2020 Benje, Tinto, Envínate, Tenerife, Spain

2020 Benje, Tinto, Envínate, Tenerife, Spain

Product: 20208059194
Prices start from £52.00 per magnum (150cl). Buying options
2020 Benje, Tinto, Envínate, Tenerife, Spain

Buying options

Available for delivery or collection. Pricing includes duty and VAT.

Description

I also tasted the red varietal Listán Prieto (a.k.a. País, Criolla Chica, Mission) 2020 Benje Tinto from a similarly dry and warm vintage as 2019, vinified and aged in the same way with indigenous yeasts and matured in neutral oak barrels for eight months. 

It feels a little closed (reductive?) but with a great palate. These 2020s have very fine tannins and velvety textures. Give it a little bit of time, but this will be as good as the 2019. 

20,000 bottles and 200 magnums were produced. It was bottled in June 2021.

Drink 2022 - 2026

Luis Gutiérrez, Wine Advocate (February 2022)

wine at a glance

Delivery and quality guarantee

Critics reviews

Wine Advocate94/100

I also tasted the red varietal Listán Prieto (a.k.a. País, Criolla Chica, Mission) 2020 Benje Tinto from a similarly dry and warm vintage as 2019, vinified and aged in the same way with indigenous yeasts and matured in neutral oak barrels for eight months. 

It feels a little closed (reductive?) but with a great palate. These 2020s have very fine tannins and velvety textures. Give it a little bit of time, but this will be as good as the 2019. 

20,000 bottles and 200 magnums were produced. It was bottled in June 2021.

Drink 2022 - 2026

Luis Gutiérrez, Wine Advocate (February 2022)

Read more
James Suckling93/100

Dusty red cherries, red plums, white pepper and fresh herbs on the nose follow through to a supple, medium-bodied palate that’s natural and juicy, rounded with refined, caressing tannins. Lots of fruit coating here. 85% Listan Prieto (mission/pais) and 5% Listan Blanco, the rest Tintilla and Listan Negro.

Drink now

James Suckling, JamesSuckling.com (September 2022)

Read more

About this WINE

Envínate

Envínate

Envínate, a name that translates to "wine yourself" in Spanish, perfectly encapsulates the philosophy of this producer. With a profound commitment to minimal intervention winemaking, the producer allows the grapes and terroir to express themselves naturally.

The winery was founded in 2005 by four friends: Roberto Santana, Alfonso Torrente, Laura Ramos, and José Ángel Martínez. They share a passion for crafting wines that showcase the unique characteristics of each vineyard they work with.

Envínate is known for seeking out old, low-yielding vineyards in various regions across Spain, such as the Canary Islands, Ribeira Sacra, Ribeiro, and Almansa. These vineyards often have vines that are several decades or even centuries old. They aim to produce authentic and expressive wines that capture the essence of the land and climate they are grown by focusing on indigenous grape varieties and traditional winemaking techniques.

Their winemaking approach emphasizes minimal intervention in both the vineyard and the cellar. They practice organic and biodynamic farming, working closely with local grape growers to ensure sustainable and respectful practices. In the cellar, they use wild yeast fermentation, low levels of sulfur, and avoid heavy filtration or clarification to preserve the wines’ natural characteristics.

Find out more
Spain

Spain

For so long, Spain was regarded as a source of inexpensive red wine with only Rioja standing above the parapet. Now there is a plethora of interesting wines in many different styles.

Exciting fresh whites, especially from the Albariño in the Rías Baixas and Verdejo in Rueda, – not forgetting Viura in Rioja - have extended the choice. There have also been interesting developments in that most classical of all wine regions, Jerez - the home of sherry - not so much in modernisation of production, but in developing small-scale bottlings of the highest quality Sherry at remarkably affordable prices.

Modern techniques and a new appreciation of what might be possible have encouraged pioneers to produce some startlingly attractive reds. There are now some thoroughly competent wines from La Mancha, and striking bottlings of Monastrell (known elsewhere as Mataró or Mourvèdre) in Jumilla.

Thankfully, the modernisation of the pedestrian has not held back successful traditional styles of wine. Alongside such modernists as Palacios Remondo and Allende in Rioja, long established houses like La Rioja Alta and CVNE continue to make graceful, old-style wines contingent upon several years’ barrel-ageing before further maturation in bottle. These Reserva and Gran Reserva wines have the gentle fragrance of well-seasoned fruit in partnership with a dash of vanilla oak. There are also subtle differences between regions of Rioja and in the precise makeup of the grape mix, with Garnacha and Mazuelo supporting the dominant Tempranillo.

The only challenger to Rioja's claim to red wine supremacy is the Ribera del Duero, where the same red grape, Tempranillo, defines the wines, though known here as Tinto Fino. Most magisterial of all producers is Vega Sicilia whose Unico wines are not released onto the market before a minimum of 10 years - including at least seven years of barrel ageing.

Find out more
Other Varieties

Other Varieties

There are over 200 different grape varieties used in modern wine making (from a total of over 1000). Most lesser known blends and varieties are traditional to specific parts of the world.

Find out more