The Story
The Super Carmenère of Montes
This superb wine represents a whole new dimension for Carmenère, the long-lost grape variety that recently resurfaced in Chile after being presumed extinct in Bordeaux, its original home. In Chile, we consider it our ‘signature’ variety and call it the ‘Jurassic Park’ grape that returned from the past.
Montes were pioneers on the Chilean wine scene when we created our super-premium wines: the Montes Alpha range, and icons Montes Alpha M and Montes Folly. Montes also led the way to quality by planting vineyards on steep hillsides. But we also know when to wait.
Aurelio Montes held back on releasing a Carmenère, preferring to take his time and work with the ‘new’ variety until satisfied that his wine would be a top contender, the very best Montes could produce. It was worth the wait: this beauty (a blend of 92% Carmenère and 8% Petit Verdot, aged for 18 months in new French oak barrels) is touched by the wings of an angel ... a purple angel!
VINEYARDS
The grapes destined for our Purple Angel come from vineyards in Marchigüe and Apalta in the Colchagua Valley. The soils are of granitic origin with variations in terms of clay content, organic matter, depth, and especially in the types of rock found, which are of fluvial or glacial origin, which provides an idea of the diversity of soils in our vineyards.
Apalta’s soils are very heterogeneous, with zones that are highly influenced by the Tinguiririca River and others influenced by floods and the detachment of material from high in the mountains that delineate the valley. The soils are generally deep in the lowlands and shallower at the foot of the mountains and higher areas. In the case of the Carmenere, the vineyards are preferably located in the flat zones, where the soil is deeper and has moderate moisture retention.
Marchigüe has flatter areas and low-to-moderate hills. The soils are shallow, and in some cases no more than 60 mm (24 in), with medium clay content and a high capacity for water retention. The vineyards are located in the flat areas.
The vineyards are located in the zones with lower slopes, planted at a density of 5,555 plants/hectare (2,250 plants/ acre), and managed in a double guyot system with the aim of producing yields of approximately 3.5–4.0 tons/hectare (1.4–1.6 tons/acre). The leaves closest to the bunches are severely pulled in early January to fully expose the grapes for even ripening and, more importantly, to reduce the amount of pyrazines that are characteristic of the variety.