The South Beach Wine Club
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We aren’t just another wine club - we provide our club members with everyday wines along with a daily blog full of great wine information. Our articles are full of wine news, pairing suggestions, restaurant reviews, and party tips designed to help wine buyers ranging from complete novices to experienced drinkers looking for the next best bottle. Sure, we want you to purchase a membership to The South Beach Wine Club, but we also want you to stop by every day to see what's on our minds. And once you're here, we hope you comment on what you read.

The club is designed for those who like to enjoy wine every day and those who know that wine helps make a party great - no matter what size! But who has time to make that extra trip after work to the wine store, trolling through endless bottles of wine? You should spend your time enjoying the wine, so we pick great bottles at great prices for you. No more guess work!

We keep it simple - 3 different tiers: 2, 4 or 6 bottles per month.

The price is listed in the total price - no hidden shipping costs at check out.

Customize your shipment to be all reds, all whites, or a mix - because you never know.

Perfect gift for those busy friends who always like to have a bottle of wine around.

Regularly updated blog to provide you with helpful party tips, wine suggestions, and pairing ideas.

South Beach Wine Club Blog:

Taking a look at Spain’s Rioja Region

Author: Randy  //  Category: Wine Regions, Wine Stories, Wine Tips

 

Long recognized as the finest of Spain’s renowned wine regions, Rioja is steeped in a tradition forged almost exclusively from refined, exceptionally long-aged red wines. In fact, you can catch a glimpse of this legendary past with the delightfully old-fashioned gold wire netting that still covers many bottles. Yet these days, a flood of trendsetting new wineries called bodegas (say it with me now bo-de-gas) are introducing wines made in a more modern style. Better still, in addition to its spectacular reds, even Rioja’s lesser-known whites and roses are now getting into the act.  A suggestion: spend some time in the Spanish section of your wine shop – of course, after having read this article.

Rioja made its first big splash on the wine scene in the mid-19th century, at a time when French vineyards to the north were hit by a devastating double whammy of powdery mildew and phylloxera, a vine-killing parasite. As French wines evaporated from the market, wine merchants desperately searched for great wines to replace them. Knowing that Rioja produced magnificent red wine – much of it aged in oak barrels like the finest Bordeaux – French merchants made a beeline for this previously untapped region. For Rioja, the trade had an explosive impact, causing growers to plant thousands more acres of vines and securing a reputation that’s endured to the present day.

Aficionados have always cherished Rioja’s classic old wines, which have an unblemished reputation for elegance and earthiness. Traditionally, these were fermented in huge wooden vats and then aged for years in small, American oak barrels, which added a tantalizing vanilla aroma. Today, in addition to the classic style, you’ll find many bodegas fermenting wines in modern stainless-steel tanks for crisper flavors.  Also, in an effort to create greater complexity, bodegas are also aging in French rather than American oak. Whatever the style, the reverence for older wine remains, and Rioja’s labeling system reflects this – dividing oak-aged red wines into three categories: Crianza, Reserva, and Gran Reserva. Look for one of these three designations on bottles of Rioja. If you prefer fresher, fruitier flavors, select Crianza, which is the youngest of the three. For greater depth, try a longer-aged Reserva. And for an oak-driven reflection of centuries past, opt for the painstakingly long-aged Gran Reserva.

rioja-wine

For Rioja red wines, the most important grape variety, by far, is Tempranillo. It yields an elegant and complex medium-bodied wine, capable of plenty of aging. Although some wines are made solely from Tempranillo, more often Riojas are a blend of Tempranillo seasoned with smaller amounts of Garnacha, Graciano, and/or Mazuelo.

Although Rioja is still known primarily for its red wines, white Riojas, which feature Viura, Garnacha Blanca, and/or Malvasia grapes, are threatening to change all that. They’re made in a wealth of exotic styles, from traditional, long-aged white Reservas to chic, barrel-fermented versions; for those, look for the words “Fermentado en Barrica” on the label.

Don’t skip past the roses, either. Although roses from the nearby Navarra region tend to get better press, Rioja roses can also be diverse and interesting – in particular, the rare Reserva versions that are aged before release.

So now that you’re prepared to tame and tackle the Spanish wine section, I hope you begin to spend more time exploring these  shelves.