Duckman White Spark Duck Traditional Method

MXN $540

Grape: 100% Maria Gomes

Region: Bairrada, Portugal

Wine Notes: We cannot emphasize how much we love this wine! Maria Pato grew around wine and it shows, this is a perfect example of her intelligent unfuzzy winemaking.

You have notes of bright scent of green apples, lemon zest, and a subtle hint of sea salt. On the palate, the bubbles are fine and prickly, and the wine is completely dry. It has a very clean, stony finish that makes it feel light and thirst-quenching. It’s a straightforward, refreshing bottle that’s great to open whenever you want something fizzy but not too heavy.

We would drink this everyday.

Good to have it with: salted popcorn, grilled white fish, octopus carpaccio

In stock

 

Description

Wine Details – Duckman White Spark Duck

This wine comes from 30-year-old vines planted on numerous plots of sandy and chalky-clay soils.

Alcohol Grade: 12.5%
Aging/ Vinification: Spontaneous fermentation unfolds in stainless steel, utilising natural yeasts, over an extended period of three weeks, all without temperature control. Following this, the wine undergoes a year of maturation on its lees, contributing to its depth and complexity. Notably, it retains its authenticity by foregoing filtration and abstaining from fining processes, allowing the pure expression of the vineyard and grape characteristics to shine through.
Best to have it: 6-10ºC

The Producer: Duckman Wines (Maria Pato)

Duckman is Maria Pato’s way of continuing her family’s long history in Portugal’s Bairrada region, but on her own terms. The name comes from her surname, Pato—a nod to her grandfather João, who was a pioneer in the area long before it was trendy. Maria works closely with her father, the legendary Luis Pato, to protect their local heritage. They only use native Portuguese grapes, refusing to plant international varieties because they want the wine to taste exactly like the coast where it’s made.

The vineyards sit very close to the Atlantic Ocean, so you get these cool breezes that keep the grapes fresh and add a noticeable saltiness to the wines. They farm two very different types of ground: some vines are in sandy soil and others in chalky clay, which gives them a lot of variety to play with. In the cellar, Maria keeps things as simple as possible, avoiding additives or heavy processing. She even leaves the official “Bairrada” name off the labels as a way to stay independent from strict local rules, focusing instead on making honest wines with plenty of personality.

Additional information

Wine Body

Light-Body

Country

Low ABV

Region

Size

Winemaking style

Natural, minimal intervention

Winery