Information About Chile Is At The End Of This Page.

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Caliterra Carmenere Reserva Chile 2009 $6.95
Casa Lapostolle Clos Apalta Limited Release Estate Bottle 2005       WS 96/100 WINE OF THE YEAR 2008 $299.99
Casa Lapostolle Cabernet Sauvignon Rapel Valley 2008 $9.95
Casa Lapostolle Cabernet Sauvignon Rapel Valley 2010 $9.95
Casa Lapostolle Cabernet Sauvignon Cuvee Alexander Colchagua Valley Apalta Vineyard 2008 $17.95
Casas Patronales Cabernet Sauvignon 75% Carmenere 25% 2004 $5.99
Concha Y Toro Marquis De Casa Concha Carmenere 2007 $14.95
Concha Y Toro Marquis De Casa Concha Syrah 2006 $14.95
Concha Y Toro Don Melchor Cabernet Sauvignon Puente Alto 2005    WS 96/100 # 12 On The Top 100 Of 2008 $99.95
Concha Y Toro Don Melchor Cabernet Sauvignon Puente Alto 2006       WS 94/100 $59.95
Concha Y Toro Cabernet Sauvignon Frontera 2009 $4.95
Concha Y Toro Carmenere Frontera 2009 $4.95
Concha Y Toro Casillero Del Diablo Reserva Cabernet Sauvignon 2010 $9.95
Concha Y Toro Casillero Del Diablo Reserva Carmenere 2010 $9.95
Concha Y Toro Merlot Frontera 2010 $4.95
Concha Y Toro Sauvignon Blanc Late Harvest 375ml 2005 $11.95
Concha Y Toro Xplorador Carmenere 2005 $5.95
Concha Y Toro Xplorador Carmenere 2007 $5.95
Escudo Rojo Baron Philippe De Rothschild Maipo Chile 2007 $11.95
Montes Alpha Cabernet Sauvignon Colchagua Valley 2005 $11.95
Montes Alpha Cabernet Sauvignon Colchagua Valley 2007 $16.95
Montes Alpha Chardonnay Casablanca Valley 2005       WS 89/100 $15.99
Montes Alpha M Chilean Red Wine Santa Cruz Apalta Single Estate Hand Picked Grapes 2004        WS 94/100 $69.95
Montes Alpha M Chilean Red Wine Santa Cruz Apalta Single Estate Hand Picked Grapes 2005       WS 95/100 $69.95
Montes Alpha M 2006 $69.95
Montes Folly 2005 $69.95
Montes Folly 2006 $69.95
Montes Malbec Classic Series 2006 $7.95
Montes Malbec Classic Series 2008 $9.95
Purple Angel By Montes 2006 $45.95
Root 1 The Original Ungrafted Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $9.95
Santa Ema Cabernet Sauvignon Selected Terroir 2005 $6.95
Santa Ema Cabernet Sauvignon Amplus 2005 $16.95
Santa Ema Cabernet Sauvignon Amplus 2006 $16.95
Santa Ema One Amplus 2006 $16.95
Santa Ema Rivalta 2003 $39.95
Santa Ema Sauvignon Blanc Amplus 2006 $12.95
Santa Rita 120 Cabernet Sauvignon Chile 2008 $4.99
Santa Rita 120 Carmenere Chile 2008 $4.99
Santa Rita 120 Merlot Chile 2008 $4.99
Santa Rita Chardonnay Special Reserve Single Estate Medalla Real 2007 $7.99
Veramonte Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve 2008 750ml $9.95
Veramonte Primus 2006 375ml $9.95
Veramonte Primus 2008 750ml $12.95
Vina Maipo Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 1.5 liter $7.95
Vina Maipo Chardonnay 2007 1.5 liter $7.95
   
 

 

There's a bubbling sense of excitement in the Chilean wine industry, as sparkling as the bubbles in a Valdivieso methode champenoise. As the revitalized wine industry hurtles ahead, Japanese orders kept faxes running hot in January and February. Long years of hard work and heavy investment are beginning to pay bumper bonuses.

The constant quest to raise both quality and prices is paying dividends. A justified sense of self-worth is buoyed by keen excitement as Chile stamps a proprietary brand on the rediscovered grape Carmenere.

It all adds up to a glowing testimonial for the Chilean wine resurgency.

The incredible growth of Chile's output is a textbook example of how aggressive private enterprise can combine with enthusiastic government backing. The official trade organization, ProChile, is both effective in providing a back-up infrastructure for exporters and a source of information for global markets.

Statistics show the graphic results of this benign attitude. In 1988, Chile shipped 185,630 hectoliters (one hl = 26.4 U.S. gallons) abroad. By 1998, this had grown to an impressive 2.3 million hl worth US$500 million.

The value per bottle increased equally dramatically. As the 21st century dawned, Chile enjoyed a global reputation for quality. And its reach was worldwide. Instead of sending 88% of its wine to Latin America, as it had in the 1980s, it sold in high-profit markets like Europe (41% of all exports), North America (34%) and, increasingly, Asia, where in 1998 Chile sold 14% of its wine.

"Asia is the hope for future expansion," says Victor Costa Barros, a senior enologist and agronomist at the Ministry of Agriculture.

His research shows Asian imports rose 177% in 1998, with Japan leading the rush with a 283% increase in purchases.

It is a picture of astonishing progress in the past decade.

The first recorded vintage in Chile was m 1551, when priests who swiftly followed the conquistadors south pressed grapes to make sacramental wines.

Three centuries later, prosperous landowners sent their sons for education to Europe, notably to France, Spain and Italy. They came home with a taste for wine and brought skilled European winemakers and architects with them.

This classical age of wine civilization saw the foundation of many of the great modern wineries, most of which were built in gracious parkland estates modeled on the great chateaux of Bordeaux.

The only country spared from the devastating blight of phylloxera, Chile's wine industry boomed in the early years of the 20th century. But then came a chapter of neglect when many of the fine wineries produced unimaginative bulk wine for internal consumption.

In 1981, there were 100,000 hectares (one ha = 2.47 acres) under vines, which sank to 67,000 in 1985, the nadir of the industry.

Then, a new sense of identity and purpose swept Chile's winemakers and investors. Suddenly, the wine revolution which had earlier had its impact on California and Australia caught on in Chile. There were gigantic investments in land, plantings and equipment. Visionaries saw a brilliant new future for quality wines. Old-fashioned vines were uprooted. In the late 1990s, Cabernet Sauvignonernet Sauvignon doubled from 11,000 to 20,000 hectares. Merlor vineyard acreage quadrupled between 1994 and 1999. Chardonnay and Sauvignon blanc exploded while the "old" grapes stagnated.