Viñedo de los Vientos
Estival
2003
12.5% alc.
Atlantida, Uruguay
The link between wine and sex is a familiar, even hackneyed one, easily enough established. What has been overlooked are the burdens shared between the sex stud and, if you will, the wine stud: that he will deliver on the demand that the need for thrill and pleasure be satisfied. I was standing in a wine shop in Grand Central station in New York on my way to a casual party, looking for a couple of bottles of white wine, when this odd truism occurred to me. Now most every decent wine shop, like its sexual counterpart, will carry an interesting novelty or two. In this case, I happened upon the 2007 Viñedo de los Vientos “Estival.” From Uruguay. Now Uruguay is not along the wine route’s most trodden beat. Indeed, even in South America, Uruguay barely registers on the wine radar. By comparison its output is small. It still is strugging to emerge from its low-quality, sweet-rosé domestic wine market. But there are good wines to be had, and if you tend to prefer a European-style New World white wine, Uruguay—particularly its wines from the Cannelones sub-region near the eastern suburbs of Montevideo—may interest you.
Uruguay, by the way, is not too dissimilar from Bordeaux in climate and topography. The climate is maritime: warm, humid rain in the summers can bring on fungal diseases, but the Atlantic breezes—Uruguay is surrounded by water on three sides of the country—moderate the summer heat. The Cuchilla Grande on the eastern side of the clay-rich soil of Cannelones slightly interrupts the rolling plains of the low-level topography. This Atlantic-influenced climate and extended growing season allow for the production of aromatic but clean white wines from vinifera grapes. This type of white wine is what you get from Pablo Fallabrino’s “Estival” blend of gewurztraminer, chardonnay and moscato grapes. These grapes are grown on 4 hectares of calcareous soil from 15 year-old vines. The grapes are destemmed; the juice is fermented in stainless steel, fined and filtered. The 2007 vintage stood medium gold with pronounced tropical, apple, peach, grass and stone-fruit notes. Dry. Medium alcohol. Medium bodied. Once in the mouth, the drinker got a sunny bolt of pineapple, celery, grass and citrus with a strong lime finish. This wine had a well-balanced structure that was its virtue when looking for a flavorful food wine. What more could one ask from a one night stand with a stud of any stripe? Importer: T. Edward Wines, Ltd. $22.00. 8/16/09.







August 18, 2009
Uruguay is not still is strugging to emerge from its low-quality, sweet-rosé domestic wine market. Uruguay has won many prestigious international prizes with Tannat wines.