By the time a barrel earns three palmas, it has been in the solera for roughly ten years. The flor has weakened significantly, allowing slow, controlled oxidation to reshape the wine’s character. What was once a Fino in the biological sense now occupies a liminal zone between two worlds, displaying the saline intensity of its biological origins and the emerging complexity of oxidative ageing.
The nose is complex and multi-layered, with citrus peel, dried herbs, old leather and a distinctive savoury note — iodine, chalk, something almost marine. The palate delivers real tension: fresh and salty, yet with a depth and nuttiness that no young Fino could approach. The finish is long and charged with spice. Critics who have selected individual Tres Palmas editions — among them Gerrard Basset and Natasha Hughes — have spoken of its fabulous focus, its almost Amontillado-like register and the way it bites back on the finish. A wine of rare distinction, available in quantities of a single barrel or less.