Fine & Fortified
  • Tasting Notes
  • Producers
  • Buying Guides
  • Journal
  • Where to Buy
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • AI Audit ✦
Fine & Fortified
Fine & Fortified
  • Tasting Notes
  • Producers
  • Buying Guides
  • Journal
  • Where to Buy
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • AI Audit ✦

@2022 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign

Wine Style: Manzanilla

BG Essential Fino Manzanilla Guide

The Essential Fino & Manzanilla Guide: Eight Wines to Buy Now

written by admin

BG Essential Fino Manzanilla Guide

What you are choosing between
Fino and Manzanilla are closely related, but they are not interchangeable. Fino belongs to the DO Jerez-Xérès-Sherry and is the dry, biologically aged style historically associated above all with Jerez de la Frontera and El Puerto de Santa María. Under the current regulatory map, Fino may be aged in the municipalities of the delimited Jerez zone with the exception of Sanlúcar de Barrameda. Manzanilla has its own DO — Manzanilla-Sanlúcar de Barrameda — and its biological ageing must take place for at least two years in bodegas located in the municipality of Sanlúcar de Barrameda. The distinction is not cosmetic: Sanlúcar sits at the mouth of the Guadalquivir estuary, where higher humidity and moderated temperatures favour a particularly persistent veil of flor. The result is usually lighter, sharper, more saline and more delicate than most Finos aged inland, although bodega, cask selection and solera management can matter as much as geography.
Fino Viejo and Manzanilla Pasada are no longer loose descriptive terms. Current rules attach them to biologically aged wines with at least seven years of average ageing and the slight oxidative signs that come from a longer life under flor. Manzanilla Pasada therefore occupies a third position for the buyer: it remains Manzanilla, but extended biological ageing gradually weakens or thins the flor, allowing subtle oxidative development. The wine retains its saline core while gaining old-yeast weight, dried-fruit nuance, iodine and greater depth. It remains one of the most undervalued categories in the region.
What all these wines share is dryness, biological ageing and a need for freshness in service. For dry generosos, the current analytical threshold is ≤4 g/l sugar, expressed as glucose and fructose. They should be served cold and consumed promptly once opened. A bottle left open for three weeks is no longer the same wine.

The Selection
Fino Inocente — Valdespino
One of the benchmark single-vineyard Finos, drawn from Valdespino’s Macharnudo Alto holdings in the Pago de Macharnudo, in Jerez. It is also one of the rare modern Finos whose base wine is still fermented in American oak butts with native yeasts before entering a solera system of unusual complexity, with ten criaderas. The finished wine is normally around ten years old, giving it far more depth than most standard Finos and placing it close to the current Fino Viejo register, although Valdespino continues to bottle it simply as Fino Inocente. Expect toasted almond, sourdough, fresh yeast, beeswax, chalk and a long, saline finish.

Tío Pepe Fino En Rama — González Byass
En rama is a regulated labelling mention rather than a separate wine style. It is reserved for wines that have not undergone clarification or cold stabilisation, and it usually signals much gentler handling than the standard filtered release. Tío Pepe En Rama gives the familiar Tío Pepe solera a more immediate voice: greater texture, more aromatic intensity and a more pronounced flor character. The 2026 spring bottling is the seventeenth edition, selected by Antonio Flores and Silvia Flores from casks showing flor at its seasonal peak. This is a wine to buy by saca and by bottling date. The producer itself recommends drinking it within three months of bottling; in practical terms, freshness matters more than cellaring ambition.

Manzanilla La Gitana — Hidalgo-La Gitana
The classic entry point into Sanlúcar from one of the region’s oldest family producers, founded in 1792. La Gitana is aged in the San Luis bodega, close to the Guadalquivir and shaped by Sanlúcar’s maritime humidity. Its family solera dates back to the early nineteenth century and is organised through eight criaderas, giving a mass-market benchmark a more serious cellar foundation than its price might suggest. Pale, dry and nervy, it shows the textbook vocabulary of Manzanilla: chamomile, sea spray, green almond, fresh yeast and a clean, saline finish. It remains one of the most reliable introductions to the style.

