El Bombero 2023
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“Cariñena is home to some of the best value reds in Spain, if not the world,” declares <i>Decanter</i>. After you try El Bombero, we bet you’ll agree. It’s a BIG, juicy fruit bomb from Javier Domeque and his prized, 60-year-old Garnacha vines.

Wine Details
- Red - Full Bodied
- Spain
- Garnacha
- Vegan
- 13.5% ABV
- December 31, 2026
- Packaging Pioneer
Flavor Profile
Wine Flavor Profile
El Bombero is a full-bodied red wine with enticing aromas of red berry, cinnamon spice and black currant. The palate is luscious, with juicy mouthfuls of sun-ripened blackberry, raspberry and cherry, plus a spicy, velvety finish.Wine Food Pairings
Aged cheese, duck, game birds, venison, pork, vegetarian.Beyond the Label
Like BIG-flavored reds? You’ll love this huge customer favorite. El Bombero Garnacha has an ancient-vine power and silky richness usually associated with regions like France’s Châteauneuf-du-Pape or Australia’s Barossa Valley—an intensity that’s seriously rare in a wine at this price.
Javier Domeque is the No. 1 winemaker in remote, rugged Cariñena, which Decanter says “is home to some of the best value reds in Spain.” There, he runs Bodegas San Valero, a remarkable cooperative founded in 1944 with 66 growers contributing grapes. It now boasts 500 members that Javier calls “a small great family.”
El Bombero is Javier’s pride-and-joy, which takes its strength from gnarled, 60-year-old Garnacha vines. While painfully low-yielding and challenging to maintain, their payoff is high: each grape is a knot of ripe, intensely concentrated flavor.
You’ll enjoy enticing aromas of red berry, spice and black currant, backed by luscious, juicy mouthfuls of sun-ripe black fruit. With such intense, warming flavors, El Bombero (‘the firefighter’ in Spanish) has the weight to match hearty beef stews and rich, meaty pastas. Or, enjoy a smooth glass on its own.
And here’s another great reason to feel good about supporting Javier and his dedicated team: San Valero is Spain’s second-largest organic producer. They also promote biodiversity in the vineyards and win awards for their sustainable packaging. A win-win for everyone.
A quick word to the wise—those 60-year-old vines? They produce a tiny amount of grapes, which means there’s only so much of El Bombero to go around.