Tasting Notes and Scores
Speaking as someone who has tasted many 2013 Bordeaux wines this year, at the 10 Years On point, this is an exceptional example of the vintage, nuanced, compex, light on its feet, singular and utterly delicious. This is what oyster shell salinity means in a wine, so savoury that it has edges of soy, soot, smoke, lightly smoked spice, fattening up to creme de cassis, blackberry pastille and liqourice through the mid palate, concentrated with huge length and grip, and a crushed rose petal finish. Just so good. Waves of flavour keep you glued to the glass. 33 year old vines, planted 2,222v/ha, up to 900 altitude. The ageing process is a thing of beauty also - Unico starts in barrel for the first year, then the blend begins before part of the wine is put back into barrel and other parts into larger casks. At the end of the second year they decide upon the final blend, and back into casks for another three years, racking once a year, then finally into bottle for 4.5 years before release, adding up to somewhere close to 10 years after harvest before it appears on the market (with the magnum version held back until 2015).
Jane Anson - Inside Bordeaux
Jane Anson - Inside Bordeaux
2023-02-07 00:00:00
Wine Enthusiast
Wine Enthusiast
2024-07-01 00:00:00
This has a polished and complex nose of poached plums, dark cherries, tea leaves, graphite, milk chocolate and a touch of caramel. It’s medium-to full-bodied with firm yet creamy tannins. Caressing, seductive and ripe, but with underlying freshness. 97% tempranillo and 3% cabernet sauvignon. Tasted from magnum. The normal bottle will be released 2023 and the magnum in 2025. Try after 2023.
James Suckling
I had already tasted the 2013 Único from magnum in a vertical tasting of all the magnums ever produced and was quite impressed by it (and the still unreleased 2014 that should be available in 2024). 2013 saw a rainy harvest, and the wine is subtle, elegant and fresh, complex, silky and with precision. The wine matured in 225-liter barrels in an initial phase and then in 22,000-liter oak vats until it was bottled in June 2019. This year, the final blend was 97% Tinto Fino and 3% Cabernet Sauvignon with a little less alcohol, 14%, and a pH of 3.78 and 5.2 grams of acidity, fresh and balanced, more elegant and subtler. Único often transcends the character of the vintage and doesn't follow the norm in the region, and the 2013 is a good example of that. It was a very rainy and complicated vintage; they harvested quite quickly to avoid botrytis, and while other people waited for concentration, they did not, and their approach clearly paid back. It's aromatic and floral, less dense than the 2012, subtler, more expressive and more elegant. It's clean and fresh, tasty, with very fine tannins. It's a big surprise for the vintage and one of the finest Únicos in the last few years. 76,476 bottles, 3,658 magnums and some larger formats produced, the shortest crop since 2009.
Luis Gutiérrez
Wine Advocate
2023-01-31 16:50:00
This vintage of Único may not make very old bones, but it's a delight to drink now and will continue to evolve for at least another decade. Reflecting the cooler, wetter growing season in 2013, it's a graceful, perfumed, balsamic Tinto Fino with earth and tobacco leaf aromas, sweet, almost gamey fruit and a leafy undertone from 3% Cabernet Sauvignon.
Tim Atkin MW
I had already tasted the 2013 Único from magnum in a vertical tasting of all the magnums ever produced and was quite impressed by it (and the still unreleased 2014 that should be available in 2024). 2013 saw a rainy harvest, and the wine is subtle, elegant and fresh, complex, silky and with precision. The wine matured in 225-liter barrels in an initial phase and then in 22,000-liter oak vats until it was bottled in June 2019. This year, the final blend was 97% Tinto Fino and 3% Cabernet Sauvignon with a little less alcohol, 14%, and a pH of 3.78 and 5.2 grams of acidity, fresh and balanced, more elegant and subtler. Único often transcends the character of the vintage and doesn't follow the norm in the region, and the 2013 is a good example of that. It was a very rainy and complicated vintage; they harvested quite quickly to avoid botrytis, and while other people waited for concentration, they did not, and their approach clearly paid back. It's aromatic and floral, less dense than the 2012, subtler, more expressive and more elegant. It's clean and fresh, tasty, with very fine tannins. It's a big surprise for the vintage and one of the finest Únicos in the last few years. 76,476 bottles, 3,658 magnums and some larger formats produced, the shortest crop since 2009.
Luis Gutierrez, Wine Advocate
Wine Advocate
Look out for this on release, with its typical aromatics of red berries, violets and balsamic. It’s young, no doubt, entering with redcurrant fruit and underneath a bold line of tannin. It reflects the complicated vintage, but will come through in time. Cool rainy spring, normal summer with ‘the odd storm’, before a rainy end to the harvest. Yield 25.2hl/ha. Aged one year in new barrels, six months in used barrels, then 42 months in large-format vats. 76,476 bottles, 3,658 magnums, 362 double magnums, 59 Imperials and six Salmanazars. Tasted from magnum.
Decanter World Wine Awards
Decanter World Wine Awards
2022-09-06 00:00:00
97% Tempranillo, 3% Cabernet Sauvignon. For the first part of ageing they use 15–30% US oak and used oak can be 30–50% of all used. They have one sent of tanks for malo and others for ageing. Winemaker Gonzalo Iturriaga described 2013 as ‘a horrible vintage with plenty of rot’. The DO called it ‘normal’, their lowest ranking. They picked quite early and the wine is much more open than the 2012. They tried for finesse and complexity. The more structured lots always go into Único. Some wine goes back into used barrels and they use lots of US oak for this sort of vintage. In the third year of ageing they make another assemblage which goes into vat for three more years. They want to rack only once a year and may blend in up to 15% of other, younger vintages to refresh the blend. Then it goes into bottle for 4.5 years. Quite small production because of their strict selection. Iturriaga says he feels more responsible for this 2013 than his predecessor Xavier Ausàs, who oversaw it for only three years! Nose lacks the usual magic intensity of Único. A little tighter and less rich than usual but there’s a fantastic texture. More accessible than some and there is certainly the expected intensity of fruit though it’s currently a bit dry on the end. (JR)
Jancis Robinson
Jancis Robinson
2023-01-24 00:00:00
Castilla y Leon
View loose bottle(s) available.
Castilla y Leon
View loose bottle(s) available.
Castilla y Leon
View loose bottle(s) available.
Castilla y Leon
View 6 pack case(s) available.
Pricing includes duty and VAT.
Want To
get In TouchPlease contact the LiveTrade team today for more information or to book a demo.
Contact us