Manzanilla Solear Pasada En Rama — Barbadillo
Barbadillo has bottled Solear Pasada En Rama seasonally since 1999, making it a reference point for the modern en rama movement. The wine comes from an older selection within the Solear family and is drawn four times a year — spring, summer, autumn and winter — so each saca captures a different seasonal expression of flor. Current releases are normally offered in 37.5 cl bottles under the Solear Saca Estacional range, while special 75 cl formats have appeared for anniversary bottlings. It has the breadth, old-yeast depth and bitter-saline persistence expected from Manzanilla Pasada, but the seasonal bottling also preserves a vivid sense of Sanlúcar freshness.

Fino Jarana — Lustau
Part of Lustau’s Solera Familiar range, Fino Jarana is aged under flor in Bodega Las Cruces in Jerez de la Frontera. Lustau presents it as a Jerez-style Fino: fresh, mineral and pungent, with almond and bakery notes, dry and crisp on the palate yet rounded enough to show the fuller profile often associated with inland ageing. With an average age of around four years, it is not intended as a rare cellar selection, but as a consistent, well-managed reference for classic Jerez Fino at an accessible price point.

Manzanilla Pasada Pastrana — Hidalgo-La Gitana
A single-vineyard Manzanilla Pasada from Finca Pastrana in the Pago de Miraflores, one of the Sanlúcar pagos most closely associated with Palomino of marked saline definition. The wine was conceived in the 1980s around a stricter vineyard selection and was first commercialised in 1997. It is aged far longer than La Gitana — usually cited at around twelve years — so the flor imprint remains clear while the final phase brings semi-oxidative depth. Bottled en rama, with no clarification or cold stabilisation and only the lightest possible handling, Pastrana sits between the freshness of Manzanilla and the structured complexity of Amontillado: salted almond, dried chamomile, olive brine, iodine, quince, old yeast and a long, smoky-saline finish.

Fino El Maestro Sierra — El Maestro Sierra
El Maestro Sierra began as a nineteenth-century almacenista house and is now one of Jerez’s most distinctive independent bottling bodegas. Founded in 1830 by master cooper José Antonio Sierra, it works on a small, traditional scale from a privileged position in Jerez, exposed to Poniente winds that help sustain flor. The house is known for old soleras, manual cellar work, minimal handling and in-house cooperage. Its Fino is best described cautiously as a four-to-six-year biological wine, because public age references differ by source and release. It is bottled with minimal filtration rather than marketed as a conventional polished Fino. The profile is deeper and more assertive than most young Finos: fresh bread dough, chamomile, almond, iodine, subtle wood and a dry, persistent, faintly bitter finish.

Fino Quinta — Osborne
Produced from Osborne’s historic soleras in El Puerto de Santa María, a house whose Bodega de Mora dates to 1772. Osborne is now better known internationally for Brandy de Jerez and a broader drinks and food portfolio, but Fino Quinta remains an important classical Sherry reference. The wine spends about four to four-and-a-half years in the solera. Its name traces to the fifth criadera of the older Fino La Honda solera, separated to create a younger and lighter style when consumer preferences shifted. Pale yellow with greenish highlights, it is gently saline and lightly nutty, with flor, almond, chamomile and a clean bitter finish. A useful, affordable example of the El Puerto style, though availability can be uneven outside Spain.

A note on serving and storage
Fino and Manzanilla are not wines to keep indefinitely unless the buyer is deliberately experimenting with bottle age. For normal use, store them in a cool, dark place at a stable temperature and open them within six to twelve months of purchase, sooner for en rama bottlings. Serve lighter Finos and Manzanillas at around 7–9°C; older Manzanilla Pasada or more concentrated en rama bottlings can be allowed to rise slightly in the glass. Once opened, recork and refrigerate. A standard filtered Fino or Manzanilla is best finished within a week; en rama and pasada bottlings are at their most vivid within the first two to four days. These are not wines that improve with neglect.

