[These bottles were provided as samples for review purposes.]
Call it countercyclical marketing or just really bad weather judgment, but I’ve managed to hold off on writing up a patio-wine-themed review duet until the week when we’re due to get utterly deluged with rain. In the event that you’re soaking wet while reading this, consider it a faint flicker of hope for the future. So far the forecast has been, as usual, wrong, which will hopefully allow you to disregard this entire paragraph.
I wanted to write up these two wines together because they share both a similar grape source (Garnacha, better known in the New World as Grenache) and a similar vision: to be a cheap and cheerful source of quality fun out of a bottle. Of course, they also share a producer, Miguel Torres, whose fifth generation family estate has become one of the most solid wine bets out there, a name that evokes trust regardless of the region, country, grape or style of the wine behind the label. These relatively new releases are twin 2013 Torres bottlings of Garnacha-based wines: the De Casta Rose, which blends Garnacha with Carinena (Carignan), and the 5G, a 100% Garnacha representing five generations of the Torres family tree and the winery’s constant hunt for perfection in that grape. Both are value-priced (under $15 and under $20 respectively) and both are meant for easy and early enjoyment. Read the rest of this entry »



