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    “Portugal’s advantage in wine terms – its isolation, which has kept its inheritance of indigenous vine varieties intact and virtually unaffected by Chardonnay- and Cabernet-mania – has also been its disadvantage. The Portuguese have had this strange habit of… making wines to suit the palates of other Portuguese rather than making the sort of fruity, juicy-yet-structured wines that appeal to the majority of the world’s wine consumers. The wines that have traditionally been most respected within Portugal are incredibly tough reds that have typically spent rather too long in storage before being bottled and some slightly tired whites whose unfamiliar flavours may strike some outsiders as slightly rank. In fact Portugal has some first-class raw materials and is increasingly demonstrating the will and skill with which to transform them into exportable wines.

    It is so sad that top-quality Portuguese wine is not has much widely known and appreciated. Admittedly, the fact that Portugal now has such a vibrant wine culture (I’m told that something like seven annual wine guides are published in Portugal) has meant that prices for wines most highly regarded by the Portuguese have escalated, but these wines have such a strong personality, I don’t think any interested drinker should deny themselves the Portuguese experience.

    Portuguese wine is well placed to take advantage of current fashion for “heritage varieties.”

    1999… “The Alentejo Region, hot and dry, in the southeast, is perhaps the most promising source of accessible table wines, full-bodied, with intense colours… and this is without a doubt one of the most promising wine growing regions in the world.””
    by Jancis Robinson
  • Arquivos

Resultados dos Concursos de 2009 – Berlim, Itália, França, Bruxelas e Londres

Posted by Carrie on Domingo Maio 17th, 2009 em 20:24

Já chegaram todos os resultados dos principais concursos internacionais em que participamos em 2009.

O Reserva 2004 recebeu a sua 4.ª Medalha de Ouro em Paris (Vinalies);

O Incógnito 2005 conseguiu a 3.ª e a 4.ª Medalhas de Ouro em Paris e em Berlim;

O Syrah 2005 recebeu a sua 1.ª Medalha de Ouro em Paris;

O Aragonez 2005 conseguiu 2 Medalhas de Prata (Bordéus e Paris);

O Cortes de Cima 2006, em Londres, recebeu Medalhas de Prata (IWSC) e de Bronze (IWC);

O Touriga Nacional 2007 bem como o Syrah 2007 receberam medalhas idênticas em todos os concursos – 3 de Prata em Londres e Bruxelas, ambos foram Best in Class no IWSC e Grande Menção em Itália!

E finalmente, o Chaminé Branco 2008 alcançou um Commended no Wine Challenge UK.

Resumindo, para 2009 -

4 Medalhas de Ouro, 6 de Prata, 2 Best in Class, 2 Grandes Menções, e 1 Commended. Para mais detalhes visite a página dos Prémios no nosso site.

(Nota: nem o Chaminé Tinto 2008 nem o Cortes de Cima 2007 foram sujeitos a concurso, este ano, em virtude das datas limites de inscrição)


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