Portugal

The history of Portuguese wine has been influenced by Portugal's relative isolationism in the world's wine market, with the one notable exception of its relationship with the British. Wine has been made in Portugal since at least 2000 BC when the Tartessians planted vines in the Southern Sado and Tagus valleys. By the 10th century BC, the Phoenicians had arrived and introduced new grape varieties and winemaking techniques to the area.

In the mid-16th century, Lisbon was the biggest centre of consumption and distribution of wine in the empire, and Portuguese wine reached the four corners of the world.

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 and whites that are perhaps past their best.

Today, there appears to be more international recognition of the 'indigenous Portuguese grape variety-driven wines that have for decades been the backbone of local consumption. For international drinkers of Portuguese wine, it is perhaps best to understand Portuguese wine, not in terms of grape varieties, but to drink the wine and appreciate its style: crisp, dry, fruit-driven or savoury whites. And juicy, fruity, plush reds, or the structured, firmer, more robust and fleshy red styles. Or of course the gorgeous sweet, heady Ports.

  • Adegamãe

    AdegaMãe the wine estate was born of an old passion that has always existed within the Riberalves Group, one of the largest producers of Bacalhau - dried and salted cod - in the world.

    The winery is at Quinta da Archeira, just outside Lisbon, in the Parish of Ventosa, with an area of approximately 40 ha. (98 ac.) devoted to vines and a production capacity of 1.2 million liters per year. On gently sloping hillsides, the vineyards grow in clay-limestone soils influenced by the Atlantic climate.

    The Salino range of wines from Adegamae repesents exceptional value and flavour. Both the white and the red are fruit-driven, soft and VERY drinkable. They are the perfect house wine style, and are wonderful for everyday drinking with a range of foods. This is wine you don’t have to think about, just enjoy.

  • Quinta do Vallado

    One of the oldest and most storied estates in the Douro, Quinta do Vallado was founded in 1716 and has been in the hands of the same family — descendants of the legendary Dona Antónia Adelaide Ferreira — for six generations. The estate farms old-vine field blends alongside single-varietal plots of Touriga Nacional, Touriga Franca, Sousão and others.

    Under cousins Francisco (Xito) Ferreira Olazabal and João Ferreira Alvares Ribeiro, Vallado has become a benchmark for the modern Douro: precise, terroir-driven table wines alongside a superb range of traditional aged Tawny and Vintage Ports that honour the house's three-century heritage.

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