Tempranillo, Verdejo and Ribera del Duero: Castile and León wine cases from independent producers

A Castile and León wine case brings together six bottles from a single producer working the high plateau — Ribera del Duero, Rueda, Toro or Bierzo — chosen by the grower themselves. Browse cases from independent estates across Spain's largest wine region.

Six bottles from one estate, composed by the grower as their own recommendation across the region's grapes and appellations.

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Castile and Léon

Castile and León wine cases

A Castile and León wine case is always six bottles from one estate. The grower composes it as a single recommendation — a way to read how one producer works across their range, whether that means moving through a single appellation at different ages or tracing one grape across a few different parcels. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the case that arrives reflects exactly what the grower made and chose.

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Castile and León wines

Castile and León's individual bottles follow the region's appellations: Tempranillo-led reds from Ribera del Duero, Verdejo-driven whites from Rueda, Mencía from Bierzo's slate slopes in the west, and Tinta de Toro from the older vines of Toro. Browsing by bottle lets you move across the region's styles one wine at a time, matching grape and appellation to what you are looking for.

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Castile and León producers

The producers offering cases here farm across Castile and León's appellations — some running a few hectares of old Tempranillo vines on the high plateau, others working across two or three designations. Several have been shaping their estates across generations; others have built them more recently around a specific parcel or method. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the producers here sell on their own terms, setting their own prices.

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Wine experts

Independent wine experts rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and several of the experts listed here have reviewed bottles from Castile and León producers. Their ratings and tasting notes appear on the wine page and on the expert's own profile, building a public track record you can read before ordering.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Castile and León wine on Free Grape Society?

Browse the wines listed on this page, add bottles to your cart and check out using Klarna or card. Payment is handled securely and delivery goes directly from the producer's cellar to your address. You do not need to create an account to order, though joining Free Grape Society is free and gives you access to wine-expert advice.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

Can I order wines from more than one Castile and León producer in the same order?

Yes. You can add wines from different producers to the same cart. Each producer ships from their own cellar, so wines from different estates will arrive in separate deliveries. You will see this reflected at checkout before you confirm your order.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I find the right Castile and León wine for what I am looking for?

The wines on this page cover several distinct appellations. If you want a structured red built for ageing, Ribera del Duero Tempranillo is the most established starting point. For a fresh, aromatic white, Rueda Verdejo is the region's signature. If you want a recommendation tailored to a specific dish or occasion, you can put a question to an independent wine expert directly through Free Grape Society.

What is the difference between the main appellations in Castile and León?

Ribera del Duero specialises in Tinto Fino — the local name for Tempranillo — grown at altitude on the Duero plateau, producing reds with firm structure and good ageing potential. Rueda is almost exclusively white, built around Verdejo. Toro works with a thicker-skinned Tempranillo clone on sandy soils that yield concentrated, full-bodied reds. Bierzo, in the west, is the home of Mencía on granite and slate, producing lighter, more mineral reds.

Which Castile and León wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed wines from Castile and León producers. You can browse expert profiles to read their reviews and track record, or fill in the advice form to send a specific question — about a grape, an appellation, a food pairing or a budget — and an expert will respond directly.

Why don't you sell supermarket-brand Castile and León wines?

Free Grape Society lists wines from independent producers who sell directly through the platform. Large commercial labels are distributed through importers, agents and retail chains — a supply chain that adds cost and distance between the grower and the buyer. The wines here come from estates that set their own prices and ship from their own cellars, which means the margin goes to the producer, not to intermediaries.

Can I buy Castile and León wines if I am not based in Spain?

Yes. Free Grape Society delivers to multiple European markets. Producers in Castile and León ship directly from their own cellar, so delivery goes across borders without passing through a local warehouse. Check the delivery information at checkout for the countries currently covered and the estimated delivery window for your address.

What a Castile and León wine case contains

A wine case from Castile and León is six bottles from one producer, composed by the grower as their own recommendation rather than assembled across estates. The region covers nine provinces and a spread of denominations — Ribera del Duero, Rueda, Toro, Bierzo, Cigales among them — so a grower composing six bottles has real choices to make. A Ribera del Duero producer might walk you through different vineyard plots or ageing levels; a Rueda estate might pair its Verdejo with other whites from the same cellar. Because the selection comes from one producer rather than a buyer's desk, the six bottles say something coherent about how that grower reads their own range. Browse Castile and León mixboxes or explore cases from across Spain.

The grapes behind Castile and León's wine cases

Tempranillo is the region's anchor red, called Tinto Fino in Ribera del Duero and Tinta de Toro in Toro, where the old-vine plantings and continental heat push the grape toward fuller, more concentrated expressions than further north. Verdejo drives Rueda's whites — an aromatic variety that recovers its freshness best when harvested at night or in the cool of early morning. Mencía works the northwest in Bierzo, a grape that performs differently depending on whether the vineyards sit on the slate soils of the hillsides or the clay of the valley floor. A producer composing a six-bottle case across these varieties offers a short course in how one corner of Spain's largest wine region reads its own grapes. You can also compare cases from neighbouring regions including Rioja and Galicia, or look at the individual bottles across Spanish wines.

Getting to know Castile and León through one producer

Castile and León is geographically vast — the largest autonomous community in the European Union — but its wine culture is organised around distinct, well-defined denominations rather than one regional identity. That makes a single-producer case a useful way in: instead of navigating nine denominations at once, you start with one grower's own framing of what they make and where. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the case arrives as the producer packed it. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the cases on this page reflect that — each one is a grower's own recommendation, chosen by the person who made the wine. See also wine cases from Aragon, Valencia, and other Spanish regions, or browse the producers of Castile and León directly.