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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
Vincent West

When the winemaker wore a wet suit: Spain's $100 subsea tipple

Bottles of wine are seen inside a cage on the sea bed at the bay of Plentzia, Spain, in this undated handout picture. Courtesy Crusoe Treasure/Handout via REUTERS

BAY OF PLENTZIA, Spain (Reuters) - For many discerning drinkers, the walk down stone steps into a cool, dark cellar is an essential part of visiting a winery, but with one Spanish winemaker such an inspection is more likely to involve an oxygen tank and flippers.

Crusoe Treasure's cellar is situated 25 kilometers (15 miles) from the northern city of Bilbao - and 20 meters (65 feet) under the picturesque Bay of Plentzia.

Bottles of wine are lifted from the sea bed to the surface at the bay of Plentzia, Spain, in this undated handout picture. Courtesy of Crusoe Treasure/Handout

Aged for up to 18 months on the sea bed, its reds and whites are made with tempranillo and other classic Spanish grape varieties. Under the increased atmospheric pressure, darkness, and even temperature of their marine environment, they turn unusually soft, says the firm's founder Borja Saracho.

The bottles, which retail for between $60 and $100 each, often come with ocean debris attached, so you're just as likely to be pulling barnacles off the label as popping the cork.

"They can taste slightly disconcerting at first, because you don't associate them with an appellation, or known reference, but they maintain the characteristics of the type of grape, and above all they are silky," says the founder of the winery Borja Saracho.

Bottles of wine are lifted from the sea bed to the surface at the bay of Plentzia, Spain, in this undated handout picture. Courtesy of Crusoe Treasure/Handout via REUTERS

The government granted the firm 500 square meters of sea bed to age thousands of bottles in cages within concrete structures that also act as an artificial reef to help sustain marine wildlife.

The method is inspired by tales of champagne rescued from shipwrecks after hundreds of years underwater - and praised for its unique characteristics by those who have drunk it.

Bottles of wine are seen inside a cage on the sea bed at the bay of Plentzia, Spain, in this undated handout picture. Courtesy of Crusoe Treasure/Handout via REUTERS

(Reporting by Vincent West; Writing by Paul Day; editing by John Stonestreet)

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