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Wine Style: Fino

Fino Jarana

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Fino Jarana is Bodegas Lustau’s fino expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records approx. 4 years. The profile is kept edition-specific where the public documentation is incomplete. The current documentation records it as made from 100% Palomino Fino, aged through biological ageing under flor, with an age statement of Approx. 4 years, at 15% alcohol and in 75cl. No caveat beyond current stock and bottle-level verification.

Pale gold, with fresh yeast, almond and chalky salinity; bone dry, precise and lightly bitter. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Tío Pepe Fino

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Tío Pepe is Bodegas Tío Pepe / González Byass’s fino expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records 4 years. The profile remains tied to the exact current bottling and release. The current documentation records it as made from 100% Palomino Fino, aged through biological ageing under flor, with an age statement of 4 years, at 15% alcohol and in 75cl. No caveat beyond current price, stock and bottle-level verification.

Pale gold, with fresh yeast, almond and chalky salinity; bone dry, precise and lightly bitter. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Tío Pepe Fino En Rama

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Tío Pepe en Rama 2026 is Bodegas Tío Pepe / González Byass’s fino en rama expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records approx. 4 years. The profile remains tied to the exact current bottling and release. The current documentation records it as made from 100% Palomino Fino, aged through biological ageing under flor, with an age statement of Approx. 4 years, at 15% alcohol and in 75cl. Edition-specific 2026 bottling; do not transfer scores or data from earlier sacas.

Pale gold, with fresh yeast, almond and chalky salinity; bone dry, precise and lightly bitter. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Las Palmas Una Palma

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The Palmas system at González Byass is a private classification inherited from the nineteenth century. Cellarmasters mark exceptional butts of Fino with a chalk palma — a diagonal stroke across the head — and revisit them as they age. Una Palma represents the first selection: a Fino of around six years old, drawn from a restricted number of butts that showed exceptional purity and délicatesse at the point of tasting.

Released en rama and unfiltered, it presents with noticeably more intensity than the standard Tio Pepe. The nose is pungent and saline, with green almonds, olive brine, fresh yeast and a mineral chalk note that speaks directly of albariza soils. The palate is lively and precise, with high acidity giving it a nervy, citrus-driven structure. Textural weight is greater than the base Fino, coating the palate well and finishing with impressive length. A wine that bridges the gap between accessible Fino and something more cerebral.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Las Palmas Dos Palmas

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Dos Palmas sits at the mid-point of the Palmas progression: the flor is still present but beginning to thin, and the wine has gained complexity without yet surrendering its biological roots. Drawn from a small number of butts — sometimes as few as two or three — at around eight years of age, it is bottled unfiltered and released as a limited edition en rama Fino each autumn.

The nose is generous and saline, with more spice than Una Palma and a deeper nutty register: hazelnuts and toasted almonds alongside the lemon and hay that define the style. The palate is broad and intense, with a greater sense of concentration. The flor influence remains dominant, but the first whispers of oxidative development begin to emerge at the edges — a hint of wax, a suggestion of old wood. Grandeur balanced against precision: González Byass considers Dos Palmas the most complete expression of balance in the range.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Las Palmas Tres Palmas

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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.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Lustau

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Lustau was founded in 1896 by José Ruiz-Berdejo y Veyán, a secretary to the Court of Justice who cultivated vines and aged wines in his spare time on the family estate of Nuestra Señora de la Esperanza, operating as an almacenista and selling wines to larger Sherry exporters. In 1931, his daughter María Ruiz-Berdejo Alberti acquired a small winery closer to the centre of Jerez and transferred the family soleras there. During the 1940s, her husband Emilio Lustau Ortega moved the business to the historic Santiago district, and in 1945 Lustau ceased operating solely as an almacenista and began bottling and marketing wines under its own brands.

In 1990, Lustau merged with the family-owned Luis Caballero group, which provided the resources required to expand its stocks, international distribution and portfolio. In 2000, the company acquired six nineteenth-century cellar buildings on Calle Arcos in Jerez, which now form its principal headquarters. Lustau describes itself as the only Sherry producer with active winemaking or ageing operations in all three cities of the Sherry Triangle: Jerez de la Frontera, El Puerto de Santa María and Sanlúcar de Barrameda.

One of its most important contributions to modern Sherry was the creation of the Almacenista collection in 1981, which gave independent almacenistas unprecedented public recognition by identifying them by name and recording the number of casks contained in their soleras. Among its best-known examples is Manuel Cuevas Jurado’s Manzanilla Pasada 1/80, sourced from an eighty-cask solera in Sanlúcar and bottled with limited filtration.

The Solera Familiar range represents the principal traditional styles of Sherry. East India Solera is a Cream produced from Oloroso and Pedro Ximénez, whose components are aged separately for approximately twelve years, blended and subsequently returned to a dedicated forty-five-cask solera for a further three years. Pedro Ximénez San Emilio undergoes approximately twelve years of oxidative ageing in Jerez.

