Garnacha de Fuego
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Description
Description
Garnacha de Fuego is a bold, full-bodied Spanish red wine made from 100% Garnacha de Aragón, bottled at 15% ABV in a standard 750ml format. Produced by Bodegas Breca from old vines planted at roughly 900 meters elevation in Calatayud, it earned 90 points from critic Wilfred Wong — recognition that underscores its remarkable depth for the price tier.
Quick Facts: ABV: 15% | Origin: Calatayud, Aragón, Spain | Varietal: 100% Garnacha de Aragón | Producer: Bodegas Breca
Production & Heritage
Bodegas Breca sources fruit for Garnacha de Fuego from old Garnacha de Aragón vines — considered the oldest surviving clone of Grenache in the world — rooted in rocky slate and quartz soils that date back to the Cambrian and Silurian geological periods. The high-altitude vineyards at approximately 900 meters above sea level experience dramatic diurnal temperature swings that help the grapes retain acidity while achieving full phenolic ripeness. Vinification takes place in stainless steel tanks with a 10-day maceration at a controlled 25°C, preserving varietal purity and vibrant fruit expression without the influence of oak.
Tasting Notes
Aroma: The nose opens with a vivid perfume of ripe black cherry and blackberry, followed by layers of lavender, ground pepper, and leather. A subtle undercurrent of loamy earth and stony minerality adds complexity beneath the fruit.
Taste: The entry is generous and fruit-forward — ripe plum and dark cherry dominate immediately. At mid-palate, the wine reveals its old-vine concentration with licorice, roasted herbs, and a balsamic quality that lends savory depth. Despite its 15% ABV, it stays surprisingly balanced, simultaneously warm and fresh, with supple tannins carrying the fruit through without heaviness.
Finish: The finish is medium-long and rounded, trailing off with lingering notes of black cherry, mineral dust, and a whisper of dried herbs. The texture stays smooth and polished, never tannic or drying.
How to Drink Garnacha de Fuego
Pour it at cellar temperature — around 60–65°F — in a large-bowled glass to let the aromatics fully open. Its fruit-driven intensity and stainless steel vinification make it equally enjoyable on its own or alongside food. For a red wine sangria, Garnacha de Fuego's dark berry richness and herbal undertone give the drink genuine backbone. In a Kalimotxo (red wine and cola), the wine's bold concentration holds up against the sweetness and carbonation without losing its character. A classic Tinto de Verano with lemon soda becomes surprisingly nuanced thanks to the mineral thread running through this Garnacha.
Best For
- Weeknight dinners where you want old-vine quality without a premium price tag
- Introducing friends to the power and elegance of Spanish Garnacha
- Pairing with a backyard barbecue or grilled meats
- Building a Spanish wine collection starting with a benchmark Calatayud red
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Garnacha de Fuego taste like? It delivers ripe black cherry and plum upfront, layered with licorice, roasted herbs, and a balsamic touch, all supported by a stony minerality and supple, rounded tannins.
How does Garnacha de Fuego compare to Borsao Tres Picos Garnacha? Both are 100% Garnacha wines from the Aragón region of Spain, but Garnacha de Fuego hails from the Calatayud DO at higher elevations, while Tres Picos comes from Campo de Borja. Garnacha de Fuego's stainless steel fermentation tends to showcase purer fruit and mineral character, whereas Tres Picos typically incorporates some oak aging for added structure.
Is Garnacha de Fuego good for everyday sipping? Absolutely — its approachable fruit, smooth tannins, and lack of oak influence make it an easy-drinking red, though its 15% ABV and old-vine concentration reward slower, more attentive sipping as well.
Where is Garnacha de Fuego made? It is produced by Bodegas Breca in the Calatayud Denominación de Origen, located in the Aragón region of northeastern Spain, where old Garnacha vines grow on ancient slate and quartz hillside soils at around 900 meters elevation.
What foods pair well with Garnacha de Fuego? Grilled lamb chops complement the wine's herbal and peppery notes. Chorizo or other cured Spanish meats echo its savory, spiced character. Roasted red pepper dishes mirror its fruit profile. Hard aged cheeses like Manchego match its weight and concentration. Slow-braised short ribs stand up to the wine's bold body and dark fruit.
What sizes does Garnacha de Fuego come in? Garnacha de Fuego is widely available in the standard 750ml bottle.
Is Garnacha de Fuego worth the price? It positions squarely as a value-tier wine that punches well above its weight — old-vine fruit, high-altitude terroir, and a 90-point critical score make it one of the stronger propositions in the affordable Spanish Garnacha category.
Why Garnacha de Fuego?
What separates this wine from countless other affordable Garnachas is its source material: Garnacha de Aragón, the oldest known clone of Grenache, grown on pre-Cambrian and Silurian-era soils at nearly 900 meters. That geological and viticultural pedigree is rare at any price point. The stainless steel vinification with controlled maceration strips away winemaker artifice and lets the terroir speak directly — you taste altitude, slate, and old-vine concentration rather than toast and vanilla. For anyone exploring Spanish reds, this bottle delivers an unvarnished portrait of what Calatayud Garnacha can achieve.
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