Tempranillo
Spain’s great red grape. Foundation of Rioja, Ribera del Duero, and the modern Spanish premium wine category. Also significant in Portugal (Tinta Roriz).
About Tempranillo
Tempranillo is Spain’s most editorially significant red grape variety — the foundation of Rioja (where it’s called Tempranillo), Ribera del Duero (where it’s called Tinto Fino or Tinta del País), Toro (where it’s called Tinta de Toro), and many other Spanish regions. The grape’s defining stylistic challenge is the traditional vs modernist tension: traditional Rioja uses American oak (which contributes distinctive dill and coconut notes) and extended aging in oak before bottling; modernist Rioja uses French oak and shorter aging. Both approaches produce serious wine. Beyond Spain, Tempranillo plays a significant role in Portuguese wine — it’s a major blending grape in Douro Port (where it’s called Tinta Roriz) and in southern Portugal under the name Aragonêů. The grape’s aromatic profile evolves dramatically with age: young Tempranillo shows cherry and plum fruit; aged Tempranillo develops leather, tobacco, dried herbs, and spice. Gran Reserva Rioja from strong vintages can age 20-30+ years.
Variety profile
Also known as
Editorial notes
Tempranillo’s synonyms across Spanish and Portuguese regions create labeling complexity — the same grape appears under at least 5 different names across the peninsula.