2020 Bodegas Taron Cepas Centenarias DOC 12x750ml

  • Competes with Ygay and La Rioja Alta—Without the $$$ Price Tag!
  • 94 Point "Outstanding" Vintage ~Wine Advocate
  • OVW Exclusive Import: We Have the Lowest Price Anywhere!

About the Wine

While wine enthusiasts are dropping $200+ for bottles like Marqués de Murrieta Ygay or La Rioja Alta 890, a small, family-run winery from the northern Rioja villages is crafting wines that rival these legendary bottles—but at a fraction of the price.

Why pay hundreds for the big names when you can get exceptional Rioja from a hidden gem that delivers the same intensity and old-school mastery without the premium markup?

Bodegas Tarón sits in the absolute middle of nowhere—the northernmost edge of Rioja where the Obarenes Mountains meet the sky and tourists never venture. Four tiny villages—Sajazarra, Tirgo, Villaseca, and Cuzcurrita de Río Tirón. These aren’t your typical vacation spots or Instagram hotspots. These are historic villages, where medieval castles still stand guard over vineyards that have been making wine since long before Columbus set sail for the New World.

The story starts with rebellion. A few years back, the farming families in these four villages looked around and realized something infuriating: they were growing some of the finest grapes in all of Rioja, but selling them off to big producers who'd blend them into anonymous bottles and slap corporate labels on them. Meanwhile, those same corporate giants were charging premium prices for wines that weren't any better than what these families could make themselves.

So they made a pact. Pool their best vineyards—nearly 700 hectares of vines averaging over 50 years old—and start making their own wine. Not to get rich, not to build a wine empire, but to honor the generations of knowledge passed down through their families. This wasn't some Silicon Valley startup with venture capital funding. This was four villages saying "enough" to an industry that had forgotten what authentic winemaking looked like.

The families behind Tarón aren't household names, and they like it that way. They're third and fourth-generation grape growers who know every vine by sight, who can predict the weather by watching how their grandfather's favorite vineyard responds to morning mist. They've watched the wine world transform around them—corporate buyouts, consultant winemakers, focus groups determining flavor profiles—while they just kept doing what their families had always done.

These aren't the neat, tidy vineyard rows you see in wine magazines. These are gnarly, bush-trained vines that look like they've been through a war, clinging to rocky clay-limestone soils at 700 meters above sea level. The families at Tarón hand-select only their most ancient, most stubborn vines—the ones that produce pathetically small yields but grapes so concentrated they practically vibrate with intensity.

Here's where the economics become almost insulting to common sense. Those $300 bottles from Marqués de Murrieta? Beautiful wines, legendary estate, deserving of their reputation. That $250 La Rioja Alta 890? An absolute classic that belongs in every serious cellar. But here's what they don't want you to know: the 2020 Taron Cepas Centenarias is made with the same obsessive attention to detail, from vines just as old, on soils just as historic, by families with just as much generational expertise.

The difference isn't quality—it's marketing budgets. While the big houses spend millions on brand building, distributor relationships, and global expansion, the families at Tarón spend their money on things like hand-harvesting in small trailers that can navigate slopes too steep for machines, fermenting in pristine stainless steel, and aging their wine for two full years in new American oak barrels followed by another year and a half in bottle before release.

This is a direct import, which means it bypasses the usual labyrinth of importers, distributors, and retailers who typically triple wine prices between Spain and your local shop. No corporate overlords deciding which markets get priority. No committee meetings determining optimal price points. Just families who've been making wine longer than most countries have existed, finally deciding to put their own name on the bottle.

While the wine world obsesses over famous names and inflated prices, these four villages just keep doing what they've always done: making wine that captures the soul of their land, one bottle at a time. They're not trying to conquer export markets or build lifestyle brands. They're just trying to make wine their grandfathers would be proud of.

The smart money isn't chasing the next hyped release or trophy bottle. The smart money is finding wines like this—authentic, uncompromising, and priced like the secret they deserve to remain. Because once word gets out about what's happening in these forgotten Spanish hills, those days of under-the-radar pricing are numbered.

Taron Cepas Centenarias are century-old vines (hence the name). High in the Spanish mountains at El Monte, these ancient vines have survived a hundred years of seasons. Their thick, gnarled trunks store decades of accumulated wisdom, producing grapes of extraordinary intensity. Every bottle of Century carries the essence of vines that have been perfecting their craft since the 1920s.

Tasting Notes

100% Tempranillo. It stands out for its deep, purplish hues. Sensations of red fruit, liqueur chocolate, chestnut and spices. The entry reveals good structure and acidity; fresh, with noticeable, well-rounded tannins. Long finish. It has excellent cellaring potential and an elegant, ample, persistent aftertaste.

Reviews

Fine spicy oak, dark plums, blackberries, hazelnuts and chocolate. Medium- to full-bodied with silky tannins and a long, juicy finish. Excellent depth and balance. Better from 2026, when the oak settles more. ~92 James Suckling

~91 Tim Atkin, Master of Wine

Appealing nose, with sweet dried flowers. Very expressive nose with a lovely mouth-filling structure. Pleasant fruit with sour cherries on the palate. An excellent example of the style ~90 IWSC

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  • Competes with Ygay and La Rioja Alta—Without the $$$ Price Tag!
  • 94 Point "Outstanding" Vintage ~Wine Advocate
  • OVW Exclusive Import: We Have the Lowest Price Anywhere!

