Dec 19, 2022
Much has changed since our original
2017 episode (199) on Cava and Spanish sparkling wine. It's time
for a refresh and an update!

Photo: Cava cork.
Credit: cava.wine
In this episode we fill you in on the
roller coaster the DO has been on since 2017 and where it stands
today. The story shows how Spain has moved from just being ON the
radar of international wine buyers to moving to a level of
sophistication that demands its regions have the kind of terroir
focus of the other great wine nations of the Old World – France,
Italy, Germany, and Austria, to name a few.
We review the regulations, changes,
and the strife in the region and discuss what to seek out to get
the best of these highly accessible, delicious, and decidedly
Spanish wines.
Here are the show
notes...
The Basics
- We start with the statistics on Cava -- it encompasses 38,133
ha/94,229 acres and made 253 MM bottles in 2021
- 91% of Cava is white, 9% is rosado (rosé)
- Various zones produce the wine, but Penedés is the heart of
Cava production, with more than 95% of total output
- We discuss the early history of the area, beginning with the
first sparkling production in 1872 with Josep Raventós to the point
where the DO is formed in 1991 – we leave the modern history until
later, as complex and muddled as it is!

Map: The overly spread
out regions of Cava. Credit: Cava DO
We then get into the grapes
and winemaking:
- Whites: Since most Cava is white, the white
grapes dominate. Most important are the indigenous grapes, Macabeo
(Viura, the white of Rioja), Xarel-lo, and Parellada. Chardonnay is
also authorized, as well as Subirat Parent (Malvasia) for
semi-sweet and sweet Cava.
Photo: Macabeo. Credit: D.O.
Cava
- Reds: Used for rosado (rosé), native grapes
are Garnacha (Grenache), Trepat, and Monastrell (Mourvèdre). The
Cava DO authorized Pinot Noir for use in rosado in 1998
- Winemaking:
- We discuss the vineyard requirements for the making of quality
Cava, including the importance of gentle picking and transport to
the winery to prevent oxidation
- We briefly review the
Traditional Method (Champagne Method) of winemaking, which is how
all Cava is made
Photo: Riddled Cava, ready for disgorgement..
Credit: D.O. Cava
- We discuss the aging qualifications for Cava, Cava Reserva,
Cava Gran Reserva, and Cava Paraje Calificada that range from a
minimum nine months to several years, and what each style
yields
- We review the various dosage levels so you know what to look
for:
- “Brut Nature” - no added sugar
- Cava Extra Brut – very little sugar
- Cava Brut: Slightly more added sugar in the dosage, sugar is
barely noticeable
- Cava Extra Seco: heavier mouthfeel, noticeable sugar
- Cava Seco: Dessert level, very sweet
- Semi Seco: Even sweeter
- Dulce – Super sweet
We discuss why Cava is such a big mess, with much
infighting in its modern history, and why not all sparkling Spanish
wine is created the same:
- We talk about the first fissures in Cava, with the 2012 break
off of Cava OG producer Raventós i Blanc leaving the Cava DO
because the quality standards were too low -Vino
de la tierra Conca de l'Anoia (their own site)
Photo: Raventós i Blanc Rosado, Vino de la
Tierra
- We discuss the 2015 formation of The Association of Wine Producers and Growers
Corpinnat (AVEC) or Corpinnat. We
define the group and talk about its requirements for the small
member producers:
- Mission: Create a distinguished,
excellent quality, terroir-driven sparkling wine based solely on
Penedès, rather than far flung regions that make lesser wine. To
raise the profile of Cava from cheap shit to good stuff
Photo:
Corpinnat corks. Credit: Corpinnat Website
- Corpinnat Requirements
- At least 75% of the grapes must be from vineyards owned by the
winery, wine must be made on the premises of the winery
- Minimum price paid for livable wages to the growers
- Certified organic and hand harvested grapes
- 90% of the grapes must be indigenous varieties: Macabeo,
Xarel-lo, Parellada for whites, Garnacha, Trepat, Monastrell, for
reds.
- 18 months minimum aging
- **By design: Cava’s three biggest producers can’t meet the
requirements: Cordoniu, Freixenet and García Carrión – which
is why Corpinnat started in the first place, to raise the quality
standard and allow smaller producers a voice
Corpinnat members (2022):
Gramona, Llopart, Recaredo, Sabaté i Coca, Nadal, Torelló, Can
Feixas, Júlia Bernet, Mas Candi, Can Descregut, Pardas
- We discuss the qualifications of the Cava Paraje
Calificado classification, created by the Cava DO in 2017
for single-estate sparkling wines with a vineyard designation,
lower yield, and a longer aging period
- Cava de Paraje Calificado requirements include
specifications for: lower yield, manual harvest, minimum
fermentation time in the bottle at 36 months. Vines must be at
least 10 years old and the wine must be produced locally in the
same winery that grows the grapes.
- Issues: Includes the large wineries’ estate
vineyards and (originally) some smaller ones but doesn’t address
the issue of quality or cohesive terroir/flavor. It’s like a medal
system – here are our best wines!
Photo: Paraje Califado Cava -- Can Sala,
Freixenet
- Disastrous conclusion: The Cava
Paraje Calificada was the solution to the Corpinnat – it was meant
to be more inclusive. But Corpinnat was supposed to be a new small
producer/ quality designation within Cava. Because it excludes
large producers, the DO wouldn’t allow Cava and Corpinnat on the
same label, and Corpinnat left the DO. They cannot use Cava, or
Gran Reserva on their labels.
Of the 12 wines approved as CPC in
2017, 5 aren’t CPC anymore, only Corpinnat
We address most recent
regulations of Cava in 2020
The Cava Regulatory Council approved
new zoning of the Cava DO. We review the subzones that are supposed
to create a better delimitation for consumers:
Comtats de Barcelona - 95%+ of
Cava production
- Includes Sant Sadurní d'Anoia, the "capital of Cava" – where
the first bottles of Cava were produced in 1872
- Location: In Catalonia, in northeast Spain.
Along the Mediterranean coast near Barcelona
- Climate: Mediterranean climate, slight
variations inland versus coast but mostly long summer, lots of sun,
hot summer and spring - easy to ripen grapes, lots of different
grapes thrive
- Land: Diverse terrain – various
exposures, orientation, altitudes, and microclimates
- Five Sub-zones (used for Reserva and Gran Reserva Cava,
more limited yields, organic viticulture, vineyards 10+ years
old): Valls d'Anoia Foix, Serra de Mar, Conca del Gaià,
Serra de Prades and Pla de Ponent
- Each has a slightly different character – some more at
elevation, some farther from the sea – slight variations in flavors
and what grows where

