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Six-Pack · Spanish Reds · Spring Pop-Up 2026

Viva España

Six Spanish bottles that prove great wine doesn’t require a great occasion — or a great budget

These are the wines you open on a Wednesday. No occasion needed. No explanation required.

Spain has more land under vine than any country on earth, and a seemingly endless capacity for producing wines of genuine character at prices that make the French wince. This pack covers three corners of the country — Jumilla, Bierzo, and Alicante — and six bottles united by one quality: they are all considerably better than they have any right to be at this price.

🌹 The Bottles

1

Bodega Luzon 2020 Luzon Verde

Jumilla · Monastrell · 2020

The opener. Pour it without ceremony.

Jumilla sits in the sun-baked southeast of Spain, where Monastrell — the grape the French call Mourvèdre — produces wines of remarkable depth and warmth. The Luzon Verde is the accessible, fruit-forward face of that grape: dark cherry, violet, a touch of wild herbs and a finish that invites the next glass. The bottle you reach for first because it asks nothing of you.

2

Vinos de Arganza 2021 Mencia Lagar de Robla

Bierzo · Mencía · 2021

Bierzo on a budget — and genuinely impressive.

Bierzo is the cooler, greener northwest Spain that most people haven’t discovered yet — which means the prices haven’t caught up. Mencía, the indigenous red grape here, produces wines of real freshness and character: raspberry, violet, a little earthiness and a brightness that sets it apart entirely from the southern Spanish style. This is the most elegant and refreshing bottle in the pack.

3

Casa Balaguer 2019 El Vivero Garnacha

Alicante · Old Vine Garnacha · 2019

Old vines, young energy.

El Vivero means “the nursery,” but there is nothing young about these Garnacha vines. Old roots in the Alicante limestone produce concentrated, perfumed wine with a character that no young vine can replicate. Strawberry, dried herbs, a hint of garrigue and a warmth that is pure Mediterranean sun. Serve it slightly cool.

4

Ego Bodegas 2018 Gorú Verde

Jumilla · Monastrell · 2018

Fifty-year-old bush vines. Ninety-plus points.

Ego Bodegas farms fifty-year-old Monastrell bush vines in Jumilla and produces wines that regularly earn ninety-plus points from the major critics — which makes the price almost embarrassing. The Gorú Verde is dense, dark and seriously structured: blackberry, espresso, a hint of leather, and tannins that mean business. Open it with something that can stand up to it.

5

Bodegas Olivares 2016 Altos de la Hoya

Jumilla · Monastrell · 2016

Jumilla’s old vine secret — now with some bottle age.

Eight years of age have done beautiful things to this wine. What was once a powerful, tannic Monastrell has softened into something genuinely complex — dark dried fruit, tobacco, a savory earthiness and a finish that lingers long after you expected it to stop. Olivares farms old vines at altitude, which preserves freshness in a region that can easily produce overripe wines. This one got everything right.

6

Bodegas Ego 2020 El Goru 38 Barrels Jumilla

Jumilla · Monastrell · 2020 · 38 barrels produced

The finale. Thirty-eight barrels of something very good indeed.

Only 38 barrels of this wine were made — which is a very small number. Bodegas Ego reserves this label for their most concentrated, most carefully selected fruit, and the result is a Monastrell of real intensity and precision. Rich, structured, and deeply flavored, with dark plum, spice and a persistence that marks it as the most serious bottle in the pack. Open it last, or save it entirely. Either choice is the right one.

What’s included

Bodega Luzon 2020 Luzon Verde
Vinos de Arganza 2021 Mencia Lagar de Robla
Casa Balaguer 2019 El Vivero Garnacha
Ego Bodegas 2018 Gorú Verde
Bodegas Olivares 2016 Altos de la Hoya
Bodegas Ego 2020 El Goru 38 Barrels Jumilla

Pick-up available Fri–Sun, May 1–3

Six bottles. One country. Infinite excuses.

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