Typical Rioja - good value at £16 — 4 years ago
Rosado pero se acerca al@sabor de un tinto — 5 years ago
Strong powerful acid pushing lots of flavour 25yo — a month ago
Deep ruby in color; Black cherries; cedar, and blackberries on the nose; medium acidity; medium minus tannins; tastes like plums, cherries, and clay pots with a long finish. There's something in this wine that tastes a little artificial. It reminds me a little of these purple drinks I had as a kid. Otherwise, this is really easy drinking. I like it and Nellie does too. — 2 years ago
Negroni con Fam — 4 years ago
To Patti from R&B Feb 2025
Warming, smooth and leathery 👍 — 8 months ago
Good tannins and acidity but very well balanced and structured. Red and dark fruits, baked spices, cinnamon and a whiff of leather. Delicious wine! — 3 years ago
Excelente! Suave al paladar , mejorando su personalidad con El Paso de los minutos — 4 years ago
Wine Society - nice light rose. Fruity - very drinkable. — 4 years ago
Freddy R. Troya
Barón de Ley – Varietales Tempranillo – 2014
Rioja DOCa – Spain 🇪🇸
Overview
A 100% Tempranillo from Rioja’s esteemed Barón de Ley Varietales Collection, crafted to highlight the noble face of the region’s flagship grape. Although structured in a crianza style with a projected drinking window of 10–12 years, opening it in 2025 revealed the wine perched right on the twilight edge of maturity. This is bottle #04400, now showing the soulful evolution that Rioja Tempranillo is famed for.
Aromas & Flavors
Initially faint cherry fruit, now firmly in the tertiary spectrum: leather satchel, dried rosemary, forest floor, and faint cigar box. Gentle hints of balsamic and dried fig linger in the background.
Mouthfeel
Medium-bodied with softened, polymerized tannins. Acidity remains fresh enough to carry the wine, but fruit presence has largely faded, leaving savory and earthy notes to dominate.
Food Pairings
A fine match for aged Manchego cheese, braised lamb shank, mushroom-stuffed peppers, or even a rustic stew where earthy and herbal notes harmonize.
Verdict
This Tempranillo no longer plays its youthful cherry trumpet but rather resonates like the old violin sound of Rioja—mellow, textured, and contemplative. A fascinating study in maturity, best enjoyed with reflection rather than exuberance.
Did You Know?
Rioja wines are often classified not just by grape but by aging designations (Crianza, Reserva, Gran Reserva). This bottle leaned into crianza timing, showing beautifully at first but demonstrating how Tempranillo gracefully transitions from fruit-driven vibrancy to complex tertiary elegance. — 2 days ago