Xinomavro — whose name translates literally as "acid black" — is Greece's greatest indigenous red grape and one of the world's finest and least-known varieties. Grown primarily in the Naoussa region of northern Macedonia, it produces wines of formidable structure: deep ruby in colour, intensely aromatic with dried tomato, olive, and spice, and built on a backbone of fine tannin and high acidity that makes it a natural match for long cellaring. Great Xinomavro from producers like Alpha Estate rivals fine Barolo in its complexity and food-matching versatility.
In Turkey, Bogazkere — meaning "throat scraper" — lives up to its dramatic name with wines of dark fruit, firm tannin, and an earthy, mineral depth that reflects the volcanic basalt soils of the Euphrates valley where it grows. Blended with the softer, fruit-forward Öküzgözü, it forms the backbone of Turkey's most interesting red wines. These are serious bottles for serious food: slow-cooked lamb, braised meat, aged hard cheeses.
From Lebanon, the Bekaa Valley estates produce Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon-dominated blends of genuine world-class quality — structured, deep, and built to age in a way that many more famous New World reds cannot match.
What unites all of these wines is their relationship to place and cuisine. They are not made for points, or for international palates, or for shelf appeal in a supermarket. They are made to be consumed with food, at long tables, over conversations that run late into the evening. That's the kind of wine we love and the kind we stock. Free shipping on orders over $300.