The Winery Cruz Primero of Mendoza

Winery Cruz Primero - Extinto Malbec
The winery offers 3 different wines
3.4
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Its wines get an average rating of 3.4.
It is currently not ranked among the best domains of Mendoza.
It is located in Mendoza

The Winery Cruz Primero is one of the best wineries to follow in Mendoza.. It offers 3 wines for sale in of Mendoza to come and discover on site or to buy online.

Top Winery Cruz Primero wines

Looking for the best Winery Cruz Primero wines in Mendoza among all the wines in the region? Check out our tops of the best red, white or effervescent Winery Cruz Primero wines. Also find some food and wine pairings that may be suitable with the wines from this area. Learn more about the region and the Winery Cruz Primero wines with technical and enological descriptions.

The top red wines of Winery Cruz Primero

Food and wine pairings with a red wine of Winery Cruz Primero

How Winery Cruz Primero wines pair with each other generally quite well with dishes of beef, lamb or poultry such as recipes of chickpeas spanish style, lebanese lamb meatball or chicken waterzooi with blanche de hoegaarden and pink pepper.

Organoleptic analysis of red wines of Winery Cruz Primero

In the mouth the red wine of Winery Cruz Primero. is a powerful with a lot of tannins present in the mouth.

The best vintages in the red wines of Winery Cruz Primero

  • 2014With an average score of 3.80/5
  • 2011With an average score of 3.60/5

The grape varieties most used in the red wines of Winery Cruz Primero.

  • Malbec

Discovering the wine region of Mendoza

Mendoza is by far the largest wine region in Argentina. Located on a high-altitude plateau at the edge of the Andes Mountains, the province is responsible for roughly 70 percent of the country's annual wine production. The French Grape variety Malbec has its New World home in the vineyards of Mendoza, producing red wines of great concentration and intensity. The province Lies on the western edge of Argentina, across the Andes Mountains from Chile.

While the province is large (it covers a similar area to the state of New York), its viticultural land is clustered mainly in the northern Part, just South of Mendoza City. Here, the regions of Lujan de Cuyo, Maipu and the Uco Valley are home to some of the biggest names in Argentinian wine. Mendoza's winemaking history is nearly as Old as the colonial history of Argentina itself. The first vines were planted by priests of the Catholic Church's Jesuit order in the mid-16th Century, borrowing agricultural techniques from the Incas and Huarpes, who had occupied the land before them.

Malbec was introduced around this time by a French agronomist, Miguel Aimé Pouget. In the 1800s, Spanish and Italian immigrants flooded into Mendoza to escape the ravages of the Phylloxera louse that was devastating vineyards in Europe at the time. A boom in wine production came in 1885, when a railway line was completed between Mendoza and the country's capital city, Buenos Aires, providing a cheaper, easier way of sending wines out of the region. For most of the 20th Century, the Argentinean wine industry focused almost entirely on the domestic market, and it is only in the past 25 years that a push toward quality has led to the wines of Mendoza gracing restaurant lists the world over.

Discover other wineries and winemakers neighboring the Winery Cruz Primero

Planning a wine route in the of Mendoza? Here are the wineries to visit and the winemakers to meet during your trip in search of wines similar to Winery Cruz Primero.

Discover the grape variety: Grosse Arvine

Most certainly originating from the Swiss Valais - Martigny and Fully vineyards - it is the result of a natural intraspecific crossing between the rèze and a child of the arvine with which it should not be confused. Today, grosse Arvine is practically no longer cultivated and remains completely unknown in France, as in all other wine-producing countries.

News about Winery Cruz Primero and wines from the region

NZ winery uses terroir ‘fingerprint’ to verify fine wine origin

North Canterbury-based Pyramid Valley has formed a partnership with fellow New Zealand firm Oritain, which specialises in proving the origin of different products, and said the group’s ability to ‘fingerprint’ vineyard terroir offers a way to guarantee the provenance of its fine wines. Both partners suggested the system could contribute to preventing fine wine fraud more generally, but it’s early days. Wines in Pyramid Valley’s 2020-vintage Botanicals Collection, featuring Pinot Noir and Chardon ...

Decanter guide to picnicking for wine lovers

According to lifestyle and happiness guru Gretchen Rubin, you ‘bring your own weather to a picnic’. Ms Rubin, I’d suggest, has never shivered under a tree watching raindrops turn her fish-paste sandwich to mush because the weather forecast was wrong. There are, it’s safe to say, picnics and Picnics. It’s a term that takes in everything from a rubber baguette in a French ‘Aire’ off the Autoroute du Soleil to a four-course spread while listening to opera at Glyndebourne. What’s definitely true is ...

Andrew Jefford: ‘Perhaps they think “drinkers like oak”. Really?’

An electronic dart was tossed at us recently by Decanter reader Tim Frances from Kent. It landed on the screen of our magazine editor Amy Wislocki; Amy lobbed it across the virtual room to me, suggesting a column-length reply. ‘Here’s a poser,’ Tim began. ‘How do your experts grade a wine that they find intellectually well made, but that they truly madly deeply dislike? I’ve tasted wines I can admire dispassionately, but would stab my feet with forks rather than drink them. Must be a conundrum f ...

The word of the wine: Aggressive

Said of a wine with excessive, biting and unpleasant acidity.