Cume do Avia

GaliciaSpain
Cume do Avia
Cume do Avia

This website contains no AI-generated text or images.
All writing and photography are original works by Ted Vance.

East of Spain’s Rías Baixas lies the Ribeiro D.O., one of the country’s most historic wine regions internationally known for both red and white wines for nearly a thousand years. Here, a band of idealistic young brothers and cousins left city life to reclaim their family’s abandoned land, Eida de Mouro, and recapture their family’s ancient history. Their label, Cume do Avia, began nearly two decades ago, and their geologically complex mountainside vineyards are composed of granodiorite, schist, slate, and gneiss bedrock, clay and sand topsoil, and have nearly twenty indigenous grape varieties planted with ancient massale selections and overlook the Avia and Miño Rivers. They bottle single variety and blended wines of intense freshness, detail, and authenticity, with the reds led by the graceful queen of Galician red grapes, Brancellao, along with the unstoppably vigorous Caíño Longo, and the ink-black and deliciously savage Sousón. Their whites are led by soft Treixadura, with a supporting cast of high-acid varieties, like Albariño, Lado, and Loureiro.
Colleita 8 White

Cume do Avia - 2021 Colleita 9, Blanco

Price: $30.00
Size: 750ml
Availability: 

24+ in stock

Type of Wine: White
Grape(s): 53% Treixadura, 17% Albariño, 14%, Loureira 13%, Lado, 3% Caíño Branco
Style: Mineral, Elegant and Aromatic

GROWER OVERVIEW

East of Spain’s Rías Baixas lies the Ribeiro D.O., one of the country’s most historic wine regions internationally known for both red and white wines for nearly a thousand years. Here, a band of idealistic young brothers and cousins left city life to reclaim their family’s abandoned land, Eida de Mouro, and recapture their family’s ancient history. Their label, Cume do Avia, began nearly two decades ago, and their geologically complex mountainside vineyards are composed of granodiorite, schist, slate, and gneiss bedrock, clay and sand topsoil, and have nearly twenty indigenous grape varieties planted with ancient massale selections and overlook the Avia and Miño Rivers. They bottle single variety and blended wines of intense freshness, detail, and authenticity, with the reds led by the graceful queen of Galician red grapes, Brancellao, along with the unstoppably vigorous Caíño Longo, and the ink-black and deliciously savage Sousón. Their whites are led by soft Treixadura, with a supporting cast of high-acid varieties, like Albariño, Lado, and Loureiro.

VINEYARD DETAILS

Colleita Blanco comes from Treixadura (60%), Albariño (30%), Lado, Caiño Branco, and Loureira Blanco, planted between 2008 and 2013 at elevations of 250-350m on south-facing exposures. The vineyards range from flat to very steep terraces on a mix of metamorphic (schist, slate, gneiss) and igneous (granite, granodiorite) bedrock, with a topsoil mix of very rocky sand, silt, and clay.

CELLAR NOTES

Colleita 10 Branco goes through a natural fermentation with maximum temperatures between 18-23°C in steel and are aged 5 months in large, ancient (restored) chestnut foudres. Before bottling, it is lightly filtered.

About The Wine

Freshness, elegance and purity, like the guys at Cume do Avia caught the Spring in a bottle, this blend of five different indigenous grapes leap past any notable varietal nuances with hardly a fingerprint left on it by its makers. The nose dives straight into the soils, the surrounding grasses, forests and cool, foggy air. The alcohol is usually less than 11%, making it the great lead into a meal.

(See a 3D map of the vineyard here. The vineyards are only to the left of the main road.)