Juancho Asenjo, "La Sobremesa" at www.elmundovino.com: "The wines by Equipo Navazos are a cultural contribution of the highest importance."
Jamie Goode, www.wineanorak.com: "Equipo Navazos make mindblowing Sherries. I’m drinking one at the moment, and it’s a life-enhancing experience."
Jancis Robinson, Sherry as Montrachet – revelations. www.jancisrobinson.com: "They are not cheap. But then nor is Grand Cru burgundy."
Our notes:
If you have had the chance to taste through our range of Sherries with resident Sherry nut (Stuart El Sherrief Northey), you will no doubt be aware of the hard work we have put in to our offering over the last 5+ years. It is a selection of Sherries of which we are very proud. Firstly we managed to secure Argueso, one of the finest producers of Manzanilla and makers of an authentic, briny, citric style that offers an alternative to the more full bodied, warmer style that you see more often in our market. Then came Toro Albala, a truly great Montilla producer that bottles a full range of outstanding Sherries (starting with the brilliant value Fino Electrico) and vintage Pedro Ximénez, going back to 1910. If there is a better Pedro producer, we have not tasted it (thank you Steve Metzler!) Equipo Navazos completes the picture and takes it to another level.
Equipo Navazos is perhaps the most significant thing to have happened in the world of Sherry for a very long time. It has some of the most influential people in the fine wine world raving about the quality of these wines, and they are talking about the quality first and the fact that they are Sherries second. These are wines to make Sherry sexy again. They are also as rare as hens’ teeth and are being sought after with the same urgency that wealthy Burgundy collectors seek out the wines of DRC or the greatest Montrachet. This makes sense: these wines are every bit as profound, deep, long and complex as any bottle of DRC (and that is no insult to DRC!)
The Equipo Navazos project was started by a group of Spanish Sherry lovers led by wine writer and Sherry guru Jesús Barquín, regular contributor to World of Fine Wine and Professor of Criminology at the University of Granada. These “Sherryphiles” were aware, through their own extensive tastings, of a treasure trove of brilliant Sherries that were sitting, unbottled, in the bodegas of Jerez, Sanlucar and Montilla. Bodegas often have butts or casks (bota) of Sherry whose small volume makes it commercially unviable to bottle separately. The concept behind Equipo Navazos (Team Navazos) was to select specific bota of such wines for individual bottling, unfiltered or lightly filtered (Sherry is typically put through a very firm filtration). The wines were selected for their quality and for their distinct personalities, which would have been a shame to lose in a large blend. Initially these bottlings were intended only for a select group of friends and professionals. Yet the response was so enthusiastic that it became very clear to those behind Equipo Navazos that something important could come of this idea; namely that the opportunity existed to remind the world of just how great Sherry could be. To this end the project was expanded to allow for a small ‘commercial’ release of certain wines to a handful of international markets. After three years, Australia started to get a tiny allocation.
The Navazos Sherries are drawn from several bodegas, and represent a variety of styles: Manzanilla, Fino, Palo Cortado, Oloroso, Pedro Ximénez, Cream and even a brandy. The wines are bottled in limited series, in successive numbered editions, dated and named “La Bota de….” (the cask of…). The date of each saca, or racking, has been precisely stated on the label so that it is possible to compare editions of the same solera. This also enables precise tracking of the evolution of the wines, as these wines are expected to evolve in the bottle (it’s Sherry, but not as we know it). These are once off bottlings and once the bottles for each La Bota… release are spoken for, there are no more.
To give you an idea of the sensation these wines caused in Spain; in 2008, when the first wines were released commercially, Spain’s best known wine writer, Jose Peñín, named one of them (La Bota de Fino, Macharnudo Alto No 7) as his Wine of the Year. In the other major “wine of the year” award in Spain, voted on by an eminent panel of 60 wine critics, sommeliers and wine merchants, Equipo Navazos' La Bota de Palo Cortado, Bota Punta and La Bota de Manzanilla, Las Cañas were voted second and fourth best wines of the year respectively. Those critics in the West lucky enough to taste the wines have also got very excited, as you can see from some of the quotes above.
Not only has Jesús Barquín set the world alight with the wines released under the La Bota labels, but he is also helping to challenge a great many Sherry conventions. You will see from some of our notes from time to time that Barquín and his team think that quality Sherry benefits from bottle age (both before and after opening). Even true Manzanilla, according to Barquín, should be given at least six months to recover from bottle shock and simply evolves, rather than deteriorates. Barquin is not talking about conventional, heavilly filtered sherry, but rather unfiltered or lightly filtered, full bodied style produced by Equipo Navazos. These wines, due to their complexity and intensity, will be best enjoyed in white wine glasses. At any rate, we do not recommend the typical copitas nor any other little glasses for wines of this quality.
We have a very limited number of wines available at any time, so please contact Stuart Northey or your accounts manager if you are interested.
PRESS Max Allen reviews Equipo Navazos in The Australian: 15th Oct 2011
This is something radically new or radically old, depending on your perspective. It's a vintage 'white' but made under flor. It is produced with the support of Quim Vila of Equipo Navazos and Dirk... read more
This is something radically new or radically old, depending on your perspective. It's a vintage 'white' but made under flor. It is produced with the support of Quim Vila of Equipo Navazos and Dirk... read more
Disgorged October 2011). I've has some pretty sceptical looks when trying to explain this wine, so I'm going to defer the written clarification to an MW with loftier credentials than my own. Jancis... read more
(Saca of October 2011, D.O. Manzanilla, Sanlúcar de Barrameda) Best served around 12º C, in Zalto white wine glasses. This is a single-vineyard, terroir-driven Manzanilla, with grapes sourced from... read more
(Disgorged October 2011) I've has some pretty sceptical looks when trying to explain this wine, so I'm going to defer the written clarification to an MW with loftier credentials than my own. Jancis... read more
(Saca de March 2011) La Bota de Fino (27) "Macharnudo Alto" is the new release from the soleras that already filled previous editions numbered 2, 7, 15, and 18. The Navazos team were pleasantly... read more
La Bota de Amontillado no. 23 is simply one of the greatest wines we have ever imported. It is a very old, highly limited wine from a bodega in the ancient "de la Balsa" quarter in Sanlúcar de... read more
(Saca of October 2011, D.O. Jerez-Xérès-Sherry) This incredibly complex wine is sourced from the La Guita Bodega in Sanlúcar de Barrameda. The Bodega houses several Amontillado soleras, identified... read more
(Saca de March 2011) Another amazing and unique bottling. It is a common occurrence in the traditional Andalusian cellars that the butt located at the end of a row (thus called "bota punta" or... read more
Aged in fino butts, this is one of the most remarkable Brandies we have tried from anywhere in the world. Only the finest wine spirits were slowly aged and mollified to a warm alcoholic degree in... read more