The Still & The VineSchool of Wine & Spirits
Marqués de Riscal Reserva 2019
Red WineIssue 4

Marqués de Riscal Reserva 2019

Herederos del Marqués de Riscal (est. 1858) · Bodegas Marqués de Riscal, Elciego, Rioja Alavesa, Spain

$2014.5% proofElciego, Rioja Alavesa — where, in 1858, a Spanish marquess who’d been living in Bordeaux brought a French cellar master to Rioja, imported Bordeaux techniques and grape varieties, and launched a quiet revolution that transformed Spanish winemaking forever.
Marqués de Riscal went against the grain before “going against the grain” was even a concept in Spanish wine. When Camilo Hurtado de Amézaga founded the winery in 1858, he did something heretical: he brought a French cellar master from Château Lanessan in the Médoc to teach Rioja producers Bordeaux techniques. He imported French grape varieties alongside the native Tempranillo. The result was Spain’s first modern winery, and in 1895, Marqués de Riscal became the first non-French wine to receive an Honorific Diploma at the International Wine Exposition of Bordeaux. The 2019 Reserva — 94% Tempranillo, 21 months in American oak — is a masterclass in Rioja’s unique marriage of Spanish soul and Bordelais discipline. At $20–$25, it’s one of the great values in European wine.

Kit Aromas

Tasting Notes

Nose

Ripe cherry, dried cranberry, leather, vanilla, tobacco leaf, and a subtle cedar spice from the American oak aging.

Palate

Medium-bodied with fine-grained tannins — red plum, dark cherry, vanilla cream, dried herbs, and a savory undertone of cured meat and smoked paprika.

Finish

Long and elegant with lingering leather, sweet tobacco, and a dry minerality that keeps pulling you back.

Specifications
Varietal
Tempranillo
Blend
94% Tempranillo / 6% Graciano
Serve & Pair

Cocktail Suggestion

Cocktail — Rioja Sangria Clásica: 1 bottle Marqués de Riscal Reserva · 2 oz brandy · 1 oz Cointreau · 1 oz fresh orange juice · sliced orange, apple, and lemon · cinnamon stick. Combine in a pitcher, refrigerate 4 hours. The Reserva’s vanilla and leather notes give this sangria a backbone most versions lack.

Food Pairing

Pair with: Lamb chops with rosemary and roasted garlic. Rioja Reserva and lamb is one of wine’s great marriages — the wine’s savory leather and herb notes amplify the lamb, while the fruit balances the char.

Train These Aromas
Comments

Be the first to comment.

Leave a comment

0 / 4,000

First-time comments are reviewed before appearing. Be kind, be specific, no spam.

More from Bodegas Marqués de Riscal, Elciego, Rioja Alavesa, Spain
Ron Zacapa Edición Negra
Rum

Ron Zacapa Edición Negra

Ron Zacapa

Edición Negra takes Zacapa's high-altitude solera system and pushes it toward heavier charred casks, producing a darker, more brooding rum than its siblings. The result is a spirit that trades some of the Centenario 23's honeyed charm for genuine complexity and a savory edge. Whether you sip it neat or pair it with a robust dessert, this is rum built for contemplation.

86 proof
Michter's 10 Year Old Single Barrel Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Bourbon

Michter's 10 Year Old Single Barrel Kentucky Straight Bourbon

Michter's

Michter's 10 Year exemplifies the discipline of selecting barrels that can handle a full decade without tipping into over-oaked bitterness. This is bourbon that rewards slow sipping — each minute in the glass unlocks new layers. A benchmark for what extended aging should accomplish in Kentucky whiskey.

94.4 proof
Don Pilar Añejo Tequila
Tequila

Don Pilar Añejo Tequila

Don Pilar

Don Pilar's Añejo delivers genuine agave character that has been shaped, not masked, by eighteen months in oak. This is añejo the way it should be done — the wood serves the spirit, not the other way around. At its price point, it competes well above its weight class, offering depth and balance that many pricier añejos struggle to achieve.

80 proof
Jensen's Old Tom London Gin
Gin

Jensen's Old Tom London Gin

Jensen's

Christian Jensen spent years researching nineteenth-century recipes to reconstruct an authentic Old Tom profile. The result is not a novelty — it is a genuine revival, offering a window into what gin tasted like before London Dry became the dominant style. Essential for anyone building a historically informed Martinez or Tom Collins.

86 proof
More Red Wine Reviews
Tenuta delle Terre Nere Etna Rosso San Lorenzo 2021
Red Wine

Tenuta delle Terre Nere Etna Rosso San Lorenzo 2021

Tenuta delle Terre Nere

Marc de Grazia's Terre Nere estate produces some of Etna's most expressive contrada wines, and San Lorenzo is a standout: old Nerello Mascalese vines rooted in ancient lava flows deliver a wine of rare transparency. This is not fruit-driven in the obvious sense — it is terroir speaking through fruit. Think Burgundy by way of a volcano.

Domaine de la Côte Pinot Noir Sola Tierra 2021
Red Wine

Domaine de la Côte Pinot Noir Sola Tierra 2021

Domaine de la Côte

Rajat Parr and Sashi Moorman's Sola Tierra block sits on diatomaceous earth soils that produce some of the most transparent Pinot Noir in California. This is a wine of direction rather than power — it knows exactly where it's going and arrives with grace. If you're still looking for California Pinot that can stand alongside Burgundy Premier Cru, start here.

Château Pibran Pauillac 2019
Red Wine

Château Pibran Pauillac 2019

Château Pibran

Château Pibran punches well above its price in the 2019 vintage. Owned by AXA Millésimes (who also own Pichon Baron), it benefits from the same meticulous attention and top-tier terroir. The tension between ripe fruit generosity and classic Pauillac austerity makes it both immediately enjoyable and cellaring-worthy.

28 proof
Luciano Sandrone Barbera d'Alba 2021
Red Wine

Luciano Sandrone Barbera d'Alba 2021

Luciano Sandrone

Sandrone's Barbera is always a masterclass in restraint and fruit purity. The 2021 vintage delivered ideal conditions in Piedmont, and this wine captures the variety's defining bright acidity alongside ripe, generous fruit. It over-performs for Barbera d'Alba — the kind of bottle that reminds you why this grape deserves a permanent place at the table, not just as Barolo's understudy.