
Winery Altos de TrevejosBambú Blanco
This wine generally goes well with

Details and technical informations about Winery Altos de Trevejos's Bambú Blanco.
Discover the grape variety: Cornalin d'Aoste
Deep, structured reds with a dark, intense ruby color, firm tannins and a dense palate, offering intense aromas of black fruits (blackberry, blackcurrant), black cherry, spices, pepper, alpine and balsamic notes. Fine cellaring potential; mountain wines from altitude. Star of Valle d'Aosta DOC, grown on sun-drenched terraces between Aymavilles and Chambave. Italian indigenous variety of the Aosta Valley, distinct from Valais cornalin (rouge du pays).
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Bambú Blanco from Winery Altos de Trevejos are 0, 2018, 2015
Informations about the Winery Altos de Trevejos
The Winery Altos de Trevejos is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 11 wines for sale in the of Abona to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Abona
DO in southern Tenerife (Canary Islands), vineyards among the highest in Spain (up to 1,700 m at Vilaflor) on black volcanic "jable" sands, dry sunny climate, traditional gobelet training. Listán Blanco flagship white: dry and tense with citrus, green apple, white flowers and saline volcanic mineral touch, acidity preserved by altitude. Gual textured, Verdello lively and Malvasía floral in whites. Listán Negro (cherry, smoke) and supple Negramoll in light reds.
The wine region of Iles Canaries
Spanish vineyard archipelago spared by phylloxera, ~50 grape varieties of which 20 unique worldwide. Black volcanic soils and sub-tropical oceanic climate. Listán Negro in light, spicy red with signature notes of red cherry, wild strawberry, smoke, pepper and a volcanic mineral touch, fine tannins — an atypical style. Supple Negramoll, fresh Listán Blanco (citrus, flowers), aromatic Malvasía (candied orange, honey) historically famous.
The word of the wine: Old vines
There are no specific regulations governing the term "vieilles vignes". After 20 to 25 years, the yields stabilize and tend to decrease, the vines are deeply rooted, and the grapes that come from them give richer, more concentrated, more sappy wines, expressing with more nuance the characteristics of their terroir. It is possible to find plots of vines that claim to be a century old.













