Who is Atov?
March 7th, 2008 | Uncategorized
I like keep our blog topical if nothing else, so in deference to this Sunday’s election in Spain, I thought I should share with you a moment of my own stupidity relating to said subject.
I like keep our blog topical if nothing else, so in deference to this Sunday’s election in Spain, I thought I should share with you a moment of my own stupidity relating to said subject.
Over the last year or two I have sometimes been quite outspoken regarding certain types of tasting, questionable competitions and even the odd wine critic. Well, now is the time to retract everything…… We have just been awarded 90 points by possibly the most famous of them all!!!
Jay Miller, the Spanish wine reviewer for the Wine Advocate, has kindly made the following comment about our Albariño:
The Times newspaper boasts some of the best food & wine critics around – Gordon Ramsay, Heston Blumental, the wonderful restaurant critic A.A.Gill, and one of my personal favourites, Jeremy Clarkson (albeit that he writes about cars!).
Following the recent retirement of Cuba’s infamous leader, I thought it quite an appropriate moment to clear up and misunderstandings that there might be relating to our name.
Firstly, I should say that there is of course no connection whatsoever between our Bodega and the aforementioned Cuban gentleman! The name ‘Castro’ relates to a former partner of Angela’s father who left the business many years ago (for some reason, of which I am not clear, his name remained).
OK, so now the real point of my story…… In the Rias Baixas denomination there are at least three other Bodegas that carry the name ‘Castro’ in their title. Only today I passed one of the others on my way to work and remarked upon the shiny new logo attached to the front of the building – suspiciously like our own lettering, I thought to myself!
Now, I don’t wish to blow our own trumpet (well, actually I do) but we are certainly the best known of all the Castros around these parts, so I guess that it might just be possible that the others are trying to cash in on our success by using their similar name, and linking it to a similar logo? Certainly, many, many years ago I knew some consumers who used to think that anything with Mouton or Latour in the name must be a great quality wine….. as if they could somehow confuse Mouton Cadet with Mouton Rothschild for example!
So, whilst we acknowledge that imitation is really the most sincere form of flattery, there is, and only ever will be, one Bodegas Castro Martin.
We thank you for your Fidel-ity…… (sorry)!
Angela and I (in our dreams!)
ALIMENTARIA, BARCELONA 10TH–14TH MARCH 2008Please note our exact coordinates:
We look forward to seeing you next month
Tastings can often be hard work – long hours on your feet pouring wine can easily put a strain on your enthusiasm. Not so last month when we attended the annual tasting of one of our biggest importers…..
Every year the venue is decorated around a highly original theme – this year based on the different rooms of a house. Producers found themselves in some fairly unfamiliar surroundings for tasting – France, for example, in the kitchen, Italy, in the bathroom, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa sharing the garden etc.
Spain was located in the bedroom, complete with double bed and staff dressed in pyjamas and nightgowns! (Imagine being paid for lounging around in bed all day!).
Despite the light-hearted surroundings the tasting itself is always deadly serious, and is attended by up to three thousand customers over a period of ten hours.
We wait with bated breath to learn more about next year’s theme…..
These days we are asked with increasing frequency whether any of our wines are either organic or biodynamic. I thought it was about time therefore, that I post some sort of statement that explains our approach to these ‘green issues’.
2). We have natural grass cover between the vines that is cut manually. In this way we can also use the natural organic material (mulch) to help replenish the soil.
3). We use natural worm humus, especially when planting new vines.
4). We use sheep and horse “manure” to add nutrients to the soil when required.
5). Plagues and Diseases: Mainly preventive strategies are used, such green pruning and thinning the canopy to avoid excessive humidity under the pergolas. This of course allows a better circulation of air and thus helps to prevent fungus attacks.
Sometimes these attacks cannot be prevented and so we are obliged to use some products (all approved in ecological viticulture), such as:
6). To reduce the possible spread of fungus spores in the following harvest we collect and burn all the vine cuttings after pruning.
7). We use pheromone traps that cause sexual confusion to control the polilla de la uva (grape moth) or lobesia botrana. In the case of an attack we treat with bacillus thuringiensis (which is a biological treatment)
8). Harvest : manual collection of grapes to avoid damaged bunches and premature oxidation.
Tom Stevenson has been writing about wine for nearly thirty years and is the author of more than 20 books. He’s been nominated on three occasions as Wine Writer of the Year and received the coveted Wine Literary Award, America’s lifetime achievement award for wine writing.
Every year he invites a team of specialised journalists to help him compile a handbook of the best wines that the world has to offer. These fall under numerous different categories, from best newcomer to the best bargain wine.
In the case of Spain, Tom handed responsibility to John Radford, author of the award winning New Spain, winner of the Livre Gormand Best European Wine Book and the Premio Especial Alimentos de España from the Spanish Government. John is also chairman of the Spanish committee of the Decanter World Wine Awards.
We are therefore delighted to reveal that Bodegas Castro Martin is now listed as one of the Top 10 ‘Best Value’ producers in the whole of Spain.
As a former buyer I am truly delighted to receive the accolade of ‘best value wine’, which for me is the most significant of all the different categories in this report – quality and value is, after all, the Holy Grail of any worthwhile wine buyer……
After a few celebrations and a brief norovirus (don’t ask), I finally find the time to wish you all a very Happy New Year – a healthy, safe and prosperous 2008.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, we have just received our copy of a new guide, produced by Wines from Spain and distributed throughout the United States. Our entry is for Castro Martin 2005, and the tasting note, written by Doug Frost (Master Sommelier and MW), reads as follows:
“The aromas show both red and green apple, white peach, apple blossom, and some honey; dusty rocks and minerals are prevalent in the nose as well. The mouth is a bit fleshier, with sweet peach skin, apple, lots of ripe citrus, and a stony finish. I’m sure there are other combinations, but this wine just loves seared scallops.”
Who are we to argue?