Montilla-Moriles | Wine Region Notes


The Region at a Glance

  • Location: South of Córdoba, ~5,000 ha, 17 localities, 125-600m altitude
  • Type: Vinos tradicionales andaluces: fino, amontillado, oloroso, dulces
  • Grape: pedro ximénez (75%)
  • Terroir: The best wines come from the Subzonas de Calidad Superior, Sierra de Montilla and Moriles Alto, characterized by white, chalky albero (alberiza) soils.
  • Natural Strength: Unlike Sherry, Montilla-Moriles dry wines (like Fino) typically reach 15% ABV naturally through the extreme summer heat, preserving the pure character of the grape
  • Asoleo: Sweet PX wines are made by sun-drying grapes on esparto mats for 4–10 days, concentrating sugars to incredible levels (often 400–500 g/l); almost all PX wine in Jerez originates from Montilla-Moriles

History

Current productive area around 5,000 ha (down from 20,000 ha in the 1970s), slightly smaller compared to Jerez.

For a short historical overview of the region, see article

Soils

Sierra de Montilla (hills east of Montilla) and Moriles Alto (north of Moriles) are designated Subzonas de Calidad Superior with albariza-type soils (locally called albero), at 400–600 m altitude. These are considered the ideal terroirs for Pedro Ximénez. Yields are limited to 60 hl/ha vs. 80 hl/ha in the broader DO.

For a brief description of the soil types, see

Source: www.montillamoriles.es/territorio/tipos-de-suelo

Styles

The DO website also covers Crianza (biológica under velo de flor in oak botas and crianza oxidativa) and the criaderas and soleras with the different wine styles as a result

StyleAging TypeCharacter
Joven / Blanco JovenNoneFresh, fruity young white
TinajaClay/cement vessels; some florTraditional, terroir-driven
FinoBiologicalDry, delicate, almond notes
AmontilladoBiological → OxidativeDry, nutty, amber
OlorosoOxidative onlyRich, dark, complex
Palo CortadoBiological → Oxidative (rare)Between Amontillado & Oloroso
Cream / Pale CreamBlended sweet stylesCommercial blended styles
Pedro XiménezSun-dried grapes; oxidativeIntensely sweet, raisined

Bodegas

For a complete list of bodegas, see the DO Montilla-Moriles site

Alvear

Founded 1729, oldest bodega in Andalusia. 300 ha in Sierra de Montilla, almost exclusively Pedro Ximénez. Benchmark: Fino C.B.

Toro Albalá

Founded 1922 in Aguilar de la Frontera. Globally recognized for vintage PX wines, including Don PX Convento Selección 1946 — the first sweet wine to receive a perfect 100-point Parker score. Also produces ultra-aged traditional vinegars and terroir-driven dry whites under the MIUT project.

Pérez Barquero

Founded 1905. Distinguished for the 1905 Solera Fundacional series (Amontillado and PX both scored 100 points by Parker). The Gran Barquero Fino undergoes up to 10 years of biological aging, reaching 15% ABV unfortified.

Robles

Founded 1927. Regional pioneer in certified organic viticulture since the late 1990s. Winner of the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture’s Award for Best Organic Production.

Equipo Navazos

Founded 2005 by Jesús Barquín (Professor of Criminology, University of Granada) and Eduardo Ojeda (Technical Director, Grupo Estévez). Selects and bottles exceptional individual casks from Jerez, Sanlúcar, and Montilla through the “La Bota” numbered release series. Pioneered the “en rama” movement and recovery of unfortified Andalusian whites.


Montilla-Moriles vs. Jerez

Montilla-MorilesJerez
Dominant grapePedro Ximénez (>75%)Palomino Fino
Fortification (dry styles)Typically none — reaches 15%+ naturallyFortified to 15–15.5% (Fino/Manzanilla)
PX sweet winesFortified to 14–15%, nearly full barrels → preserves fruit freshnessFortified to 18%, 5/6-full barrels → more oxidative
Flor strainscapensis / bayanus — thinner florbeticus / montuliensis — thicker flor
Fino characterFuller-bodied, richer (grape variety + continental climate + later harvest + thinner flor)Lighter, more saline
Preferred generosoAmontillado (= “in the Montilla style”)Fino / Manzanilla
Best Fino aging8–10 years (e.g., Gran Barquero, Fino Capataz)Typically younger
PX supplySupplies virtually all of Jerez’s PX — the only wine Jerez may purchase from outside its zoneImports PX from Montilla
Current vineyard area~5,000 ha (down from ~20,000 ha in late 1970s)~7,000 ha
DO recognition1932 (Consejo Regulador 1944)1933

Resources

Official DO and promotion

Source: www.turismoyvino.es

Books

Articles


Last updated: February 2026