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Winemaker Vasil Tskipurishvili
Founded in 1995 by three brothers named Kharebava, Khareba is one of Georgia’s largest and most commercially successful wineries. Its origins date back to at least the 17th century when wines from its vineyards in Vachnadziani belonged to the noble Jandieri and Vachnadze families. It was also an important state-owned winery until the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. The Kharebera brothers renovated and expanded the winery and its vineyards. Today Khareba owns 1500 hectares of vineyards specializing in the country’s indigenous varieties and has four winemaking facilities including one in Imereti.
We tasted wines made in the international style, wines made in qvevri (marketed under the Monastery Qvevri label), wines from their boutique Lipartiani label, and a Champagne-style sparkling wine. All the wines are sourced from Khareba’s 135 ha of estate vineyards in Western Georgia, and all the grapes are hand harvested.
International Style: These wines are made using the classic (European) method of fermentation in stainless steel using commercial yeasts. The wines are all clean with good varietal character and offer uncomplicated, easy drinking pleasure. The Brut, which sees 8 years en tirage, is especially impressive.
Monastery Qvevri: These wines are all made in the traditional Georgian manner, fermented in qvevri with native yeasts and about 30% of the grapes are given 3-5 months skin contact. The wines are of consistently good quality. The Aladasturi and Otskhanuri Sapere are especially impressive.
Khareba 2022 Monastery Qvevri Krakhuna Imereti Light-medium amber orange in color. Spicy, orange-inflected aromas. Soft on entry and full in the mouth. 30% of the grapes are given 4 months skin contact. 12.5% alc. Khareba 2022 Monastery Qvevri Tsitska Imereti Light amber in color with delicate peach notes on the nose. The palate offers a suave texture with notes of ginger spice and fresh stone fruit. 12% alc. Khareba 2021 Monastery Qvevri Tsolikouri Imereti Yellow-amber with orange flecks. This is a complete wine showing stone fruit skins and nervy mineral notes on the nose. It’s soft on the attack with lovely balance and expressive, tongue-coating flavors on a grippy, firm palate. Very good. 11.5% alc. Khareba 2020 Monastery Qvevri Aladasturi Imereti This is a late ripening variety susceptible to botrytis, so it’s picked early, dried Amarone style for about 4 weeks and the fermented in qvevri. The wines is full in the mouth with good acidity and freshness with no dried fruit character. Aromas and flavors tend towards plum, dark cherry and milk chocolate. Finishes dry. 13% alc. Excellent. Khareba 2023 Monastery Qvevri Otskhanuri Sapere Imereti This variety often has unripe green berries in the bunch, so Khareba does a super careful selection of only the ripest berries. The result is this Petit Verdot-like wine, dark purple in color and dense on the palate with flavors that evoke ripe black raspberries. Finishes very long with chalky tannins. Excellent.
Lipartiani: The Lipartiani Wine House takes its name from the noble Lipartiani family of the principality of Samegrelo in West Georgia. Its estate in the village of Salkhino was renowned for the quality of its wines, especially those made from the Ojaleshi grape variety, since at least the mid-19th century. Lipartiani is Khareba’s boutique winery within a winery. The wines are in most cases blends of varieties and regions made in both the Georgian (qvevri) and classic (European) methods. These wines were previously reviewed in the IWR article Lipartiani: Georgia’s New Boutique Winery.
Source : https://i-winereview.com/blog/index.php/2025/02/20/khareba-winery-new-and-old-winemaking-in-imereti/