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Callejuela Blanquito Manzanilla Pasada Sherry

Callejuela Blanquito Manzanilla Pasada Sherry

€32.95
Appearing a golden-yellow colour, it proves captivating with its very intense and concentrated aromas. It melds apple freshness with robust iodine notes and delicate white petals. On the palate it's tangy, firm and mineral, spicy and has hints of hay. Dry and saline from entry to aftertaste.
  • Body
    Medium
  • Country
    Spain
  • Region
    Andalucia
  • Grape Variety
    100% Palomino

Description

From the moment you observe the Blanco brothers in their natural habitat, roaming the chalky backroad vineyards of Sanlúcar de Barrameda, you realize that you’ve just entered into a humble and deep rooted rincóncillo of the Marco de Jerez.  And as the dusty Albariza swirls in the summer heat of the Levante, the term “Salt of the Earth” quickly permeates the mind.

There are no men in suits or English speaking guides.  No video to watch, or gift shop to visit.  In fact, the very humble, charmingly decrepit bodega just expanded beyond the small cellar as they slowly added new space for more fermentation tanks and even…a…bathroom.   The adjoined side of the old building remains still, dark, dank and dusty, stacked high with cobwebbed laced botas.

José “Pepe” Blanco and his brother Francisco “Paco” Blanco started the Callejuela winery with their father and “dos botas viejas” in the year 1980 within the family home in town, where their offices still remain.  They were OG Almacenistas making base wine from their own Palomino vineyards that they sold to the local bodegas of Sanlúcar.

Throughout decades, their father Francisco Blanco became a prominent local viticulturist who increased his hectares by slowly buying small parcels throughout the Marco de Jerez, all within three very important pagos:  Añina, Marcharnudo and Callejuela.

The Blanco family philosophy has always been to carefully orchestrate a later harvest, beginning around the 2 of September, while many of their neighbors start around the 14th or 15th of August.   This enables them to pick grapes with higher brix, needing less degrees of alcohol dilution when fortifying with the grape spirts used to make Manzanillas and Sherries.  Also, and maybe most importantly, they strive to maintain the purest Palomino grape expression as possible, and the longer the hang time on vine, the more influence of the albariza soil is transmitted.  Here, their thirsty roots can often stretch down approximately 6-7 meters in search of the retained moistures captured below the dry, hot albariza crusted land.

Details

Food Pairing Sweet desserts Mature and hard cheese Appetizers and snacks Aperitif Cured Meat Nuts
ABV 15.50%
Categories Wine, Spain, Fortified Wine

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