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Pingus 2011 300cl

DO | Ribera del Duero | Castilla y León | Spagna
CHF 3’459.20
Punteggi dei critici
95 Da Robert Parker
95 Da James Suckling
As with all the 2011s, the 2011 Pingus is riper, with never-seen-before alcohol levels (15.5%), but the wine feels extremely balanced. As usual, the highly-selected grapes were fermented in 2,000-liter oak vats with indigenous yeasts and aged for 22 months in second-and third-fill barrels. It is ripe and exuberant, with notes of violets, spices (curry!), smoky peat and umami-like meat-broth aromas. The palate is full-bodied, glyceric with sophisticated tannins, but plenty of them, so they need to calm down a little. I believe there will be a lot of people who will really love this 2011, it's showy and exuberant. 6,000 bottles produced. Drink 2016-2020. I had a relaxed and superb tasting with Peter Sisseck, where we had time to discuss the wines and Ribera del Duero in general as Sisseck is now part of the Consejo Regulador. It was also a great learning experience as he showed me some experimental wines that resulted in adjustments from the 2012 vintage onward, and a big jump in precision for the wines, with the yet unbottled 2012 Pingus verging on perfection. He explained the range of wines he produces as it follows: PSI is the regional wine, Flor de Pingus is the village, and Pingus is the Cru. PSI is the newer wine in the lineup and the one that might require more explanation. In 2007, a difficult vintage in Ribera del Duero, he lost quite a lot of grapes for Flor de Pingus because of a big hailstorm, so he had to look for grapes he could purchase. He then realized how much Ribera had grown: from 6,000 hectares in 1985 to 9,000 hectares in 1990 and more than 22,000 hectares today! There is a big surplus of grapes, so the grapes from old vineyards are not valued. He decided that he wanted to support the people who were keeping their old vineyards and not ripping them up, or going to younger vines and high yields. He purchased their grapes, paid a fair price and produced PSI with them. Besides tasting extensively and slowly, I retasted 2010 Pingus and I also had the chance to preview the 2013 Pingus (clean, pure, with great acidity, but still too young) plus some experimental cuvees, some of which might see the light in the future. They have never produced better wines at Pingus. Bravo!
Produttore
Dominio de Pingus
La tenuta Dominio de Pingus, fondata di recente, ma con una certa esperienza alle spalle, ha un buon seguito dal 1995, che ha reso i suoi vini tra i più celebrati della Ribera del Duero. Il proprietario, Peter Sisseck, si era già fatto un nome come vigneron di Hacienda Monasterio prima di acquistare alcuni appezzamenti piantati con vecchie viti di Tinto Fino (Tempranillo). Sisseck segue un approccio più moderno per i suoi vini, utilizzando la fermentazione malolattica in botte per produrre vini morbidi e vellutati. I suoi sforzi sono più che apprezzati e creano aromi intensi, puri, fruttati e persino speziati in tutti i suoi vini migliori. Il suo obiettivo di produrre "un vino spagnolo inconfondibile e guidato dal terroir... un vino di garage" si è realizzato nei vini acclamati in tutto il mondo. Il vino principale, Pingus, è un Tempranillo in purezza prodotto in quantità estremamente limitata ed è sempre il pezzo forte della produzione, classificato tra i migliori della denominazione anno dopo anno. La premiata tenuta produce anche il Flor de Pingus a un prezzo più accessibile e il PSI, un assemblaggio principalmente di Tempranillo e Garnacha, che rende il vino fruttato, fresco e piacevolmente accessibile.