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Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $25.95
9 bottles: $25.43
100% País. From a two-hectare site of sandy, decomposed granite soils in the Maule region. The vines are farmed...
12 FREE
Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $22.95
9 bottles: $22.49
100% Pais from organic, dry-farmed, 200-300-year-old bush vines on iron-rich heavy clay soils with granite and quartz...
12 FREE
Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $20.40
9 bottles: $19.99
White
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $18.34
12 bottles: $17.42
Slightly cloudy in appearance, this is a white wine with plenty of personality; it is fresh, vibrant, with citrusy...
Rapid Ship
Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $18.94
Light in colour, the 2021 has a very fruity character, but with more freshness and floral notes than the first...
12 FREE
Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $18.00
12 bottles: $17.10
Light in colour, the 2022 has a very fruity character, but with more freshness and floral notes than the first...
Red
1.0Ltr
Bottle: $19.95
12 bottles: $19.55
Cinsault, Pais, and Carignan from small plots planted between 1800-1960 in granite soils. Grapes are hand-harvested,...
12 FREE

Chile Portugal 1.0Ltr

Chile has a long and rich wine history which dates back to the Spanish conquistadors of the 16th century, who were the first to discover that the wonderful climate and fertile soils of this South American country were ideal for vine cultivation. It has only been in the past forty or fifty years, however, that Chile as a modern wine producing nation has really had an impact on the rest of the world. Generally relatively cheap in price,Whilst being widely regarded as definitively 'New World' as a wine producing country, Chile has actually been cultivating grapevines for wine production for over five hundred years. The Iberian conquistadors first introduced vines to Chile with which to make sacramental wines, and although these were considerably different in everything from flavor, aroma and character to the wines we associate with Chile today, the country has a long and interesting heritage when it comes to this drink. Chilean wine production as we know it first arose in the country in the mid to late 19th century, when wealthy landowners and industrialists first began planting vineyards as a way of adopting some European class and style. They quickly discovered that the hot climate, sloping mountainsides and oceanic winds provided a perfect terroir for quality wines, and many of these original estates remain today in all their grandeur and beauty, still producing the wines which made the country famous.

Benefiting from both the hot, dry Iberian climate as well as brisk Atlantic winds, Portugal is a perfectly situated country for vineyard cultivation and wine production. With a wine making history which stretches back thousands of years, it comes as little surprise that wine plays an important role in the cultural identity and practices of the country. The Phoenicians, the Carthaginians, the Greeks and the Romans all had a hand in forming Portugal as an important center for wine production, and over the millennia, this resulted in each region of this beautiful part of Europe producing its own distinctive wines easily identifiable and separate from neighboring Spain's. Today, the varied terroir and climate across Portugal allows a great range of wines to be made each year, from the fresh and dry Vinho Verde wines to the famous and widely drunk fortified Port wines, and many in between.