Where to buy
Treat this guide as a producer and style guide, not as a live stock list. The wines above may appear through specialist retailers in the UK and US, but availability changes by saca, shipment and market. In the United Kingdom, retailers worth checking include The Whisky Exchange, Butlers Wine Cellar, Soho Wine Supply, The Wine Society, Tanners Wines, Amathus Drinks and Waitrose Cellar. In the United States, useful sources include 67 Wine, K&L Wine Merchants, Astor Wines & Spirits, Despaña Vinos y Más, Flatiron Wines & Spirits and MacArthur Beverages, with regional specialists such as Slope Cellars and Noe Valley Wine & Spirits also worth checking. Shipping rules, release dates and bottle formats vary, especially in the US and for en rama or limited bottlings. For the most reliable distribution information in your market, contact the producer, importer or specialist retailer directly.

Editorial note
This guide was reviewed against current publicly available producer information, regulatory documentation and specialist retailer data. Prices, release dates and availability may change by market and by saca, especially for en rama and limited bottlings. Readers should check the bottling date, format and release before purchase. Last editorial review: June 2026.

junio 28, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Manzanilla La Gitana

written by admin

Manzanilla La Gitana is Bodegas Hidalgo-La Gitana’s manzanilla expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records approx. 5 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. 5 years, at 15% alcohol and in 75cl. Current bottle and market format should be checked before publication.

Pale to deep gold, with flor, chamomile, almond and coastal salinity; dry, savoury and persistent. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Manzanilla La Gitana En Rama

written by admin

The En Rama release takes La Gitana to its logical extreme: the same wine, the same vineyards, the same solera, but bottled without filtration or fining, directly from the barrel. Released seasonally, with each bottling reflecting the state of the flor at a specific moment in the year — spring sacas tend to show the most vivid character, when the flor is at its thickest.

The nose is more intense and complex than the standard La Gitana: the saline and chamomile notes are amplified, the yeasty character more pronounced, and there is an almost briny quality that recalls the Atlantic on a cold day. The palate is broader, with greater weight and texture, and the finish is longer and more complex. Drink within months of bottling, very cold, in a large glass. One of the finest en rama releases produced anywhere in Sanlúcar.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Manzanilla Deliciosa

written by admin

Deliciosa Manzanilla is Bodegas Real Tesoro, Valdespino y La Guita’s manzanilla expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records 6 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 6 years, at 15% alcohol and in 75cl. No caveat beyond current price, stock and bottle-level verification.

Pale to deep gold, with flor, chamomile, almond and coastal salinity; dry, savoury and persistent. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Manzanilla Solear

written by admin

Solear is Bodegas Barbadillo’s manzanilla expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records prolonged biological ageing; exact average not disclosed. 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, at 15% alcohol and in 37.5cl / 75cl. No caveat beyond current price, stock and bottle-level verification.

Pale to deep gold, with flor, chamomile, almond and coastal salinity; dry, savoury and persistent. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Solear En Rama

written by admin

Solear En Rama is one of the founding documents of the modern en rama movement. Barbadillo was the first bodega to release a Manzanilla in unfiltered form — beginning in 1999 with Solear — and in doing so established a template that has since been adopted across the entire region. Released four times a year as seasonal sacas, each edition reflects the state of the flor at a specific moment: winter, spring, summer and autumn, each with its own character and intensity.

The wine is bottled as a Manzanilla Pasada, around eight to nine years old, drawn from the best barrels in the Solear system. En rama means no fining, no filtration, no cold stabilisation: the wine as it exists in the barrel, transferred directly to the bottle. The nose is richer and more complex than the standard Solear — warm hay, dried chamomile, lemon peel, a deeper saline register and the low golden glow of aged flor. The palate has a broader, more textural presence, with greater length and depth. An essential reference point for the Manzanilla category.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Manzanilla Papirusa

written by admin

Manzanilla Papirusa is Bodegas Lustau’s manzanilla expression within its current or recently verified portfolio. The current documentation records approx. 5 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. 5 years, at 15% alcohol and in 37.5cl / 75cl. No caveat beyond current stock and bottle-level verification.

Pale to deep gold, with flor, chamomile, almond and coastal salinity; dry, savoury and persistent. Flor, saline definition and a gently bitter close keep the profile precise.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Barbadillo

written by admin

Barbadillo was founded in Sanlúcar de Barrameda in 1821 by Benigno Barbadillo y Hortigüela, who returned to Spain after developing a successful commercial career in Mexico. Together with his cousin Manuel López Barbadillo, he acquired the El Toro winery and established the foundations of a family business that has remained closely connected with Sanlúcar for more than two centuries. The company is currently chaired by Manuel Barbadillo Eyzaguirre, a member of the seventh generation of the founding family.

