2nd Wednesday & Friday Wine Clubs - February 2023
- dougakins
- Feb 8, 2023
- 2 min read
Updated: Feb 10, 2023
Spanish Wines - A Sampler

Spanish wine (Spanish: vinos españoles) includes red, white, and sparkling wines produced throughout the country. Located on the Iberian Peninsula, Spain has over 1.2 million hectares (2.9 million acres) planted in wine grapes, making it the most widely planted wine-producing nation,[1] but the second largest producer of wine in the world, behind Italy and ahead of France and the United States. This is due, in part, to the very low yields and wide spacing of the old vines planted on the dry soils found in some of the Spanish wine regions. The country is ninth in worldwide consumption with Spaniards drinking, on average, 21.6 liters (5.7 US gal) per person a year. The country has an abundance of native grape varieties, with over 400 varieties planted throughout Spain, though 88 percent of the country's wine production is from only 20 grapes — including the reds Tempranillo, Bobal, Garnacha, and Monastrell; the whites Albariño, Airén, Verdejo, Palomino, and Macabeo; and the three Cava grapes Parellada, Xarel·lo, and Macabeo.
Major Spanish wine regions include the Rioja and Ribera del Duero, which are known for their Tempranillo production; Jumilla, known for its Monastrell production; Jerez de la Frontera, the home of the fortified wine Sherry; Rías Baixas in the northwest region of Galicia that is known for its white wines made from Albariño and Catalonia which includes the Cava and still wine-producing regions of the Penedès as well the Priorat region.
One of the dominant geographical influences of Spanish viticulture is the vast plateau known as the Meseta Central that covers much of central Spain. Several of Spain's principal rivers that are at the heart of many Spanish wine regions flow to the sea from that central area. These include the eastward flowing Ebro river that runs through the Rioja and several Catalan wine regions; the Duero which flows westward through the Ribera del Duero region in Spain before crossing the border into Portugal's Douro Valley which is at the heart of Port wine production; the Tajo which runs through the La Mancha region; Guadalquivir which flows into the Atlantic at the Sherry producing village of Sanlúcar de Barrameda. In addition to the Meseta Central, several mountain ranges are known as cordilleras serve to isolate and influence the climate of several Spanish wine regions. These include the Cantabrian Mountains that spur westward from the Pyrenees and protect regions like the Rioja from the rain and the cool of westerlies coming from the Bay of Biscay. The Cantabrian Mountains act as a rain shadow with the coastal regions of the Basque Country receiving an average of 59 inches while the winemaking region of Rioja, near Haro, around 62 miles away receives only 18 inches. In Galicia on the northwest coast, the region receives annual rainfall that ranges from 39 inches on the coast to 79 inches near the mountainous border of Castile and León.

Wines Tasted:
Armas de Guerra Rosado 2021 $15
Bodegas Ramon Bilbao Valinas Albarino 2021 $18
Bodegas Sierra Salinas Mira Salinas 2016 $15
Palacios Remondo La Montesa 2018 $18
Segura Viudas Cava Brut $12
Shaya Arindo Verdejo 2020 $17
Vina Real Crianza 2017 $15
Choose your Favorite Wine(s):
0%Segura Viudas Cava Brut
0%Shaya Arindo Verdejo 2020
0%Bodegas Ramon Bilbao Valinas Albarino 2021
0%Armas de Guerra Rosado 2021
You can vote for more than one answer.
Excellent information and research!