Travel Drama Site Home

Chile Travel Drama Forum
01/09/06 06:10

  'Chilean Wine History and Style' Stories  

Post your Chile related message now.
All listings are the responsiblity of the posters; keep in mind, anyone can post anything!
Chile, Apartment: Apart. Business, Bed Roon 601.



Login or Register


Interact
If you have any questions or comments, please post a new message or a follow up.
Chile Related Resources

Message Topics
Chile - Stories

Chilean Wine History and Style


Post your travel stories here.

Tynan Szvetecz () -

The Buddhists say that life is suffering. The capitalists say that life is a struggle. The communists say that life is a team-effort. But the Chileans say that life is beautiful. Why? Because sometimes you are just born with a full deck of cards. Chile is perhaps the only wine making country on Earth that seems to have everything exactly where it wants it.

Spanning a formidable length of 2,700 miles, Chile is the poster child for geographic isolation. With the frigid Antarctic ice off its southern border, a desert off the northern one, and its heart squeezed between the Pacific Ocean on the western border and the epic Andes on the eastern border, it is quite literally a cradle for the choicest wine growing conditions on the planet.

In fact, the isolation has fostered a wine growing environment in which little or no pesticides need be used to ward off grape eating predators, an achievement that speaks most notably when Chile can claim along with Argentina to be one of only two countries in the world to not have been afflicted by the lethal phylloxera pest (this insect destroyed European vineyards in the late 19th century and reeked havoc on California vineyards in the 20th).

To add insult to injury, the grape-growing environment is so favorable, and the land and labor so cheap, that Chilean wine has developed a reputation for having the best value to price ratios on the market.

While Chile's wine history runs deep – the first vines were allegedly planted by Cortez in the early 16th century - it ran up against the same wall that colonized wine regions of high potential did like Argentina and South Africa. In all cases, poor political climate combined with restrictive taxes and local populations that favored cheap, unexceptional wines to force wine makers to keep their creativity relatively tame. And like these countries, Chile was ready to rise to the challenge when conditions finally shifted – in its case during the late 1980's.

In perhaps the most precocious growth spurt in wine making history, Chile went from wines that were nothing of note to wines that were first class in less than ten years. Vineyard establishments in Spain, Italy and the United States were ready to invest heavily when conditions were ripe, resulting in an amazing number of Chilean vineyards having the most up-to-date facilities around. As if the perfect wine growing climate wasn't enough.

These investments in the best equipment as well as select French and American oak barrels helped give a boost to wine makers that were already chopping at the bit to take advantage of the wine growing climate and make some truly notable wines.

Some places are just born to be great, but the beauty of it in this case is that the rest of us can enjoy it at a great value!

Chile is perhaps best known for its world-class interpretation of the Cabernet Sauvignon grape. A few bold souls have even claimed that there are certain Chilean vineyards that are more Bordeaux than Bordeaux!

A large part of Chile's fascination with the big four grapes – Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot and Sauvignon Blanc – revolves around its targeting of the American market. During the late 80's and early 90's when the Chilean wine boom really came into full swing, the American market was devouring wines that were not only made from recognizable grapes like Cabernet and Chardonnay, but also were sold at a reasonable price. To this day, the United States remains the premier importer of Chilean wine.

One of the more important ingredients in the recent Chilean wine exploration was that while major vineyards upgraded their facilities, smaller, family owned vineyards decided to take the leap and market their own brands. The result was that more definitively unique wines emerged from the area, though at higher prices. This suggests that while a reasonably priced $10 Chilean Chardonnay will be pretty good, a more expensive $40 or $50 bottle will be great.

Anyone familiar with Chilean wines will not be surprised to hear the reference to Carmenere, a medium bodied grape that is the source of many smoky and bold reds. In fact, a Chilean Merlot might actually be crafted from the Carmenere grape. As more mature Chilean vineyards are able to distinguish between vines using DNA testing, consistency in labeling practices will become more dependable.

There is also an important labeling note to keep heed of regarding Chilean wines. Because of Chile's proximity to the Andes, there is often too much water introduced into the irrigation process (note from discussions in the Wine Growing categories of SavorEachGlass.com that, in general, the less water a vine receives the higher quality the final harvest will be). As a result, some higher quality vineyards have shifted to a drip irrigation system that controls the amount of water introduced throughout the growing season. If you note anything related to drip irrigation on the back of a bottle of Chilean wine, there is a good bet it will be a keeper.

About The Author

Tynan Szvetecz is an editor for www.savoreachglass.com , an international wine directory that is helping explore the spirit of wine for a new generation.

This article can also be viewed at


Trackbacks
Trackback specific URI for this entry

No trackbacks.

You are not logged in. It is recommeded that you post messages and comments with a Travel Drama profile. You can login or register. You will be protected from spam and have more features. Registration is quick and easy. You can also post as a casual user with the form below. Your IP address will be published with your email address (if provided below).

Submit a follow up to this message.

Please submit a new reply here. HTML is not allowed and you are encouraged to seperate your paragraphs with a double blank line for readablity. Please make sure your message is relevant to Chile, Stories, and this message: If you wish to start a new message click here

Chile, Stories; Chilean Wine History and Style

Everything you enter will be published.

Name:           
E-Mail:         

Optional (please add link to our directory first)
Web Link:       

Link Title:     

Message:




Submit Reply. Please do not submit the same message more than once.

* If you are simply looking to promote a travel related website, please submit it to our Travel Directory. You are welcome to include urls in your forum postings, however, keep in mind that the forum is designed for discussions about topics not just posting of urls.





For the full benefit of Travel Drama website please register and login. You can upload your photos and interact with other users better.

Login with Email: Password:
Not a member? Register: Register for Travel Drama

Note: once you register your email address with Travel Drama it is used across our whole network of forums and blogs. You can create seperate profiles for each forum or blog, but use the same login.



Have you added a link to us from your website? (4389):

Chile, Stories; Chilean Wine History and Style

Copyright (c) 2006-2008 GLR Sales LLC.



()

Privacy Policy
Stories Chile 'Chilean Wine History and Style'