Sergio Martínez has led the technical team as cellar master since 2016. In 2025, he was named IWC Fortified Winemaker of the Year for the seventh time, equalling the record achieved by his predecessor and mentor Manuel Lozano.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Bodegas Real Tesoro, Valdespino y La Guita

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Valdespino traces its traditional family origins to 1264, when, according to the history preserved by the house, King Alfonso X granted land to the knight Alfonso Valdespino following the Christian conquest of Jerez. Commercial wine activity associated with the family is documented from 1430, while the modern company, A. R. Valdespino, was formally constituted in 1875. These dates represent different stages in the history of the name and should not be treated as interchangeable foundation dates. In 1999, Valdespino was acquired by Grupo José Estévez, which preserved its historic brands and soleras while transferring the principal ageing operations to the group’s facilities on the outskirts of Jerez.

The identity of Valdespino is inseparable from Macharnudo Alto, one of the most highly regarded historic pagos of Jerez and the source of the Palomino used for the house’s most distinctive wines, including Fino Inocente and Amontillado Tío Diego. Fermentation in seasoned American-oak butts remains one of the defining features of these wines — a practice once common throughout Jerez but largely abandoned as stainless-steel fermentation became standard. Fino Inocente passes through ten criaderas and reaches an average age of approximately ten years under flor; its prolonged biological ageing and its origin in Macharnudo Alto make it one of the most distinctive and mature Finos produced in Jerez.

Eduardo Ojeda played a central role in the modern technical development of Valdespino and supervised the reorganisation of its soleras following the 1999 acquisition. He subsequently became a co-founder of Equipo Navazos. Victoria Frutos Climent joined Grupo José Estévez in 2005 and is now the winemaker most closely associated with Valdespino and the other Sherry houses belonging to the group.

The old-wine portfolio includes Don Gonzalo Oloroso VOS and the VORS wines Coliseo Amontillado, Cardenal Palo Cortado, Su Majestad Oloroso and Niños Pedro Ximénez. Moscatel Toneles occupies a separate position within the collection, drawn in extremely small quantities from an ancient tonel whose age is frequently estimated at close to a century. This should be understood as a technical and historical assessment rather than an exact chronological certification. As a Moscatel, it is not marketed under the VOS or VORS categories.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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El Maestro Sierra

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El Maestro Sierra dates its foundation to 1830, when José Antonio Sierra, a master cooper, established his own wine business in Jerez de la Frontera. This history is symbolised by the traditional label of the house, which depicts a fox pursued by mounted hunters — the fox representing the craftsman seeking a place in a trade dominated by wealthy merchant families, the horsemen evoking the powerful bodegueros who controlled the industry.

The winery remains a small, independently owned house at Plaza Silos 5 in central Jerez. It is currently headed by María del Carmen Borrego Plá, daughter of Pilar Plá Pechovierto, who managed the house for more than four decades until her death in 2020. Ana Cabestrero combines responsibility for winemaking, cellar management and commercial direction, and her work has been central to maintaining the traditional character of the house while expanding its international recognition.

El Maestro Sierra preserves the identity of a traditional almacenista-style producer. Restrained intervention, careful maintenance of the soleras and limited production remain fundamental to its philosophy.

The portfolio includes Fino, Amontillado, Oloroso, Medium, Cream and Pedro Ximénez. The international reputation of the house rests particularly on a group of exceptionally mature wines drawn from very small soleras. Amontillado 1830 is described by the producer as having more than forty years of average ageing. Oloroso 1/14 is drawn from a fourteen-cask solera and presented with an estimated age of approximately fifty years. Oloroso 1/7 comes from an even smaller seven-cask system and is described as approximately eighty years old. The collection also includes a very old Palo Cortado and a Pedro Ximénez de Anticuario. Age figures substantially exceeding the official minimums required for VOS or VORS certification should be understood as producer estimates based on the history, movements and concentration of the soleras.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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Bodegas Tradición

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Bodegas Tradición was founded in Jerez de la Frontera in 1998 by Joaquín Rivero Valcarce. The project was conceived as a revival of his family’s long-standing association with the Sherry trade, particularly the legacy of the historic J. M. Rivero and CZ businesses. The present company dates from 1998 and draws on a much older family tradition, but should not be presented as the uninterrupted corporate continuation of a business founded in the seventeenth century.

The winery is located at Plaza Cordobeses 3, in Jerez’s historic Santiago district. Following Joaquín Rivero’s death in 2016, his daughter Helena Rivero assumed the presidency and continued the project’s focus on mature wines, limited production and the preservation of historic soleras.

The current wine range comprises Fino Tradición, Amontillado Tradición VORS, Oloroso Tradición VORS, Palo Cortado Tradición VORS, Cream Tradición VOS and Pedro Ximénez Tradición VOS, alongside Brandy Tradición Solera Gran Reserva and Brandy Platinum Solera Gran Reserva. Fino Tradición is made entirely from Palomino and undergoes approximately ten years of biological ageing; two sacas are generally produced each year, in spring and autumn. The Amontillado, Oloroso and Palo Cortado carry VORS certification, guaranteeing a minimum average age of thirty years. The Cream and Pedro Ximénez are certified as VOS, guaranteeing a minimum average age of twenty years.

The cellars house the Joaquín Rivero and Helena Rivero Collection, comprising more than three hundred works of Spanish painting dating from the late medieval period to the nineteenth century. A selection is displayed among the soleras and includes works associated with artists such as El Greco, Velázquez, Zurbarán, Murillo and Goya. The integration of the collection into the working cellars makes Tradición an unusual meeting point between two forms of Spanish cultural heritage: historic painting and long-aged Sherry.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
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