The nose is thick with black fruit, red earth and wildflowers, which marry wonderfully with the gentle tannins and cascade of bitter herbs that follow. A litre of Mallorcan sunshine, this is as invigorating as it gets. Find out more.
A light, bright and hazy litre of red, bouncing with red berries, citrus and bitter herbs. As always with Elio's wines, this one transports us straight to the Mediterranean sunshine. Made in collaboration with his friend Oscar Navas of La Furtiva, this is a blend of young vines of the native Callet, Manto Negro and Fogoneu from Felantix planted over the island’s characteristic red clay soils, what the locals call ‘Call Vermell’. Soils that are rich in iron and lend the wine a distinct streak of minerality. The grapes were fermented as whole bunches for nine days, before being pressed off to vats for six months of rest. A bright, sun-kissed bottle of Mallorcan sunshine!
Few wines speak so strongly of where they’re from as those produced by Eloi Cedó Perelló on the island of Mallorca. Originally from Montsant, Eloi’s project started back in 2010 when he began making a string of one-off wines from the vineyards farmed by friends around his native Catalunya. In 2012 he produced the first vintage of his now iconic cuvée, Chateau Paquita. A tribute to his late mother, this arresting blend of Mallorcan varieties was one of those wines that simply stops you in your tracks – a truly unique expression of man, grape and place. An island of incredible beauty, Mallorca also offers a unique climate for growing grapes. Though it spends most of the year bathed in sunshine, the vineyards benefit from both the breeze of the Mediterranean and the cool, dry winds of the Mistral. The fascinating local varieties are grown over what the locals call Call Vermell – red, clay soils that are incredibly rich in iron and lend the wines a distinct minerality. Eloi farms a collection of tiny plots dotted around the island in the villages of Felantix, Porreres, Consell and Santa Margalida. They range from a hectare to just a tenth of that size and the oldest vines were planted in the sixties. He farms organically, employing biodynamic principles and in the bodega displays a real lightness of touch, adding nothing at any stage. Eloi’s wines have an uncanny sense of place. Though their heady flavours of sunkissed fruit, bitter herbs and sweet sea breeze transport you straight to the island, they are delicate, nuanced and incredibly light on their feet.