Skip to content

95-Point Rioja That Actually Gets Opened: The Return of Smart Gran Reserva

In a market where consumers are trading down but still expect quality, one category is quietly outperforming: well-priced, high-scoring Rioja Gran Reserva.

Not the kind that sits in a cellar for decades, but the kind that actually gets poured, reordered, and recommended.

A 95-Point Rioja That Breaks the Mold

The 2015 Manzanos Gran Reserva Rioja has been awarded 95 points by Wine Enthusiast — placing it firmly among top-performing wines in its category.

But what makes this wine truly relevant today is not just the score — it’s how it drinks.

Aromatically, it delivers:

  • Balsamic oak
  • Dried plums
  • Licorice
  • Sweet spices, clove, tobacco, and cedar

On the palate, it shows:

  • Elegant, smooth tannins
  • well-integrated body and acidity
  • A long, balanced finish

This combination — depth + drinkability — is exactly what modern consumers are looking for.

Built in the Vineyard, Not Just the Cellar

What sits behind the glass is equally important.

This wine is sourced from:

  • Old bush-trained vineyards in Azagra and San Adrián
  • Complemented by high-altitude Garnacha from Yerga (Aldeanueva de Ebro)
  • South-facing slopes with clay-limestone soils and gypsum

These conditions create:
👉 Naturally low pH
👉 Strong acidity
👉 High aging potential

Even in warm vintages, the wine retains freshness and structure — a key differentiator in Rioja today.

Precision Winemaking Meets Classic Rioja Aging

The production process reinforces this balance between tradition and precision:

  • Hand-harvested in the morning
  • Fermentation in small stainless steel tanks (max 25°C)
  • 5 manual pump-overs daily
  • 14 days total maceration

Then the key factor:

👉 36 months in French and American oak barrels (4–6 years old)
👉 Followed by minimum 2 years in bottle

After barrel aging, the wine is refined in concrete tanks, enhancing integration and texture.

This is not industrial Rioja — this is controlled, long-cycle winemaking.

A Classic Rioja Blend That Overdelivers

The wine is a traditional Rioja blend:

  • Tempranillo → structure and fruit
  • Garnacha → body and warmth
  • Mazuelo & Graciano → acidity and longevity

The result is a Gran Reserva that delivers:
👉 Complexity without heaviness
👉 Maturity without oxidation
👉 Power with balance

From Cellar Wine to Retail Performer

What makes this wine especially relevant in today’s market is its dual positioning:

For consumers:

  • Complex but approachable
  • Ready to drink now
  • Recognizable Rioja profile

For retailers:

  • 95-point score (strong selling signal)
  • Premium category with accessible pricing
  • High perceived value

This is not just a “special occasion” wine.

It’s a repeat-purchase Gran Reserva.

Food Pairing That Drives Real Consumption

Unlike many structured reds, this wine is versatile at the table.

It pairs naturally with:

  • Duck
  • Pork
  • Pasta dishes
  • Salads with cheese

That versatility matters — because wines that pair easily sell faster and reorder better.

The Bigger Picture: Rioja’s Strategic Comeback

Gran Reserva Rioja is no longer a slow-moving category.

It’s becoming:

  • smart premium alternative
  • high-margin category for retailers
  • bridge between casual and serious wine drinkers

And wines like Manzanos Gran Reserva are leading that shift.

Final Thought

In today’s wine market, the winners are not just the highest-scoring wines.

They are the ones that deliver:

👉 Authenticity
👉 Consistency
👉 Real value

The 2015 Manzanos Gran Reserva Rioja sits exactly at that intersection.

And that’s why it doesn’t just score well.
It sells.

Louis Pasteur

Louis Pasteur is a passionate researcher and writer dedicated to exploring the science, culture, and craftsmanship behind the world’s finest beers and beverages. With a deep appreciation for fermentation and innovation, Louis bridges the gap between tradition and technology. Celebrating the art of brewing while uncovering modern strategies that shape the alcohol industry. When not writing for Strategies.beer, Louis enjoys studying brewing techniques, industry trends, and the evolving landscape of global beverage markets. His mission is to inspire brewers, brands, and enthusiasts to create smarter, more sustainable strategies for the future of beer.