Free corkscrew on first orders over with the code CORKSCREW

Decántalo
Wine blog
Don't miss our articles on the world of wine. Wineries, production types, wine regions, pairings, interviews with the top professionals in the winemaking world and all the latest wine news.

The new generation of wine that is rewriting the rules

08/07/2026 Winemaking
The new generation of wine that is rewriting the rules

There was a time when the great international wine seemed to speak a single language: concentration, new oak barrels, power, and solemn labels were the defining features. Today, the conversation has shifted. The new generation of winemakers no longer seeks only scores or classic prestige; they pursue identity, landscape, and emotion.

This is not merely a passing trend. There is a transformation in the way wine is cultivated, vinified, and consumed. A generation is emerging that perceives wine less as a product and more as a cultural interpretation of the land. Old vines, small productions, sustainable agriculture, local identity, and wines that evoke emotion more than they impress.


Moreover, the consumer has also evolved. Today's wine enthusiasts seek genuine stories, producers with character, and bottles that express a specific landscape rather than replicating an international formula. Perhaps this is why these winemakers generate such fascination. Because, in an era of global homogenisation, their wines still taste of a specific place in the world.

5 wine projects you must not miss:

Judith Beck: The Elegant Naturalness of Burgenland

Austria has been one of the most intriguing wine laboratories in Europe for years, and Judith Beck is one of its essential figures. From Burgenland, she works with local varieties using a biodynamic philosophy that avoids any unnecessary artifice.


Her wines possess something that currently obsesses the new international sommellerie: energy. Light yet profound reds, vibrant fruit, and a sense of freedom that breaks with the old notion of heavy or rigid Central European wine. Her Cherry Bomb is a good gateway into this freer universe. 

Filipa Pato: Portugal is No Longer a Secret


For decades, Portugal was the favourite country of initiates and sommeliers. Today, it plays in the global premier league, and Filipa Pato has much to do with it.


From Bairrada, she has crafted tense, precise, and deeply Atlantic wines. Her work with Baga demonstrates that Portugal's historic varieties can achieve extraordinary elegance without losing identity. A fine example is Filipa Pato & William Wouters Dynámica Baga.

Matassa: Southern France After the Revolution



If there is one project that has radically influenced the new French scene, it is Matassa. Founded by Tom Lubbe in the French Roussillon, it has helped redefine what the Mediterranean is.


For years, southern France was associated with warm and heavy wines. Matassa has done exactly the opposite: light, saline, vibrant wines full of freshness. With wines like Matassa Tattouine, it has become more than a winery; it is an aesthetic reference for an entire generation.

Xurxo Alba: Galicia and the Return to the Landscape


The new Spain of wine no longer looks solely to Rioja or Ribera. Many of the most interesting projects today are born in Atlantic and rural areas, and Xurxo Alba perfectly represents this transformation.


From Galicia, he revives native varieties and traditional methods to reinterpret them with contemporary sensitivity. His Albamar wines speak of Atlantic acidity, salinity, and landscape, moving away from power to seek transparency and character. For instance, Albamar O Pereiro.

Arianna Occhipinti: Sicily and the New Mediterranean Sensibility

Arianna Occhipinti has become one of the most influential names in contemporary Italian wine. From Sicily, she has crafted a new vision of the Mediterranean: less excess and more delicacy.


Working with traditional varieties like Frappato and Nero d’Avola, she creates floral, luminous, and deeply territorial wines. Her influence has been immense because with wines like Occhipinti Il Frappato she has shown that Mediterranean wine can also be fine, fresh, and emotional.

Ultimately, they all share the same belief that great wine is born not from technical perfection, but from identity. Bottles that speak of a landscape, a culture, and a way of understanding the land. In an increasingly homogeneous world, this diversity of perspectives has become the true luxury of contemporary wine.