Portugal COPY COPY Flashcards
Where is DOC Douro and what is the climate like?
80km East of Porto, runs from the Marão mountains to the Spanish border.
Located in the Duriense IGP.
Around the Douro river valley the vineyards are sheltered from the Atlantic by the Marão mountains giving a warm continental climate
A semi-sparkling white or rosé wine that is 8.5% alcohol and high in acidity is most likely to originate from which region in Portugal?
Vinho Verde DOP
Which small DOP is located near the famous surfing beach Guincho in Portugal and is famous for vineyards?
Colares DOP
Name the 5 dominant black grapes used to make DOC Douro red wines and give simple tasting notes of a DOC Douro red wine
Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz (Tempranillo), Tinta Barroca, Tinta Cão and Touriga Franca
Deep colour, full body, intense black fruit, high tannin and toasty oak
What are the three subregions of the Douro Valley?
Baixo Corgo / Cima Corgo / Douro Superior
What is the subregion of Vinho Verde that specializes in varietal Alvarinho wines?
Monção e Melgaço
What is the most common soil type found in the Dão?
Granite
What is the modern name of Portugal’s PDO? What is the traditional term?
DOP - Denominacão de Origen Protegida
DOC - Denominacão de Origen Controlada
What are the 2 producers of sweet, semi-sparkling Portugese rosé that became extremely popular following WWII?
Mateus and Lancers
A red wine with elevated acidity, elevated alcohol, black fruit flavors and a generous use of new French oak is most likely to originate from what region in Portugal?
Douro DOP
The DOP of Colares is located near which capital city?
80% of the plantings here are ungrafted vines of ___ and ___.
Phylloxera was avoided due to:
Lisboa / Lisbon
Ramisco and Malvasia.
Sandy soils.
Which Portugese DOP is famously phylloxera free?
Why is this?
Colares DOP
Primarily sandy soils prevented the advancement of this vine-destroying pest.
Which Vinho Regional does Douro DOP and Porto DOP fall under?
Duriense IGP
Match the Portuguese variety to its synonym used elsewhere:
- Tinta Roriz
- Jaen
- Malmsey
- Bastardo
- Alvarinho
- Tempranillo
- Mencia
- Malvasia
- Trousseau
- Albariño
What are the 3 mountain ranges that surround the Dão DOP?
Caramula, Estrela, Nave
What is the most common method for making Vinho Verde wines semi-sparkling?
Direct CO² Injection
What are the 5 IGPs / Vinho Regional areas of SOUTHERN Portugal?
Lisboa IGP (West coast, directly south of Bairrada area)
Tejo IGP (east of Lisboa, along the Tejo river, west of Alentejano)
Alentejano IGP (Large area along the Spanish border, extending over to the Atlantic)
Peninsula de Setubal IGP (south of Tejo, on the Atlantic coast and surrounded by Alentejano to the east/south)
Algarve IGP (southernmost IGP)
Red and Rosé Vinho Verde is made primarily from which grape varieties?
Vinhão (a teinturier grape), Espadeiro, Borraçal, and Alvarelhão,
List these regions from north to south (1 = northernmost, 5 = southernmost).
A. Douro
B. Dão
C. Alentejo
D. Minho
E. Madeira
A / 2
B / 3
C / 4
D / 1
E / 5
What is the slightly prickly and very acid white wine from the Minho region?
Vinho Verde
If a guest asks for a rich, juicy, easy drinking, inexpensive wine similar to Malbec, which Portuguese region would be the best to recommend?
Alentejo
What are 2 synonyms for Touriga Nacional in Portugal?
Bical Tinto / Mortágua Preto
DOC Vinho Verde has a moderate Maritime climate with plenty of rain.
What risks does this bring?
What is the name of the traditional training method used to mitigate this risk, and how does it work?
What has this method been widely replaced with today?
High risk of disease; mold and rot.
Enforcado.
Vines would grow up the trunks of trees, telephone poles, and stakes, creating an overhead canopy and lessening the risk of fungal disease.
Nowadays, more modern trellising techniques are used.
What is the most widely planted white grape of Portugal?
Fernão Pires
What are the 3 sub-regions of the Douro DOP, from West to East?
Baixo Corgo / Cima Corgo / Douro Superior
Malvasia, Viosinho, Rabigato, Encruzado, and Fernão Pires are all ________ grapes?
White
In what Portugese region would you most likely encounter “chão de areia” and “chão rija” soil types?
What is the make up of these soils?
Colares DOP / Lisboa IGP
Chão de areia = “sandy ground”, an area of sandy dunes.
Chão rija = “hard ground”, calcareous brown soils
The Peninsula de Setubal is home to a well-known, sweet wine produced from the Muscat grape, known as what?
Moscatel de Setúbal
How would you describe red wines from Dão, in comparison to those from the Douro?
Delicate red fruit aromas, soft tannins and high acidity.
Typically more elegant, sharper, and more floral than their counterparts in the Douro.