About the Wine

While wine enthusiasts are dropping $200+ for bottles like Marqués de Murrieta Ygay or La Rioja Alta 890, a small, family-run winery from the northern Rioja villages is crafting wines that rival these legendary bottles—but at a fraction of the price.

Why pay hundreds for the big names when you can get exceptional Rioja from a hidden gem that delivers the same intensity and old-school mastery without the premium markup?

Bodegas Tarón sits in the absolute middle of nowhere—the northernmost edge of Rioja where the Obarenes Mountains meet the sky and tourists never venture. Four tiny villages—Sajazarra, Tirgo, Villaseca, and Cuzcurrita de Río Tirón. These aren’t your typical vacation spots or Instagram hotspots. These are historic villages, where medieval castles still stand guard over vineyards that have been making wine since long before Columbus set sail for the New World.

The story starts with rebellion. A few years back, the farming families in these four villages looked around and realized something infuriating: they were growing some of the finest grapes in all of Rioja, but selling them off to big producers who'd blend them into anonymous bottles and slap corporate labels on them. Meanwhile, those same corporate giants were charging premium prices for wines that weren't any better than what these families could make themselves.

So they made a pact. Pool their best vineyards—nearly 700 hectares of vines averaging over 50 years old—and start making their own wine. Not to get rich, not to build a wine empire, but to honor the generations of knowledge passed down through their families. This wasn't some Silicon Valley startup with venture capital funding. This was four villages saying "enough" to an industry that had forgotten what authentic winemaking looked like.

The families behind Tarón aren't household names, and they like it that way. They're third and fourth-generation grape growers who know every vine by sight, who can predict the weather by watching how their grandfather's favorite vineyard responds to morning mist. They've watched the wine world transform around them—corporate buyouts, consultant winemakers, focus groups determining flavor profiles—while they just kept doing what their families had always done.

These aren't the neat, tidy vineyard rows you see in wine magazines. These are gnarly, bush-trained vines that look like they've been through a war, clinging to rocky clay-limestone soils at 700 meters above sea level. The families at Tarón hand-select only their most ancient, most stubborn vines—the ones that produce pathetically small yields but grapes so concentrated they practically vibrate with intensity.

Here's where the economics become almost insulting to common sense. Those $300 bottles from Marqués de Murrieta? Beautiful wines, legendary estate, deserving of their reputation. That $250 La Rioja Alta 890? An absolute classic that belongs in every serious cellar. But here's what they don't want you to know: the 2020 Taron Cepas Centenarias is made with the same obsessive attention to detail, from vines just as old, on soils just as historic, by families with just as much generational expertise.

The difference isn't quality—it's marketing budgets. While the big houses spend millions on brand building, distributor relationships, and global expansion, the families at Tarón spend their money on things like hand-harvesting in small trailers that can navigate slopes too steep for machines, fermenting in pristine stainless steel, and aging their wine for two full years in new American oak barrels followed by another year and a half in bottle before release.

This is a direct import, which means it bypasses the usual labyrinth of importers, distributors, and retailers who typically triple wine prices between Spain and your local shop. No corporate overlords deciding which markets get priority. No committee meetings determining optimal price points. Just families who've been making wine longer than most countries have existed, finally deciding to put their own name on the bottle.

While the wine world obsesses over famous names and inflated prices, these four villages just keep doing what they've always done: making wine that captures the soul of their land, one bottle at a time. They're not trying to conquer export markets or build lifestyle brands. They're just trying to make wine their grandfathers would be proud of.

The smart money isn't chasing the next hyped release or trophy bottle. The smart money is finding wines like this—authentic, uncompromising, and priced like the secret they deserve to remain. Because once word gets out about what's happening in these forgotten Spanish hills, those days of under-the-radar pricing are numbered.

Taron Cepas Centenarias are century-old vines (hence the name). High in the Spanish mountains at El Monte, these ancient vines have survived a hundred years of seasons. Their thick, gnarled trunks store decades of accumulated wisdom, producing grapes of extraordinary intensity. Every bottle of Century carries the essence of vines that have been perfecting their craft since the 1920s.

Tasting Notes

100% Tempranillo. It stands out for its deep, purplish hues. Sensations of red fruit, liqueur chocolate, chestnut and spices. The entry reveals good structure and acidity; fresh, with noticeable, well-rounded tannins. Long finish. It has excellent cellaring potential and an elegant, ample, persistent aftertaste.

Reviews

Fine spicy oak, dark plums, blackberries, hazelnuts and chocolate. Medium- to full-bodied with silky tannins and a long, juicy finish. Excellent depth and balance. Better from 2026, when the oak settles more. ~92 James Suckling

~91 Tim Atkin, Master of Wine

Appealing nose, with sweet dried flowers. Very expressive nose with a lovely mouth-filling structure. Pleasant fruit with sour cherries on the palate. An excellent example of the style ~90 IWSC

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