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"Methymneos is my favorite wine in the world. Period." Matt Barrett
The village of Xidera in western Lesvos seems an unlikely place for a state-of-the-art winery but there it is. Run by Ioannis Lambrou, an articulate and intelligent Athenian with his family roots in the village and probably the only guy in town who listens to the Velvet Underground, a visit to the winery is a must, as is leaving with several bottles
or boxes after the tour and tastings. We traveled around Lesvos with a box of their excellent white and many bottles of reds, then continued on to Chios and finally to the island of Kea where we spent the rest of the summer drinking Methymneos and turning our friends on to it. I wish I had some right now.
The wine of Lesbos was the most expensive in the markets of ancient Athens, Rome and Byzantine Constantinople and the only wine in the harems of the Turkish sultans. According to Archestratos "Deipnologos" (4th century B.C.), an ancient writer and fanatic connoisseur, the wine of Lesbos was the best of antiquity:
"I can name and praise the wines produced in other cities and their names I do not forget. But none of them is compared to the wine of Lesbos." (Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae, A, 52d)
Unfortunately, the ancient Lesvos Grape Variety, which produced this exquisite wine, was almost destroyed by phylloxera at around the middle of the 20th century. It was only in 1985 that the family of Dimitris Lambrou, editor of the historical research magazine «Davlos», started replanting, using buds from the last remaining vines of the island
grafted on rootstock resistant to phylloxera. The ancient variety was later identified and classified as unique through
the use of DNA techniques. It was the firm belief of the D. Lambrou family in the great winemaking potentials of the Lesbos Grape Variety which ignited this quest and led to the dawn of a whole new era for wine-making on the island.
Methymneos is a product of organic farming. True to the ancient tradition of the island, they do not use industrial fertilizers or agrochemicals in their vineyards. Their grapes grow completely naturally, according the laws of the household economy of villagers in Western Lesbos, who have ignored technological evolution for centuries...This is a matter of
principle, essential for the quality of the product and the health of consumers and in respect
of Greek history and tradition.
The vineyards are situated at an altitude of 300m, in the crater of the inactive volcano of Western Lesbos, near the village of Xidira. The whitish sulphurous and volcanic soil and the
Mediterranean mountain micro-climate are ideal for the production of high quality wines.
"In our neo-classical winery we produce our wine, harmoniously combining the ancient oral and written tradition with state-of the-art wine-making equipment as well as modern techniques.
Our french-oak barrels, where the wine ages, are never used for a period of more than four years.
Its unique clean and brilliant ruby-like red color, which is characteristic of old wines, is combined in a very distinctive way with the light and young aromas of honey and citrus fruit and an equally unique taste that is also an interplay of the old and the new. These special characteristics of Methymneos stem from
the grape variety by which it is produced as well as the soil of the inactive volcano where the vineyards are located."
The name «Methymneos» was an adjective attributed to Dionysus (Plutarch, Moralia, B, 648e), derived from the words methy(=wine), hymeneos(=wedding) and the hymn of the symposia, and thus reflects the mythical and noble nature of our wine.
To visit Methymneos Winery, turn left at the 24th kilometre of the route Kaloni-Andisa-Sigri, immediately after the village of Vatousa. Then, follow the 7 kilometre road to the village of Chidira. The winery is at the entrance of the village.Signposts will lead you all along the way.
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