Winestein: Malbec keeps Argentine wine sales soaring

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articlenopicBy David Falcheck for TheTimes-Tribune.com

Hard to imagine that 10 years ago, wine from Argentina was a quaint discovery.

Now, Argentina's flagship wine, the easy-to-pronounceand-order malbec, is on everyone's lips.

Even in the midst of the Great Recession, Argentine wine sales continue to soar. From 2008 to 2009, Argentine wine imports to the United States grew 18 percent, according to the Wines of Argentina, a trade group.

With so many good-tasting, low-cost wines coming from South America, people exploring the world for bargains are discovering Argentina. There, it's all about malbec, which accounts for the vast majority of that wine.

The black grape traces its roots to France. Malbec was widely planted in Bordeaux, where it was a component of its red blends. Years ago, diseases and frost killed malbec. Burned growers declined to replant it, although some pockets of malbec survive. There's some malbec in the Loire Valley and in Southern France where a small region, Cahors, bottles mostly malbec. Cahors wines are fairly easy to find.

Argentina, which was heavily settled by Italian immigrants, has always made wine. But the wine was made for.. Read Full Article

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