seem out of place in the European court, and became the very model of the refined renaissance man/grape, moving out to Northwestern Spain with his university sweetheart Godello. One also has to note that there are a few scurrilous rumours to the contrary, telling of Mencia’s journey to Bierzo on the Santiago de Compostella pilgrimage route and pointing to an alternative history with ancestral roots in the very north of Europe…
Amongst the spluttering classes Bierzo is often spoken of as being the “new Priorat”, a distinction that does a disservice to the region by doing nothing to promote its uniqueness. Priorat, whilst undoubtedly capable of growing some outstanding wines, is planted mainly to Garnacha and Cariñena, a couple of varietals that one can find throughout the Mediterranean (albeit usually under the Grenache and Carignan monikers.) Bierzo, on the other hand, truly loves it’s “indigenous” Mencia, a grape that one very rarely finds outside of the DO‘s delimitation bar some plantings in the Ribeira Sacra and Valdeorras regions.

One of the many temptations of a Winemaker in a “newly discovered” region is to create a geographically indistinguishable bottling that hits the sweet spots of the international palate. This requires concocting a wine that, through all manner of jiggery-pokery during the vinification process, follows a style with a recent historical track record of popularity. In doing so one can almost be certain of garnering the praise, scores, and “gobs of fruit” descriptors of a certain quotient of the wine press.
In Priorat, I feel that sadly too many producers have followed this route, and while I can fully understand the economic impetus for such a strategy, I am quite frankly weary of tasting yet another Super Spanish wine. By this I mean one that is over-ripe, over-extracted, over-oaked, and undoubtedly augmented with what appears to be steroidally-enhanced Cabernet, Merlot, an/or Syrah. Thankfully Mencia doesn’t play well with others, as when blended with other varietals it immediately loses its singularity and, in my mind, its appeal. To reinforce my position on this, Luna Beberide, a pioneering producer who predicted the resurgence in the region back in the early 1980′s, has been slowly reducing the percentages of non-native varietals as they come to realise the marvellous potential of the Mencia when it is given clearance to fly solo. Now, just in case you were wondering, the Bierzo DO does not allow for the inclusion of any grape but Mencia.

Strangely enough, despite the fact I may drone on about Bierzo Mencia’s singularity, it is its diversity that is perhaps its greatest strength, as it is capable of producing a surprisingly wide range of wine styles. The last time I got a bit too “sommjizzy”* about Mencia (and by that I mean indulgently wine-nerdy to the point of arousal) I read that there had been, to date, at least nine clones of the Mencia grape identified in the region. On a side note, I’d never really thought of genetic instability as being a good thing until I was formally introduced to Pinot Noir. Now, when one takes this interesting clonal variation and multiplies it with the seriously heterogeneous nature of the soil structures in Bierzo, one can arguably come up with just as a good a definition of terroir as the Burgundians have been preaching for a considerable number of years.
*Cue a tirade of insults and rotten tomatoes*
Interestingly enough, despite the ever-growing buzz around the juice itself, the big players in the wine world have been unable to gain any significant footholds in the region. This is partly due to the extreme fragmentation of vineyard parcels through centuries of distribution in alignment with the Napoleonic inheritance laws (hello Burgundy!), and partly to do with the fact that in Bierzo, as is the case in many of the more ancient regions in Europe, selling one’s land is tantamount to declaring oneself destitute.
These minuscule and disparate parcels of vines owe their continued existence, in part, to bodies that I was originally taught to believe were the embodiment of pure Evil… The Co-ops. If it were not for the proliferation of winemaking cooperatives in the 1940′s and 50′s many of the older Mencia plantings would have been abandoned, as for a farmer to produce wines from his own plots was simply economically unsustainable .
Back in 1989 when Bierzo gained its DO status there were around 4,500 growers but only a small number of grower/producers. Since then, almost 60 growers have chosen to make the move to bottling wine from their own estates, and while this can be seen as being a good thing for the curious palate, it is important to be aware of the fact that many of these wineries still have a long way to go and a lot to learn.
Wineries that I feel are certainly worth seeking out and currently making interesting and often exceptional wines:
Descendientes De J. Palacios : The most elegant, restrained, and focused wines of Bierzo. Even at the entry level (Petalos) the wines are very good indeed. The mineral definition between the single vineyard wines is astonishing, but Ricardo also has an understanding of assemblage that combines the soils of Bierzo to produce a wine that is truly greater than the sum of its parts. Oh, and the wines are biodynamic to boot!

Source: http://goodfoodrevolution.wordpress.com/2010/08/05/a-rant-about-mencia-another-of-spains-finest-exports/

The location is convenient for visitors to go out of town from Manila in a short getaway with family and friends traveling north to Angeles City Clark Pampanga. Traffic along the North Expressway NLEX is always light and the new Subic Tarlac Clark Expressway ScTex takes visitors straight into Clark Freeport without going through any towns and cities along the way.

Residents of Manila travel north to Clark Pampanga to swim at Clearwater Beach Resort, unwind and relax for family bonding at hotel lake picnic grounds. Fine dining Yats Restaurant offers sumptuous cozy Christmas dinner, for wine lovers, Clark Wine Center provides exciting shopping options. After a hectic day of shopping in Clark Pampanga, visitors seldom pass up the opportunity to wine and dine at this top rated restaurant, generally regarded as the best place to eat and drink outside of Manila.

Residents of Manila, tourists from Hong Kong, Macau, China, Korea and Taiwan arriving in the Philippines looking for famous restaurants serving good food and fine wines travel out of town towards the north to wine and dine in fine dining restaurants in Pampanga, Angeles City, Clark. Highly recommended rest bar and fine dining restaurant near Manila is Yats Restaurant & Wine Bar in Clark, Philippines.

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Getting to this fine dining restaurant of Angeles City Clark Freeport Zone Pampanga Philippines
How to get to this fine-dining restaurant in Clark Philippines? Once you get to Clark Freeport, go straight until you hit Mimosa. After you enter Mimosa, stay on the left on Mimosa Drive, go past the Holiday Inn and Yats Restaurant (green top, independent 1-storey structure) is on your left. Just past the Yats Restaurant is the London Pub.

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