Highly tannic red grape variety; often used in the red wines of the Bairrada DOC
Baga
What is the main grape variety used in white Vinho Verde, and the 4 secondary varieties?
Loureiro. Other white grapes include Trajadura (Treixadura), Avesso, Pedernã (Arinto), and the Spanish Albariño.
What 2 styles of vinho licoroso are produced in Sétubal?
What grapes are used for them?
Sweet whites made from min. 67% Moscatel de Setúbal (Muscat d’Alexandria)
Red fortified wines made from Moscatel Roxo
Though there are many others, what are the top 4 grapes used for white Douro wines?
Malvasia Fina, Viosinho, Rabigato, and Gouveio
One of the primary red grapes used in Port; provides firm structure and black-fruit flavors:
Touriga Nacional
In which 2 regions does Herdade do Esporão produce wine?
Alentejo and Douro DOPs
What is the most planted black grape in Portugal?
What is the highest regarded black grape in Portugal? What are its key tasting notes?
Tempranillo / Tinta Roriz / Aragonez
Touriga Nacional -
Inky, full-bodied, structured, high tannins
What are the wines from Alentejo like and what are the 3 main black grapes?
Most wines are low acid, high alcohol, and of a basic quality level. The northernmost area (Portalegre DOP) is the most promising sub-region
Aragonêz, Trincadeira and Alicante Bouschet with use of Touriga Nacional and Syrah increasing
What are the 7 IGPs / Vinho Regional areas of NORTHERN Portugal?
Minho IGP (Vinho Verde DOP, NW)
Transmontano IGP (NE, bordering with Spain
Duriense IGP (Porto / Douro Valley, separated by the Serra do Marão)
Terras de Cister IGP (directly south of Duriense)
Beira Atlantico IGP (south of Porto on the Atlantic Coast)
Terras do Dão IGP (east of Bairrada)
Terras da Beira IGP (east of Dao, Spanish border to the east)
Unfortified wines produced in the Douro River Valley from traditional Port varieties are categorized as
Douro DOP
Describe the climates of Portugal
Predominantly Maritime from Atlantic influence
Many inland vineyards are hot, dry and Continental.
Altitude can moderate temperatures, especially at night, in some regions.
Tempranillo is given two names in Portugal; what are they?
Tinta Roriz, alternatively known as Aragonês in the Alentejo region
The establishment of Portugal as an international powerhouse for wine export in the 17th and 18th centuries was partly due to its trade relations with what nation?
England
Arinto is closest in flavor profile to which international grape?
Riesling
What 2 white grapes are used in Bairrada region?
What is the most widely-used black grape?
Arinto and Maria Gomes
Baga
What are the Portuguese terms for PGI wines?
What are non PGI table wines called?
IGP = Indicacão Geografica Protegida
Traditionally Vinho Regional
Non IGP wines are called Vinho
Where is the largest Vinho Regional region in Portugal?
Vinho Regional Alentejano
Portugeser red grape variety also known as Tinta Amarela
Trincadeira
Which DOP is located within the Peninsula de Setubal region and produces mainly red wines based on what grape variety?
Palmela DOP
Castelão
What is the predominant black grape of Bairrada and, with later picking, what are the tasting notes?
What are the 2 white grapes used in this region?
Black grape = Baga, with later picking gives wines deep in colour, high tannin with soft, rich, black fruit flavours.
The predominant white grapes are Arinto and Maria Gomes
Sétubal is classified as a:
What is the name of the maturation process it goes through?
What grapes are used in white / red Sétubal?
Vinho Locoroso
Torna Viagem
min. 67% Moscatel de Setúbal (Muscat d’Alexandria) or Moscatel Roxo,
White grape variety grown in the Vinho Verde region; also the star of Spain’s Rias Baixas DO
Alvarinho
Unfortified wines produced in the Douro River Valley from international grape varieties such as Cabernet Sauvignon are categorized as
Duriense IGP
What species of oak tree is primarily used for cork production?
Quercus Suber
List the 2 DOPs located on the Peninsula de Sétubal.
Palmela DOP / Sétubal DOP
Portugal’s most widely grown white grape variety
Fernão Pires, also known as Maria Gomes.
Aside from grapes, what other major component of the wine trade is Portugal well known for producing?
Corks
Pinhão is a major hub of wine production located in which sub-region / DOP / on which river?
Cima Corgo / Douro DOP / Douro River
Describe the topology of Dão, where vines are planted, and its climate:
- Surrounded by mountains, protecting it from cool maritime conditions from West and from warmer Arid conditions from East & South
- Mediterranean climate; Warm dry summers & mild winters
- Rainfall: High;1600mm in West: 1100mm in East; falling in Autumn & winter
- Vineyards at 400-500mRL up to 900mRL
Vinho Verde is produced in what region?
Minho Vinho Regional
What is the largest threat to viticulture in the DOPs of Bucelas, Colares, and Carcavelos?
Which IGP are they located within?
Urban Sprawl
Lisboa IGP