Tip: Walk from bodega to bodega in the Barrio Alto in the morning; end with langostinos (prawns) from the fishing port at Casa Balbino on the Plaza del Cabildo.

More wine day trips in Jerez & Sherry

El Puerto de Santa Maria: the third vertex of the Triangle ★ 4.8

El Puerto de Santa Maria is the smallest of the three Sherry Triangle towns and home to some of the most historic bodegas: Osborne (founded 1772), Lustau's El Puerto soleras, and Aponiente (three Michelin stars). The waterfront Ribera del Marisco is one of Andalucia's great seafood streets and pairs naturally with El Puerto's elegant fino and amontillado styles.

Pours: Fino, Amontillado, Palo Cortado

Tip: Combine Osborne bodega tour in the morning with lunch at a ribera seafood bar; book Aponiente months in advance if your dates coincide.

Sevilla: the sherry gateway and Andalucian capital ★ 4.7

Sevilla (Seville) is the natural cultural companion to a Jerez wine trip: the city's tapas culture is built around chilled fino and manzanilla, and the historic Alfalfa and Santa Cruz barrios are dense with sherry-centric bars. The Cathedral, Alcazar and Triana neighbourhood are essential sights; the return journey through the Cadiz province flatlands passes the sherry vineyards.

Pours: Fino, Manzanilla

Tip: El Rinconcillo on Calle Gerona (est. 1670, reputedly Seville's oldest bar) pours manzanilla alongside toasted bread with lard and ibérico; the ideal start to any Sevilla afternoon.

Ronda and Sierra de Malaga: dramatic mountain wine country ★ 4.6

The historic hilltop town of Ronda, perched on a dramatic limestone gorge in the Sierra de las Nieves, is surrounded by one of Andalucia's most exciting emerging wine regions: the Sierras de Malaga DO. At 700-900 metres altitude the growing season is longer and cooler than the coast, producing structured reds from Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, Petit Verdot and indigenous varieties. Bodegas F. Schatz and Bodegas Descalzos Viejos are the most visitor-accessible estates.

Pours: Sierras de Malaga DO red, Ronda Cabernet, Syrah

Tip: Make the dramatic single-road ascent to Ronda from Jerez in the morning; visit a bodega at altitude in the afternoon and watch the sunset over the gorge.

Vejer de la Frontera: white village, atun rojo and sherry vinegar ★ 4.5

The whitewashed hilltop village of Vejer de la Frontera overlooks the Atlantic plain south of Jerez and is the gastronomic capital of the atun rojo (bluefin tuna) tradition: the almadraba trap-fishing nets at Barbate and Zahara de los Atunes have been operated here since Phoenician times. Restaurants pair bluefin tuna belly with chilled fino; sherry vinegar aged in Jerez butts is a local condiment. The village is one of Andalucia's most beautiful.

Pours: Fino, Sherry vinegar (aged in oak)

Tip: La Castilleria restaurant in Vejer does the definitive atun rojo experience; book two weeks ahead in June when the almadraba season peaks.

Donana National Park: Europe's largest wetland with Manzanilla ★ 4.5

The Coto de Donana, accessed by boat from Sanlucar's quayside, is Europe's most important wetland reserve and a World Heritage Site where the Guadalquivir meets the Atlantic. The visit pairs naturally with Sanlucar Manzanilla: take the morning boat tour through the wetlands, return to Sanlucar for lunch of prawns and manzanilla on the Plaza del Cabildo. The combination of birdwatching and sherry tasting is one of the most distinctive experiences in southern Andalucia.

Pours: Manzanilla

Tip: Book the official Donana boat tour at least two weeks ahead in spring and autumn peak migration seasons; the Sanlucar tourist office manages bookings.

Montilla-Moriles: the source of Pedro Ximenez ★ 4.4

The Montilla-Moriles DO south of Cordoba is the source of most Pedro Ximenez grapes used in Jerez's sweet sherries under the long-standing cross-appellation supply agreement. The limestone-chalk albariza soils around Montilla produce their own unfortified and naturally fermented DO wines that parallel sherry styles without the fortification: the Fino de Montilla and Amontillado are lighter in alcohol but share the same aged, saline character. Bodegas Alvear (founded 1729) is the essential stop.

Pours: Pedro Ximenez, Fino de Montilla, Amontillado de Montilla

Tip: Combine with a stop in Cordoba and its Mezquita; the drive north from Jerez through Andalucia's olive-covered hills is beautiful in spring.

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