Map: Detail of the
Comtats de Barcelona Cava Zone.
Credit: Cava DO
The Ebro Valley
area
- Northernmost part of the DO, far in the interior, near and
influenced by the river Ebro
- Climate: Temperate, continental climate –
summers are hot and dry with cold winters
- Two subzones (used for Reserva
and Gran Reserva Cava, more limited yields, organic viticulture,
vineyards 10+ years old): the Alto Ebro around Rioja,
Navarra, and the Basque area of Álava and the Cierzo Valley Sub
Zone. The Cierzo is near the Aragonese city of Zaragoza in the
central area of the Ebro River, with strong regional winds (the
Cierzo) to dry out the area

Map: Detail of the Ebro River Valley Cava
Zone. Credit: Cava DO
Smaller zones:
- Levante: (Eastern
Highlands, no official name yet), in interior of Valencia province,
with a dry Mediterranean to semi continental climate depending on
whether altitude)
- Viñedos de Almendralejo
(Almendralejo vineyards): Fairly flat, southwestern-most
part of the DO. A very dry, hot climate, with warm wind, known as
the solano
We end with an update of where
Cava is today (hint: it’s huge and growing, it’s trying to
improve by moving towards organics, it’s still fighting against
Corpinnat) and what could be the next step for Corpinnat too.
A fascinating show that takes you on
the wild ride that the region and wine has been on since we first
discussed it those many years ago.
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Sources:
www.cava.wine
https://www.raventos.com
https://www.corpinnat.com
https://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2019/02/nine-producers-break-with-cava-to-form-corpinnat/
https://www.decanter.com/wine-news/new-breakaway-sparkling-wine-appellation-to-rival-cava-20501/