2016 Artadi San Lazaro is sold out.

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Pingus and Artadi: Rocking the 100pt Boat

Wine Bottle
  • 97 pts James Suckling
    97 pts JS
  • 96 pts Wine Advocate
    96 pts RPWA
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2016 Artadi San Lazaro 750 ml

Sold Out

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  • Curated by unrivaled experts
  • Choose your delivery date
  • Temperature controlled shipping options
  • Get credited back if a wine fails to impress

From Rioja, with Burgundian Attention to Terroir

Most legendary Spanish reds, like Ribera del Duero’s Vega Sicilia and Rioja’s La Rioja Alta, took generations to earn their exalted status among the Old World greats. 

Then there’s Artadi. The world-class Rioja* benchmark estate stands alongside $1000 Dominio de Pingus as one of the cult Spanish wines that have elevated the Tempranillo grape and achieved an insatiable demand in just a few decades. Not only has Artadi more than matched the legacy Spanish producers in stature, but by distinguishing themselves as one of the premier expressions of Spanish terroir, Artadi has become one of most critically lauded and sought-after wines of Europe.

We’re thrilled to share Artadi’s gorgeous San Lazaro with you today. 

Artadi’s 2016 San Lázaro hails from a miniscule plot of just four acres planted at over 1900 feet in 1956. The vines, which grow in fine sand over limestone soil that dates back millions of years, are farmed organically and hand-picked, yielding Tempranillo of deep black fruits, silky body, and beautiful finesse. As Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate enthused in their 96-point review: “In short, this is phenomenal.”

It’s difficult to overstate the importance of Artadi and Juan Carlos López de Lacalle, who recognized how great the Artadi vineyards could be back when they were part of a cooperative of thirteen growers. He purchased the estate, changed the philosophy, and began making single-vineyard bottlings from the separate sites. Located in arid Rioja Alavesa with the snow-capped Sierra de Cantabria looming to the north, Artadi now consists of 204 acres of diverse vineyards.

Let us explain the * above, because while the quality of the Artadi wines is remarkable, the changes they could catalyze are seismic. Rioja has long opted for one regional identity and chosen to focus on aging regimen—using terms like “Crianza” and “Reserva” on their labels—while shunning the names of specific villages and vineyards. Artadi sees this an affront to the region’s spectacular terroirs, and finds the idea that a consumer can walk into a supermarket and purchase a six-dollar Rioja Reserva incredibly damaging to the region’s reputation.

So Artadi left. It was a move that, for producers that rely on the Rioja name, would have been extremely reckless. But Artadi has established such a reputation with their terroir-driven single-vineyard wines that the decision has done nothing to quell their demand. And the critical praise has never been higher.