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The Martini business model was to produce large quantities of many different wines, mostly red, and sell them at modest prices. This was a disadvantage by the 1980s and 1990s, when white wine was more popular and pricier wines were selling well. The fourth generation of the Martini family was not interested in working in the winery.
In the 1950s and 1960s Beaulieu was considered one of the "big four" Napa Valley producers, along with Inglenook (also in Rutherford), Charles Krug, and Louis Martini. [3] In the Ottawa Wine Tasting of 1981, the 1970 vintage of Beaulieu Vineyard George de Latour Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon received second place.
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California wine has a long and continuing history, and in the late twentieth century became recognized as producing some of the world's finest wine. While wine is made in all fifty U.S. states, up to 90% (by some estimates) of American wine is produced in the state. California would be the fourth largest producer of wine in the world if it were ...
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In 1938, Beaulieu Vineyards (BV) founder and owner Georges de Latour visited France in search of a new winemaker who had a cosmopolitan and scientific background. He was introduced to Tchelistcheff at the French National Agronomy Institute where Andre was working, along with research he was doing at the Pasteur Institute. [1]
This is a category specifically for wine brands, which are notable enough to have their own articles, separate from articles on wineries, grape varieties, wine styles, wine regions, wine appellations, or other geographical designations for wine. Wineries should be categorized under Category:Wineries and not double-categorized here.