Barbadillo is one of Spain’s largest and oldest family-controlled wine businesses and one of the leading producers of Manzanilla. Its ageing operations are distributed among sixteen cellars in Sanlúcar de Barrameda, whose different locations and orientations enable the company to work with the variations in humidity, ventilation and temperature that influence biological ageing under flor.

Barbadillo occupies a fundamental place in the commercial history of Manzanilla. According to the company’s archives, in 1827 it shipped its first casks of Manzanilla to Philadelphia. Shortly afterwards, it marketed Pastora, which the producer describes as the first commercially bottled Manzanilla. The company also claims to have been the first producer to employ the word «Manzanilla» as the name of this style of wine.

Manzanilla Solear remains the centre of the portfolio and reaches an average age of approximately six years. Manzanilla Pasada Pastora and Solear En Rama undergo longer ageing, developing greater concentration and a more mature expression of biological development. In spring 1999, Barbadillo launched the first seasonal bottling of Solear En Rama. Four sacas are now released annually, corresponding to the four seasons and reflecting the changing condition of the flor throughout the year. This initiative played a decisive role in establishing the modern commercial category of seasonally bottled, minimally filtered Manzanilla.

The current VORS collection comprises Príncipe Amontillado VORS, Obispo Gascón Palo Cortado VORS and Cuco Oloroso VORS, each carrying official certification guaranteeing a minimum average age of thirty years. These wines should be distinguished from the Reliquia collection, drawn from some of the oldest and most limited stocks preserved by the family. The series comprises Amontillado, Palo Cortado, Oloroso and Pedro Ximénez; releases are extremely small and vary according to the condition and availability of each solera. Reliquia Palo Cortado was the first dry Sherry to receive one hundred points from The Wine Advocate and remains one of the most highly regarded wines in Barbadillo’s history.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Lustau

written by admin

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
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Hidalgo-La Gitana

written by admin

Hidalgo-La Gitana was founded in Sanlúcar de Barrameda in 1792 by Don Pantaleón José Hidalgo, who took over the management of a small winery belonging to his father-in-law, Roque Bejarano. The company remains under the control of the founding family, whose eighth generation currently manages the business.

The historic cellars stand in Sanlúcar’s Barrio Bajo, close to the Guadalquivir estuary. The producer currently cultivates more than 120 hectares of Palomino in the pagos of Balbaína and Miraflores; its principal vineyard properties include El Cuadrado and Pastrana.

Manzanilla La Gitana is the flagship wine and one of the most widely distributed Manzanillas, undergoing biological ageing in Sanlúcar and reaching an average age of approximately five years. La Gitana En Rama is released in limited selections intended to preserve a closer expression of the wine as tasted from the cask.

The producer dates the origins of the Pastrana project to 1985, when Javier Hidalgo and Portuguese wine producer Cristiano van Zeller set out to create a Manzanilla based entirely on a single vineyard. Finca Pastrana covers approximately fourteen hectares in the Miraflores pago. Manzanilla Pasada Pastrana was first commercially released in 1997 and undergoes more than twelve years of biological ageing before bottling. Pastrana was one of the pioneering modern expressions of vineyard-designated Manzanilla; earlier historical precedents, however, cannot be excluded.

The current VORS range comprises Napoleón Amontillado VORS, Faraón Oloroso VORS, Wellington Palo Cortado VORS and Triana Pedro Ximénez VORS, each with a certified minimum average age of thirty years. The company also markets Wellington VOS 20, a separate Palo Cortado with a certified minimum average age of twenty years. The Napoleón and Wellington names are traditionally linked by the producer to wines supplied to French and British interests during the Peninsular War — an association that forms part of the family and commercial tradition of the house.

junio 24, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Where to Buy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms

NEWSLETTER

New tasting notes & buying recommendations. Stay updated.

Fine & Fortified

© 2026 Fine & Fortified. All rights reserved.


Back To Top
Fine & Fortified
  • Tasting Notes
  • Producers
  • Buying Guides
  • Journal
  • Where to Buy
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • AI Audit ✦