The wine most associated with Argentina is Malbec. Yet, it’s Cabernet Sauvignon, the country’s third most planted grape, that ...
Argentina is famed for its wine; in fact, wine is legally recognised as the country’s national beverage. Historically its ...
Long before Argentina was even a country, sophisticated wine drinkers (okay, let us just call them wine-thirsty Roman aristocracy) enjoyed the Malbec grape from Cahors. These ancient Romans even ...
Portillo Tempranillo by Bodega Salentein comprises 100 per cent Tempranillo grapes that are grown at the winery’s Uco Valley ...
By Tom Marquardt And Patrick Darr Most Americans identify the malbec grape as synonymous with Argentina. It is the most ...
Argentina exported nearly US$400 million ... a row after surpassing US$305 million in exports in 2004, the country's Institute of Wine reported. Now nearly 900 wineries in leafy vineyards all ...
For about 40 years prior, Argentina had been an economically isolationist country, meaning much of its winemaking equipment ... explaining the obstacles they faced. “I had to make wine [in] the most ...
Torrontes, a relative stranger to wine consumers yet native to Argentina, is the number one white grape grown. But chardonnay ...
Argentina is famed for its wine; in fact, wine is legally recognised as the country’s national beverage. Historically its famed Malbec has had ‘Main Character Energy’ but, on a recent trip ...
Torrontes, a relative stranger to wine consumers yet native to Argentina, is the number one white grape grown. But chardonnay closely follows and has a wide variation in styles in a country with a ...