Region and Vineyards
Quinta do Crasto sits in Douro, a dramatic valley where schistous slopes, intense summer light, and wide day-to-night temperature swings help build colour, tannin, and aromatic definition. The 2018 growing season began unusually wet after a very dry winter, bringing mildew pressure around flowering and fruit set, then turned hot and dry through August, allowing excellent canopy function and steady ripening.
Fruit for this wine comes from the estate's best Tinta Roriz plots, with 35-year-old vines trained on traditional patamares terraces. These terraced vineyards span multiple exposures (east, south, west, and north) around 300 m altitude, helping preserve freshness while achieving full phenolic maturity, a key reason the finished wine shows both structure and lift.
Winemaking
Made from 100% Tinta Roriz, the grapes are brought in small 22 kg boxes and rigorously selected. After complete destemming and a gentle crush, fermentation takes place in temperature-controlled stainless-steel tanks, prioritising clean fruit expression and controlled extraction. Once alcoholic fermentation is complete, the wine is gently pressed, preserving supple texture while keeping tannins precise.
Ageing follows for 18 months in French oak barrels, adding seasoning rather than dominance: cocoa, subtle spice, and a more composed frame for the Douro's natural density. Bottled in January 2021, it sits at 14.5% abv with a firm structural core (total acidity 5.3 g/L; pH 3.74), aligning perfectly with the wine's stated aim of concentration plus freshness.
Tasting Notes
- Color: Deep ruby, vivid and saturated to the rim.
- Aroma: Excellent intensity with cocoa, gum cistus (rockrose), and fresh wild berries, edged by discreet oak spice.
- Palate: Enchanting entry that expands into impressive volume and tense, high-quality tannins; solid structure, excellent freshness, and a persistent, characterful finish.
Did you know?
In Portugal, Tinta Roriz is widely used as a local name for Tempranillo (also known as Aragonez in some regions), and in Douro it can deliver both generous fruit and serious, ageworthy tannin when grown on terraces and handled with careful extraction.
Wine Pairing Ideas
- Braised Iberian pork cheeks: The wine's firm tannins and cocoa-spice notes love slow-cooked richness, while the fresh finish keeps the pairing lively.
- Duck breast with cherry reduction: Echoes the wild-berry profile and lets the wine's structure frame the duck's silky fat.
- Grilled lamb with rosemary and black olives: Herbal, savoury accents amplify the Douro character, and the oak seasoning complements char and smoke.
- Mushroom risotto with aged hard cheese: Umami meets structure; the wine's tension and persistence cut through creamy texture beautifully.