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$39.99Original List Price
31.95Best Price On The Web
*Including cost of shipping per bottle.
27
98
per btl
Code: 57502
You will get two emails from us with regards to your order. The first email from us only confirms that we received your order. The second email will confirm that we have enough wine to fill your order. Due to the high volume of sales there are times when the wine has sold out, but our system is still updating and shows it as available. We're sorry for any inconvenience and will do what we can to fill your order!
Thanks to your feedback we might bring back some of Cinderella Wine's popular previous offers. If a wine makes another appearance here, this newer offer will always be slightly higher than the original one. Offers that are on the site on Friday through Sunday will be shipped on Monday.
Best Price on Web is determined by Wine-Searcher Pro prices as of yesterday: Wine Library sells this for our sale price of $27.98. There are 4 other stores that sell this wine from $27.95 to $45.00. You must be logged into the Pro Version of Wine Searcher to see all of the results!
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Rating: | 90 Pts Jeb Dunnuck - The Rhone Report | Size: | 750ML |
Region: | Catalonia | Country: | Spain |
Varietals: | Carignan / Carinena | ABV: | 14.5% |
Cellar Tracker Link(s):
90 Pts Jeb Dunnuck - The Rhone Report |
"Impressive, the 2006 Parmi Priorat Priorat l'Infant de' Porera exhibits outstanding aromatics of black cherry and dark berry fruit, leather, vanilla and earth. These lead into a medium to full bodied palate with sweet, soft fruit, and an upfront, easy, but big texture. The finish is clean and long. Straight up delicious, drink this over the next 3 to 5 years." -90 Points - Jeb Dunnuck - Rhone Report |
Description:
WINE:
"This is a blisteringly clean, fascinating wine ââ¬â fermented in oak, but not aged in oak. The result is a touch of rotundity to balance the natural, searing focus achieved in Priorat. With notes of grenadine, pomegranate, soy, blood orange, and pencil lead, this wine is one of the few reasonably priced wines out of Spainââ¬â¢s most expensive zone. A real inspiration." -Importer
ESTATE:
According to a comprehensive study by UNESCO, the best place on planet Earth to grow grape vines is...Priorat, Spain. Over a century ago Priorat (which refers to ââ¬Åprioryââ¬Â), was abandoned by the last of the monks who had tended the land for four hundred years. Left behind were ancient Carignan and Monastrell vines, producing some of the highest quality grapes on earth in some of the harshest conditions. Here, the soil is thick, flaky schist, literally packed with iron and minerals. With the heavy marine influence, blistering days and cool nights, this moonscape is suitable only for grapes, not even grass."
"ParmiÃÂ, a new estate in Priorat, owns vines that are over a century-old, and are employing winemaker Christian Patat who assists in making the famous wines of Miani in Italy, among others. Owned by three Italian amici, Michele Riva, Giovanna Parmigiani and Antonio Aldeghi, ParmiÃÂ approaches the craft of winemaking with the knowledge, convictions, and best practices of northern Italy, where clarity of fruit reins supreme. And how appropriate this mentality is for Priorat! With expert French-oak fermentation, individual grape picking (not bunches!) and a single-bulb-cellar sensibility, this estate is truly making some of the most inspired wines made in Europe, not just Spain."
"Located in the village of Porrera, Parmiàis situated at ground-zero for Prioratââ¬â¢s best CarinÃÆena (Carignan). This is why they make one of the few 100% CarinÃÆena wines in the zone, and their flagship wine contains no other varietals. As fascinating, mysterious, and head-spinning as these wines are, perhaps the wines of Parmiàcan in fact be summed in one word: searing. The intensity is almost other-worldly ââ¬â penetrating the palate, enveloping the nasal passage and epithelium, and over-loading those message-carrying scillia that tell our brain what weââ¬â¢re smelling. It is when we inhale the perfumes of Parmiàthat we become aware of the poverty of language ââ¬â we are reduced to a few stammers of hopeless appreciation." -Importer