Tag Archives: Wines of Brazil

Wine Countries: Brazil – Wines of Brazil Tasting At Snooth PVA

For breakfast this past Saturday, a group of fortunate bloggers and I had wines from Brazil. While it certainly doesn’t sound like an onerous task, at times it can be if you have to taste very heavy wines. Luckily, none of the wines we tasted were too heavy although all the wineries were proponents of oak aging except for one. A few of the wines I found to be surprisingly friendly for 930am.

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This was not the first time I had tasted wines from Brazil and what I found interesting is that my tastes had not changed. I still really enjoyed the wines from Casa Valduga and from Lidio Carraro that I had tasted two years earlier and written about here.

Brazil has six major wine regions. There are over 1,100 wineries in the country, mostly small farms. Despite growth in the industry, Brazilians still only drink two liters of wine. It is the fifth largest country in terms of wine growing in the Southern Hemisphere following Argentina, Australia, South Africa and Chile. Brazil is also the world’s fifth largest economy with a population just shy of 200 million people.

Serra Gaucha, where most of these wineries are located, produces 85% of Brazil’s fine wine on vineyards at altitudes of 450 – 750 meters. The area is also called “little Italy.”

Casa Valduga 130

Mauricio Roloff from Ibravin who led the seminar with Gregory Del Piaz from Snooth told a joke that the way you know if someone is Brazilian in a restaurant is because they are drinking imported wine while the way to tell a tourist is that they instead, are drinking Brazilian wine.

We tasted through fourteen wines from a couple of different vintages. Generally, I thought the wines were friendly and relatively easy to drink. Oddly enough, Brazil’s growing regions are colder and damper than one might think and some of the wines had a decidely “cool climate” vibe.

A quick look through the names of the wineries clearly shows the strong connection to Italy, especially in the Serra Gaucha region. The grapes used in the wines we tasted were decidedly international varieties: Cabernet, Merlot, and Chardonnay dominated.

Of the wines we tasted, I was partial to the Casa Valduga 130 N.V., a cheery sparkler with tropical fruit, toast and yeasty notes on the nose and palate. Apparently, Casa Valduga built the first Eno-tourism complex in Brazil in the Vale dos Vinhedos, the only DO in the country. The suggested retail price was $29.99. I would have that for breakfast again maybe with a bagel and smoked salmon on the side…

The Valduga family came to Brazil from the town of Rovereto in Italy in 1875. They planted their first vineyards in the Vale dos Vinhedos region. Today, three generations later, Erielso, Juarez and João Valduga still run this winery which has concentrated on making sparkling wines using the traditional method.

Wines of Brazil

I also liked the Lidio Carraro Dadivas Chardonnay 2012, SRP $19.99 which I found shocking as I am not partial to Chardonnay at all. Carraro uses no oak in his winery but the wine rests on its lees for a long period. The Chardonnay had aromas and flavors of white flowers, pears and apples and considerable minerality according to my notes. The winery was created in 1998 and the first harvest was 2002.

The winery just announced this week that they have been awarded the contract to produce the official licensed wines of 2014 Fifa World Cup of Brazil with its FACES brand. That’s quite a coup in terms of his marketing and branding I would say.

Lidio Carraro

His Lidio Carraro Grande Vindima Quorum 2006 at $64.99 wasn’t an everyday wine but I thought this Merlot dominated blend was lovely with its blackberry flavors and ripe, juicy tannins. The blend was a combination of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, and Tannat.

Merlot seems to do very well in Brazil and we discussed whether it could become the signature grape variety from Brazil, much as Tannat is in Uruguay, Malbec in Argentina and Carmenere in Chile.

We tried two merlots from the 2009 vintage, a Pizzato Riserva Merlot SRP $19.99 and Miolo Merlot Terroir $23.99. I found the Pizzato to have some leather overtones while the Miolo was more fruit forward. Miolo is a very large player in the Brazilian market.

The Salton Merlot, Desejo 2007 $21.99 was also of interest with its full bodied, spicy nose and pleasing, velvety mouthfeel.

In general, it seemed that the wines were well-made with a little too much oak on many. The sparkling wines certainly have a place in the market although the wines are not inexpensive.

While not an exhaustive tasting, it was certainly a further introduction to the wines of Brazil, a country I look forward to reading more about while drinking more of their wines and to visiting someday soon, as soon as I improve my Portuguese, my next linguistic challenge.

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New World Wines: Brazil Is Up and Coming

I have decided to start writing once a week about wines from another country, meaning not from Italy. This will help me not only with my palate but also with my ongoing wine study. This week, I’m writing a bit about Brazil.

Brazil seems to have entered my life recently on a rather important scale. A dear friend from Brazil has just helped me with an important personal project. It seems that everyone I know speaks Portugese, workss with Brazil and/or vacations there.

Brazil is not just on my mind but on everyones’ thanks to its strong economy and recent election of a female President. Just last week, Brazil apparently became the world’s fifth largest economy, surpassing both Britain and France, according to their finance mInister Guido Mantega.

My graduate school also just held an alumni party at a wonderful restaurant in New York called Emporium Brasil where I discovered more delicacies from that land.

We had a Samba band, dancers and much cachaca and a wonderful fruit drink made with the Acai berry called Sambazon, an exciting and dynamic company doing great things with organic juices from the Acai berry and supporting local development at the same time.

Brazil’s growth is amazing and the population is already over 200 million people. Brazil was settled by many immigrants from Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Many Africans were brought as slaves to Brazil and there were and are indigenous tribes.

At a seminar on Sunday February 27 at the New York Wine Expo, I learned even more about Brazilian wines and their origins. As one might imagine, immigrants had a big role in the product of wine in Brazil, especially the Italians.

Brazil is the fifth largest wine producer in the southern hemisphere. With a production of 3.3 million hectoliters this year, Brazil is only second to Argentina (14.6 million hectoliters), Australia (12.3 million), South Africa (10.2 million) and Chile (8.6 million) in terms of new world wine countries.

Brazil has nine main wine regions but Serra Gaucha is apparently the one with the most wineries, the heart of wine tourism and is completely Italian.

Brazil has no indigenous grape varieties and thus far has concentrated on the international ones such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot and Pinot Noir. They also grow Riesling, Glera, Moscato, Malvasia, Cabernet Franc, Tannat, Ancellota, Egiodola, Touriga Nacional, and Teroldego. The have one DO of Denomination of origin area in the works, called Valle dos Vinhedos, which should be finalized in April 2011.

During the seminar, we discussed how at the moment Brazilians drink only two liters of wine per capita compared with 11 liters of beer and 31 liters of Cachaca. That means there is a lot of room for growth in the wine sales. Some 15,000 families are involved in the industry.

Generally, the wineries are small holdings. I tasted wines from all five producers who were showing their products at the expo. I liked them as a whole and especially those from Casa Valduga and Lidio Carraro. I also tasted a sparkling wine from Vinciola Aurora which was really lovely, a Pinot Noir based sparkler.

I didn’t try any wines from Miolo because I know them relatively well as their sparkler is sold throughout New York City.

In general, the wines are young, fresh and ready to drink. What I also liked was that they were not so high in alcohol and nuanced in their use of wood.

I look very forward to trying more of these wines at their nice and affordable prices. I also look forward to learning Portuguese, dancing the Samba and going to Brazil, one of the countries in South America that I haven’t visited. I’m still working on my Spanish and my tango but my interest in Portuguese and samba has been awakened as well.

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