Bodegas Juan Gil Silver Label 2022
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Parker
Robert



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This wine has been produced with Monastrell grapes from old vineyards with low yield, planted in limestone and chalky soils. This results in a deep purple/black color wine, with explosive aromas of ripe currant, red berries and smoked notes. Rich, powerful and voluminous on the attack, silken and juicy in the mid-palate with excellent length and persistence, and a long spicy well-balanced finish including toasted notes provided by the French wood.
Perfect to pair with game meat or creamy rices, stewed vegetables, mushrooms, game and poultry, casserole, fish and sauce seafood, smoked, blue and cured cheeses, grilled and/or barbecued white and red meat, roast lamb, pork or beef.
Professional Ratings
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Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
The 2022 Silver Label now shows the name on the label (and also "Etiqueta Plateada" in Spanish). It's their first wine in their new era, which started in 2002, a wine that aims to promote the quality and potential of Monastrell. It matured in new and second-use French oak barrels for one year, but they were looking for lower toast and less impact of the wood in the wine than earlier vintages when it was 100% new oak. It has a paler color and a subtler and more floral nose, keeping the poise and showing surprisingly fresh for the conditions of the year. It's ripe, reflecting the warm and dry weather, with 15% alcohol but very good freshness, coming through as balanced and harmonious, clean and pure. This is a bargain and a success for the year, a champion in drinkability.
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Bodegas Juan Gil is the Gil Family Estate's flagship winery, founded in 1916 by Juan Gil Giménez. Over 107 years, the winery has been consolidated and improved, applying technological advancements to the traditional knowledge passed down through the years. Today the 4th and 5th generations of the Gil family run the winery and group. Located in Southeastern Spain, about 60 miles from the Mediterranean coast, the region experiences a continental climate which is quite extreme: summers are hot with intense sun and winter is long and cold. Diurnal temperature fluctuations are also extreme and rainfall is limited to about 12 inches per year. The vineyards are planted between 2,000 and 2,800 feet above sea level on sandy and rocky limestone soils that are very poor in nutrients, but have a great capacity to hold what little rain does fall. Organic and dry farming is quite typical in Jumilla due to these conditions. Jumilla is known for Monastrell, with over 80% of vineyards planted with it. The Gil family's vineyards are between 40 and 100 years old with very low yields (aprox. 2,200 lb/ac). Monastrell is a thick-skin grape that thrives in the harsh conditions of the climate and terrain of Jumilla, leading to wines with great structure and intense color and complex aromas.
All of the Gil family's estate vineyards are dry-farmed without the use of any pesticides or herbicides and the winery is fully solar powered and "Zero-Waste" (by product is composted, water recycled). The addition of sulfites is kept to the bare minimum to conserve the wines and no other additives are used. The Gil family's commitment to sustainable farming and winemaking doesn't stop there; they are also Gold members of the International Wineries for Climate Action, an international organization which holds the ambitious goal of reaching Net Zero emissions by 2050, all of which requires investments in renewable energy, further shifting agricultural and business practices to reduce their carbon footprint, as well as instilling a culture of sustainability across all aspects of their business.

Full of ripe fruit, and robust, earthy goodness, Mourvèdre is actually of Spanish provenance, where it still goes by the name Monastrell or Mataro. It is better associated however, with the Red Blends of the Rhône, namely Chateauneuf-du-Pape. Mourvèdre shines on its own in Bandol and is popular both as a single varietal wine in blends in the New World regions of Australia, California and Washington. Somm Secret—While Mourvèdre has been in California for many years, it didn’t gain momentum until the 1980s when a group of California winemakers inspired by the wines of the Rhône Valley finally began to renew a focus on it.

Famous for the robust and earthy, black-fruit dominated, Monastrell (known as Mourvedre in France), Jumilla is an arid and hot region in southeastern Spain. Its vine yields tend to be torturously low but this can create wines of exceptional intensity and flavor. Quality combined with accessible price points give the region great recognition on international markets far and wide.
The reds from Jumilla are heady and spicy, packed with fruit and show aromas of dried licorice and herbs. If you like Syrah, Grenache or Pinot noir, a red wine from Jumilla would be a perfect next choice!