Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on [bizrate.com or shopzilla.com, as applicable] at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
wine immediately appears exuberant, with intense notes of spices and balsam. Hints of undergrowth and ripe red fruit complete array of scents. In mouth proves smooth, with an absolutely original body featuring an elaborate structure that balances...
Dark ruby color. Very rich nose of fresh fruit with hints of plum, coffee and cocoa. Soft on palate, with fruity and roasted flavors. finish is fresh, ripe, and round. Wine Enthusiast rating: 92.
Enjoy this wine from California produced by Big House Wine Company and is a California Still Wine 2010 vintage that is 750ml.
Enjoy this wine produced by Michel Torino and is a Argentinian Still Wine 2010 vintage that is 750ml.
The Madiran comes from 4 grape varieties: Tannat (minimum 50%), Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Fer Fervadou. It is tannins rich, concentrated and structured. It musts be ageing minimum 12 months before the bottling. Their typical aromas are...
Colomes Estate Malbec is annually one of Argentinas better values. The 2009 Estate Malbec (85%) contains small amounts of Tannat, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Syrah in its blend. It spent 15 months in barrel, 30% new American, the balance second-use...
Pinotage (29%); Touriga nacional (22%); Tannat (19%); Grenache (12%), Cabernet sauvignon (14%) and Primitivo (4%) Langarm was fermented at warm temperatures for maximum fruit extraction, without need for extended skin contact. This has created an...
80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 9% Merlot, 5% Malbec, 3% Cabernet Franc, 2% Petit Verdot, 1% Tannat. Deep, dark and nearly opaque with a ruby edge, 2007 Landslide offers up evocative aromas of chocolate laced with cinnamon, blackberry, plum, black cherry and...
Enjoy this wine from Cuyo Mendoza produced by Mil Piedras and is a Argentinian Still Wine 2007 vintage that is 750ml.
Enjoy this wine from Washington produced by Covey Run and is a Washington Still Wine 2007 vintage that is 750ml.
This elegant wine has a deep ruby color and velvety textures. The complex flavors of blackberries, cocoa, spice, with wood notes of sweet French oak along with hints of cedar, unite to form a long, smooth, harmonious finish.In any season, Castle Rock...
Enjoy this wine produced by Yikvei Zion and is a Kosher Wine - Imported 2007 vintage that is 750ml.
Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on snooth.com at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.

Region:
USA > California > Sonoma Valley
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
6% Petite Sirah 2% Tannat
Winery:
Blackstone Winery
Tags:
citrus, blackberry, meat, violet, roast dishes, fruit, stock, beef, pencil lead, silver

Region:
France > South West France > Garonne > Cahors
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Malbec; Tannat
Winery:
Château du Cèdre
Tags:
body - medium

Region:
France > South West France > Garonne > Cahors
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Malbec; Merlot; Tannat
Winery:
Château de Gaudou

Region:
USA > California > Sonoma Valley
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Cabernet Sauvignon 55%; Malbec 15%; Cabernet Franc 8%; Petite Verdot 8%; Tannat 7%; Merlot 5%; Petite Sirah 3%
Winery:
Blackstone Winery
Tags:
spices, resinous, tarts, fine, spicy, oak, chocolate, medicinal, berry, phenolic

Region:
Uruguay > Rivera > Cerro Chapeu
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Tannat
Winery:
Bodegas Carrau
Tags:
smooth, color descriptors, red, colorful

Region:
Uruguay > Canelones
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Tannat
Winery:
Bodega Bouza
Tags:
gold medals, unique

Region:
France > South West France > Garonne > Cahors
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Malbec; Merlot; Tannat
Winery:
Château de Haute-Serre
Tags:
game, duck, vineyards, color descriptors, meat, red meat, poultry, roquefort, cassoulet, resinous

Region:
France > South West France > Gascony > Madiran
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Tannat
Winery:
Château Montus
Tags:
fill, red, concentrated, supple, big, wine spectator, elegant, dark plum, mocha, silky tannins

Region:
France > South West France > Gascony > Madiran
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Tannat
Winery:
Château Bouscassé

