DO Jerez-Xeres-SherryPalomino FinoCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
One of Jerez's surviving authentic tabancos, a traditional bodega-bar where sherry is drawn directly from barrels and served in copitas over zinc-topped tables. Tabanco Plateros maintains the oldest format in the city: no cocktails, no coffee, just sherry from the wood with a plate of olives.
Why locals love it: Few guidebooks list the tabancos accurately; most tourists walk past without knowing this is the original neighbourhood sherry-bar format.
Tip: Ask the bar owner to show you the barrel room behind the bar; regulars know to arrive at opening time for the freshest pour from the newly tapped butt.
DO Jerez-Xeres-SherryPalomino FinoBiodynamic PracticingCAAENaturalEl Puerto de Santa Maria
Husband and wife Rocio Ros and Alberto Orte run Forlong from their Pago del Humo organic and biodynamic vineyard in El Puerto de Santa Maria. Their unfortified Palomino blends and traditional fortified sherries produced with certified organic grapes are among the most sought-after natural wine expressions from the Triangle.
Why locals love it: Tiny production; almost exclusively exported to natural wine bars in northern Europe and Japan with very little available within Spain.
Tip: Follow their importer Savio Soares Selections (UK) for allocation announcements; wines sell out within hours of release.
DO Jerez-Xeres-SherryPalomino Fino, Pedro XimenezJerez de la Frontera
Jesus Barquin and Eduardo Ojeda's negociant project bottles single-cask exceptional sherries from across the Triangle's great bodegas under sequentially numbered La Bota releases. Each edition is different; none are repeated. The project has done more than any other single enterprise to restore international critical prestige to Jerez.
Why locals love it: Available only through a small network of specialist importers worldwide; the sequential numbering confuses non-specialists and the wines sell out to allocatees before reaching general retail.
Tip: Sign up to the mailing list of your national importer (Raeburn Fine Wines UK, De Maison Selections US); allocations move within 24 hours of announcement.
DO Jerez-Xeres-SherryPalomino Fino, Pedro XimenezCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
Founded in 1998 to produce exclusively VORS sherries (30-year average age), Tradicion houses one of the oldest accumulated solera stocks in Jerez, buying ancient wines from bodegas that closed during the 1980s crisis. The bodega also runs a small private collection of Spanish Golden Age paintings in its tasting room.
Why locals love it: Tradicion produces no young sherries at all; its focus on VORS-only production puts it outside the normal tourist-bodega circuit. The art collection inside is one of the most unexpected discoveries in Jerez.
Tip: Book a private tasting in the art-lined sala; the VORS Amontillado and Oloroso are served at cellar temperature with fino crackers.
DO Manzanilla-Sanlucar de BarramedaPalomino FinoSanlucar de Barrameda
A small, family-run bodega in Sanlucar producing manzanilla and oloroso from ancient soleras laid down by the Grant family in the early 20th century. Not open to mass tourism; visits must be arranged through the bodega directly. The manzanilla shows the most classic expression of the Sanlucar oceanic character.
Why locals love it: No PR presence, no export agent; wines sold almost entirely at the cellar door and to Sanlucar restaurants. Unknown outside local wine circles.
Tip: Ask locals in Sanlucar's Barrio Bajo for directions to the bodega; it is one of the last operating family tabancos with its own production in the historic quarter.
DO Jerez-Xeres-SherryPalomino FinoNaturalSanlucar de Barrameda
Ramiro Ibanez's single-pago project producing wines from named albariza parcels at Sanlucar. The Ube range of unfortified Palomino whites and the fortified UBE Carrascal are among the most exciting wines in Jerez today.
Why locals love it: Tiny production; wines are allocated to restaurants and specialist importers rather than sold in tourist-facing shops. Most visitors to Sanlucar never encounter them.
Tip: Book a private visit through Ramiro's website months in advance; the vineyard walks through albariza pagos are the most educational experience in the Triangle.