Full Review

Caelesta

Caelesta
2019 Vega Estate, Grenache, Templeton Gap

Pair this wine with:
Beef Cheese Pasta Pork

Category: Grenache

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 15%
89 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$62

Caelesta
2019 Vega Estate, Grenache, Templeton Gap

Pair this wine with:
Beef Cheese Pasta Pork

Category: Grenache

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 15%
Dusty ruby color. Aromas and flavors of milk chocolate covered cherries, plum juice, purple flowers, and acetone with a satiny, crisp, dry medium body and a tingling, stimulating, medium-length finish that exhibits elements of cocoa powder and oolong tea powder, dark chocolate covered dried strawberry, and black pepper with medium, well-integrated, drying tannins and light oak flavor. Broad and slightly brutish with heavy black and purple fruits that will pair nicely with steak and mole sauces.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: milk chocolate covered cherries, plum juice, purple flowers, and acetone
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with elements of cocoa powder and oolong tea powder, dark chocolate covered dried strawberry, and black pepper
Sweetness Sweetness: Dry
Enjoy Enjoy: Now-3 years with food
Recipes Pairing: Baked Ham, Meat Loaf, Lasagna
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Broad and slightly brutish with heavy black and purple fruits that will pair nicely with steak and mole sauces.

The Producer

Caelesta

The Producer

Grenache

Wine Glass Zinfandel.jpg
Serve in a Zinfandel Wine Glass
Grenache is the world's most widely planted red variety, yet its fame is primarily as a blending variety. The most famous examples are in the Rhone Valley as part of Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Gigondas, in Spain (where it is known as Garnacha) in Priorat reds, and in Australia, where it is often blended with Shiraz.

Grenache on its own is a light red wine; indeed there are numerous versions of Grenache rosé from France and Spain' respectively, these wines are Tavel and Navarra Rosé. Tannins are very light and aromas are of wild strawberry, rhubarb and geranium.

There are also small amounts of Grenache grown in Italy (in Sardinia, as Cannonau) and the United States.