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Pedro Parra Y Familia, Cinsault Hub, 2019

$37.99

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To make a great wine you need to start from the ground up. Pedro Parra is a fervent believer in that sentiment. Say his name to most wine professionals and the response you will most often get is “Oh, the soil guy.” That is undoubtedly true and he would not say anything to dispel that notion.

As one of the most highly regarded PhDs in terroir in the world, he has advised hundreds of wineries in Chile, Argentina, the USA, Italy, Canada, France and even Armenia. It stands to reason that, when a man like this decides to put his name on a bottle of wine, it would be a wine that exemplifies his life’s work.

Though making his own wine had always been in the back of Pedro’s mind, the idea really began to crystalize the more he worked with and tasted wines from granitic soils. After all, granite dominates the soil of the area where he was born; a place of incredible viticultural potential.

Pedro grew up in the town of Concepcion, the capital of the Bio Bio region and just south of the Itata Valley. 500 kilometers south of Santiago, Itata and Bio Bio were functionally isolated until about 40 years ago. High granite mountains with steep slopes, no roads, and dense rainforest made this region a difficult place to visit for centuries. This isolation is what makes this region such an important area for Chilean viticulture. It was spared the intrusion of Bordelais varieties that wiped out the pre-phyloxera vines elsewhere.

Geologically the area is exceptional with soils dating to the Paleozoic era (220-300 million year old) which are primarily granite and schist. Schistous soils were deemed particularly good for farming pine and eucalyptus trees during Pinochet’s rule. As a result, all the vineyards that now exists in Itata and Bio Bio are planted on granite. Pedro’s preference is sandy quartzic granite soils. The loose sand drains water especially well, forcing roots deeper than the water-retaining clay soils, and leading to a greater expression of terroir.

With soil this pure and vines that, at their youngest, are 60 years old, Pedro knows not to get in the way of a good thing. All fermentations are wild and start in either stainless steel or cement. Elevage is rather neutral, but sometimes experimental. Pedro uses Rauli wood for some of his wines and un-toasted, steam-formed large oak barrels for others. This serves more to soften the edges of his wines rather than impart any real flavor.

For lovers of mineral-laden reds, these are wines you cannot pass up. The combination of deeply-rooted old vines and noninterventionist winemaking make his wines the epitome of granitic expression. These are not the highly-manufactured and manipulated Bordeaux-analogs so often peddled as expressions of Chilean terroir. These are the real thing and they can be yours for a song!

Professional Reviews

Robert Parker

RP 94
"The 2019 Hub was named after jazz trumpet player Freddie Hubbard because the wine comes from a higher and rockier place in the village of Guarilihue and Parra considers Hubbard the most audacious of the trumpet players. The dry-farmed vines were planted 40 years ago in the higher part of Guarilihue on rocky granite soils with lots of silt and quartz and less sand. It fermented in concrete tanks with 60% full clusters and indigenous yeasts, then the wine matured in concrete vat. This time I felt the wine was more fruit-driven and in a way not as complex or deep as some of the others. The palate is light and ethereal but has lots of energy and elegance from sandy soils; there's more minerality than complexity here." -Robert Parker

Details

  • Grape Variety

    Cinsault

  • Vintage

    2019

  • Size

    750ml

  • Farming Practice

    Sustainable

  • Style

    Floral , Spicy

  • Sweetness

    Dry

  • Body

    Medium Bodied

Customer Reviews

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J
John Stovall
A Chilean beauty

This Cinsault Hub blend is excellent. We had it at a private club in Colorado and ordered it online (once we found Flatirons Wines). It has generous nose and flavors. It really shines after several hours of breathing, so open it ahead of time.