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  2. Chilean wine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilean_wine

    Chilean wines have ranked very highly in international competitions. For example, in the Berlin Wine Tasting of 2004, 36 European experts blind tasted wines from two vintages each of eight top wines from France, Italy and Chile. The first and second place wines were two Cabernet-based reds from Chile: Viñedo Chadwick 2000 and Sena 2001. [35]

  3. Jubaea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubaea

    Jubaea is a genus of palms with one species, Jubaea chilensis, commonly known in English as the Chilean wine palm or Chile cocopalm, and palma chilena [3] in Spanish. It is native to southwestern South America and is endemic to a small area of central Chile between 32°S and 35°S in southern Coquimbo, Valparaíso, Santiago, O'Higgins, and northern Maule regions.

  4. Carménère - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carménère

    Chilean growers believed that this grape was a clone of Merlot and was known as Merlot selection or Merlot Peumal (after the Peumo Valley in Chile). [1] In 1994, Carménère was re-discovered as a distinct varietal in Chile by French ampelographist Jean Boursiquot, [1] a researcher at Montpellier's school of Oenology. [13]

  5. Viña Seña - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viña_Seña

    Seña wine was established as a collaborative venture in Chile between Viña Errázuriz and Robert Mondavi. [1] Since 2005 Seña is owned 100% by the Chadwick family, proprietors of Errázuriz, and is the personal project of Eduardo Chadwick. The vineyard has 42 hectares of cultivated vines, and had sales of 5,000 cases of wine in 2015. [2]

  6. Pais - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pais_(grape)

    Pais is a red wine grape that has played a prominent role in the Chilean wine industry. Up until the turn of the 21st century, it was Chile's most planted variety until it was overtaken by Cabernet Sauvignon. Today it is most commonly used in the production of jug wine in the Bío-Bío, Maule and Itata River regions in the south.

  7. Central Valley (Chilean wine region) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Valley_(Chilean...

    Panoramic view of Viña Santa Cruz in Colchagua Valley in the Chilean Central Valley. In terms of viticulture the Central Valley of Chile (Spanish: Valle Central) spans the O'Higgins Region (VI) and Maule Region (VII) Administrative Regions and the Administrative Metropolitan Region, and is the main growing zone for Chilean wine and coincides with the historical core of the Chilean Central Valley.

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