Descripción

Este vino representa el patrimonio único y genuino de los viñedos que se asientan entre los bosques de Euskadi. Ostoki significa en euskera 'lugar de hojas'. Luis Moya nombra así a este vino en homenaje a esas hojas que caen en otoño sobre su viñedo, provenientes de los robles y encinas que comparten espacio con las cepas de Garnacha que dan lugar a este tinto.

Ficha técnica

La bodega
Tipo
Tinto
Añada
2017
Grado
15.0% vol.
Producción
400 botellas
Subzona
Pamplona
Variedad
100% Garnacha
Origen
Vino de España

Cata

Nariz
Cereza y violetas.
Boca
En boca, paso fino y elegante, con cierta rusticidad.
Temperatura de servicio
Entre 12 y 14 ºC.

Viñedo y elaboración

Edad
70 años.
Suelo
Arenisco-calcáreo.
Rendimiento
2,5 kilos por cepa.
Cosecha
Vendimia manual en cajas de 16 kilos.
Vinificación
Fermentación con levaduras indígenas.
Envejecimiento
Crianza de 6 meses en barrica de roble navarro de 300 litros.
Embotellado
Tuvo lugar en diciembre de 2018.

Opinión de los críticos

The Wine Advocate:

The only wine I tasted from 2018 was the 2018 Ostoki, Garnacha from one of the few remaining vineyards that were used to produce the old red txakoli from Pamplona. 2018 was a higher-yielding year, and the grapes ripened slowly and managed to keep very good freshness (the bottled wine has a pH of 3.26). The vineyard is thought to be around 80 years of age, and like all the old vineyards, it's mostly Garnacha but also has some individual vines of other varieties, such as Tempranillo, Mazuela, Garnatxa Roya, Garnatxa Blanca, Monastrell, Viura and Moscatel. It fermented in stainless steel with indigenous yeasts and matured in one used 300-liter oak barrel and 54-liter glass demijohns for 10 months. This wine is sold with no appellation of origin. It's the most extreme and radical of the wines I tasted from Luis Moya, a young wine with a bright color and a wild nose of herbs, berries and flowers. The palate is sharp and has pungent flavors and acidity. It's not a wine for all palates, but it has lots of character. I loved it! Only 600 bottles were filled in January 2020.