Thick blackberry and plum soaked in oak, from a lesser known region in Spain. La Mancha stretches from the mountains of Toledo to the western spurs of the Cuenca hills, east of the Balearic Sea. The name is thought to have come from an Arabic word المنشأ al-mansha, meaning "land without water" which describes the region's dryland farming soils.
"Vurr-day-ho" is an uncommon light grape orginally from North Africa, and a staple of Rueda in Spain. Flavors of lime, Meyer lemon, grapefruit, grass, fennel, and citrus blossom. A good alternative to Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Grigio.