2009 Turo d'en Mota - an utterly fascinating world class sparkling wine with a story to tell

2009 Turo d'en Mota - an utterly fascinating world class sparkling wine with a story to tell

2009 Turó d'en Mota - an utterly fascinating world class sparkling wine with a story to tell

Delicate and sublime, the 2009 vintage of Turó d’en Mota expresses an authentic and precious natural environment.
Guide Penin

2009 Turó d'en Mota, Recaredo
£580 per 6 bottle case in bond


How do you sell a relatively unknown, obscure wine in an email? Clearly, it is easier with recognisable names and labels, but when it comes to the obscure, it is tricky, however wonderful or fine the wine might be.

You can turn to critics' reviews and scores – that works to a level. Otherwise, you can try and write your own endorsement and colour in the background and what makes the wine so special. That’s my chosen route.

I prefer words to scores, and our write-ups for the wines of Recaredo have gone some way in convincing our clients that these are world class wines that simply have to be experienced (or so I like to think!)

Where is it from? you may ask. Well, it is from Corpinnat, which was previously a small zone within Cava. But, as the production area for Cava is so vast and the name has become debased, a group of nine producers (of which Recaredo is one) left the Cava DO in 2019 and now produce their wines with Corpinnat shown on the label. These nine producers want to focus on higher quality production, terroir driven wines and indigenous varieties and thereby limit use of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. When given an ultimatum by the authorities to stop promoting themselves as a subset, they broke away from the DO and continued to promote Corpinnat and were recognised legally by the EU. In time, it is likely that they will be brought back into the fold with a separate appellation. Leaving wranglings about designations and appellations aside, it is easy to understand why Recaredo took this step given that the quality of the wines they produce is a world away from what you are likely to associate with Cava. If the following background does not add up to a quality-conscious producer, I am not sure what does.

Recaredo has been crafting sparkling wines at San Sadurní de Noya in Alt Penedès, some 50km due west of Barcelona, for an entire century already, ever since Josep Mata Capellades started winemaking in 1924. Today, his legacy is the Recaredo estate, named after his father, and comprising a patchwork of some 65 hectares of hillside vineyards along Bitlles river. This spectacular landscape, dominated by the Montserrat mountain, with calcareous soils, well-suited to fruit for sparkling wine production is naturally low-yielding. Recaredo is run biodynamically with production kept remarkably traditional, artisanal, and unhurried, so no pesticides, herbicides or chemical fertilisers are used here; everything is natural, everything is done by hand. They were the first estate in Penedes to be certified biodynamic back in 2010, so, while tradition is the watchword here, it is not without progression.

The reputation of this estate is inextricably linked to patience – each of their wines spends a minimum of two and half years ageing on its lees in bottle in their cellars, far and above the minimum stipulation for Cava or Champagne for that matter. Some of their wines spend a whopping 30 years in their cellars. Interestingly, this focus on extended ageing echoes the approach championed most successfully by the winemaker who I consider one of the most talented in Champagne, namely Francis Egly of Egly-Ouriet. That is not to hint at any imitation; Recaredo developed their style of long-aged wines as early as 1944.

The key variety here is Xarel-lo (pronounced charel-low) which accounts for over half of their vineyard plantings. I have been fascinated by this variety and have recently started tasting some impressive still wines from it in order to understand more of its character and attributes. This indigenous Mediterranean variety brings good acidity and structure to the blend and in my experience, a mineral-infused citrus-natured fruit with slightly smoky notes. Its blending partner, Macabeu, can offer a more floral-natured fruit, with slightly more honeyed, juicy characters. The issue with both varieties is that pinning down varietal flavour profiles is tricky as, often, yields are too high to deliver the necessary concentration in still or sparkling wines. Fortunately, this isn’t always the case. Recaredo, for example, produce at substantially less than half the permitted yield for Cava!

The Turó d'en Mota is Recaredo’s top wine and is a single vineyard Xarel-lo of just 0.97 hectares, planted in 1940 on a hill which gives its name to the wine – it is initially fermented in 300 litre oak barrels before being bottled for the second fermentation; it then rested for 160 months before disgorgement! The base of the vineyard is limestone – it is very calcareous in nature. These are deep, well-drained soils that only hold moderate amounts of water. They contain 14% active limestone, which is crucial in the expression of minerality, complexity and acidity.  In short, they are ideal for vineyards destined for sparkling wine production.

That is probably more than enough words from me – here are some from Luis Gutiérrez at robertparker.com and a Spanish publication called Penin Guide.

2009 Turó d'en Mota, Recaredo
£580 per 6 bottle case in bond

96 points, Luis Gutiérrez, robertparker.com
When I tasted all 25 vintages of Turó d'en Mota in October 2023, the 2009 Turó d'en Mota was the current release. That was only a few months ago, and today, the 2010 is ready to be released also. 2009 was a short vintage, with 3,814 kilos of grapes, or 22 hectoliters per hectare, picked very early, on the 19th of August. 2009 was a warm year, with an average temperature of 16 degrees Celsius, a little above the historical average of 15.6 degrees Celsius. It rained more during autumn, but the summer was dry; the total precipitation was 492 liters, close to the historical average of 528 liters, but distribution was irregular. The summer was warm and eminently Mediterranean. Now to 2030.
It's very Burgundian and smoky, with great complexity, with some reminiscences of Sherry, like if the wine had aged under flor. That makes it very spicy, with notes of curry and fennel. It's lively and powerful, surprisingly pale. The wine was disgorged after 160 months in bottle with lees; that's 13 years and four months. It was disgorged in May 2023

99 points, Guide Penin
Recaredo’s Turó d’en Mota 2009 has been rated 99 points by the tasters for the Guía Peñín 2024, an edition in which only eight wines have achieved this score. The experts describe this Corpinnat, aged for 13 years in Recaredo’s cellars, as “a tasty wine, very lively, balanced, elegant, with fine bubbles – long and creamy”.
Delicate and sublime, the 2009 vintage of Turó d’en Mota expresses an authentic and precious natural environment. The wine year was characterised by a rainy autumn and a markedly Mediterranean summer, ideal conditions for obtaining very lively and expressive grapes, with low yields of 22 hl/ha and a limited production of only 2,874 bottles. The result is a Corpinnat that truly connects with the landscape and the soil of the Penedès, with very healthy fruit that delivers exceptional and persistent acidity.

So, there you go, something completely different. This is very different to Champagne but nonetheless complex. Every vintage of Turo d’en Mota has convinced me these are world-class wines. Hopefully, I have said enough to intrigue you.

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