Winemaker Pedro Parra makes wines that he likes to drink: terroir-focused, with a hands-off approach in the vineyard and cellar. The granite soils and cool coastal winds keep the wines fresh with a fine mineral streak. This red blend shows red and black fruit flavors with silky tannins.
Winemaker Pedro Parra has been called the "rock whisperer" and it's easy to understand where that came from when you try his wines. They've developed a dedicated following as part of the "New Chile" wine movement. He holds a PhD in terroir, consults for wineries the world over, yet he is most dedicated to creating unique wines from the granite soils of the Itata Valley region. The "Pencopolitano" (meaning a resident of Concepcion, his home town) is a blend of several varietals that thrive in Chile - Carmenere, Pais, Cinsault - resulting in an intense, savory wine. Notes of smoked bacon, salted nuts, burnt toast with an elegantly light texture.This is an explosion of salinity for the senses. Mezcal drinkers take note.
Grown all over Europe and the Americas, Carignan (a.k.a. Carignane, Carignano, and Cariñena) is seldom seen as a 100% varietal wine. Many appellations of Languedoc-Roussillon must include a certain percentage of Carignan, but it is rarely the dominant grape in these blends. For years, this naturally high-yielding grape suffered from overproduction, but New World winemakers have lately taken up...
Chilean winemakers are known for opening their arms to forgotten European grape varieties, nursing them back to health, and then releasing them back to the rest of the world - and we can’t thank them enough for it. Chile’s friendly, delicious Carmenères are the best example, but Chile is generally one of the most consistent sources of delicious, ready-to-drink, approachable wines. Cabernet...
We'd like to clear this up once and for all: the Shiraz grape is genetically identical to Syrah. Australian winemakers put "Shiraz" on the map (and, many would argue, vice versa), and the term is now used throughout much of the New World. Let it never be said, however, that Shiraz and Syrah are the same thing: the region in which the grape is grown determines much about the flavor of the wine it...
Known as Côt throughout much of France, Malbec is the dark-skinned variety that put Argentinian wine on the map - and likewise, Argentinian Malbec saved the grape from near obscurity. The Cahors appellation in France still relies on Malbec to distinguish many of its wines, but the area is exceptional in this regard. As the grape can be quite difficult to cultivate, it has become far less popular...
Hundreds of years ago, the red Carmenère grape was widely used in the blended wines of the best châteaux in Bordeaux. No more, however: it was difficult to grow and often gave low yields, so the French mostly abandoned it. It has recently found a home in Chile, where it has successfully been made into full-bodied, deep red varietals.
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