Region:
France > South West France > Gascony > Madiran
Type:
Red Wine
Varietal:
Tannat
Winery:
Château Peyros
Tags:
color descriptors, ruby, cheese, aged, mature tannins, soil, red meat, resinous, meat, fruit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tannat
http://www.snooth.com/varietal/tannat/
http://www.tanterrawines.com/the-brand/tannat-wine
http://www.snooth.com/wines/tannat/
http://www.tablascreek.com/vineyard_and_winemaking/grapes/tannat
Tannat hails originally from France's South-West corner, tucked up against the Pyrenees mountain range that separates France and Spain. Less known there now, it has also made a home for itself in Uruguay - with examples ...
Tonight kicks off our new season of wines! We will have many Glorious Battles with brand new terriors- from the gravitas of France to the big, bold flavors of the New World: Chile, New Zealand, South Africa and more.
www.pizzornowines.com DON PRÓSPERO - TANNAT MACERACIÓN CARBÓNICA - PIZZORNO 1910 FAMILY ESTATES - PIZZORNO WINERY - RUTA 32 - KM 23 - CANE.
www.pizzornowines.com DON PRÓSPERO TANNAT 50% / MALBEC 50% - PIZZORNO 1910 FAMILY ESTATES - PIZZORNO WINERY - RUTA 32 - KM 23 - CANELÓN CHICO.
The Tannat variety hails from the Pyrenees Mountains on the border of France and Spain. European winemakers sometimes use it as an element in blends. In Uruguay, however, Tannat tends to stand alone, and it is popular ...
I get a red wine from Tesco called "Madiran" because they use Tannat grapes - I drink it for the health benefits and don't touch any other type of alcohol... How do I find out if it has sulfites or any other dodgy ingredients in it? Is there an ingredient list anywhere? I tried emailing the company but no reply. The wine is called "Madiran - reserve des tuguets" and it is £9.99 in Tesco and it's 13% alcohol if that helps.
Thanks for any help you can give me.
Read more..
I love wines made with Norton grapes (I think they're also called Cynthiana grapes, but I could be wrong there) Here's a description of the flavor: "Norton exhibits hints of tart plums, sour cherries, or elderberries and has a spicy nose similar to Syrah. It is stronger in the front and mid-palette and has a velvety finish somewhere between a Merlot and Pinot Noir. Norton is often blended with other grapes like Tannat, Merlot, Syrah, and Petit Verdot to provide a more balanced wine."
I used to drink Chrysalis Norton wines, but since returning to school I am "financially challenged" ie dirt poor. Can anyone suggest a Norton wine under $10 bucks a bottle, or even closer to $5? If not, is there a cheap substitute you would suggest?
I am in the NOVA (Northern Virginia) area, so wines I can purchase here definitely make it higher on the list. I will order wine from somewhere else as long as it is inexpensive enough to offset the shipping cost. Thanks!
Read more..
A very common drink in Uruguay is called "clericó". It is wine and fruit juices mixed together. They have a famous wine called Tannat wine.
Read more..
Except over a glass of ruby Tannat wine or a sizzling tenderloin, most people pay little mind to Uruguay. But just mention this demure South American nation to the tobacco industry and watch the smoke billow. A long-burning row between the government in Montevideo and cigarette maker Philip Morris is slowly turning into the mother of asymmetric battles.
Earlier this year, little Uruguay (68,000 square miles, half again the size of Cuba), with a population of 3.5 million and a GDP of $44 billion, tightened the already drastic restrictions on local sales of cigarettes. The international tobacco colossus, with a market capitalization of $107 billion and legions of high-priced lawyers and lobbyists from Bern to the Washington Beltway, struck back, filing a complaint with the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes. The battlefield is minuscule, the size of a pack of smokes. But the case is starting rows over national sovereignty, free trade, and public health that show little sign of dissipating any time soon. Through it all, Uruguay has stood firm, showing it can go toe to toe with giants.
By muscle alone, the multinational should have the upper hand or at least the ability to snarl the authorities in Montevideo in a drawnout and costly lawsuit. But a win over a diminutive adversary could cost Big Tobacco dearly, tarring its reputation and global brand. And that is where this Latin Lilliput is showing its poise. President José Mujica, who took office in March, recently ordered Philip Morris, maker of Marlboro, to cover at least 80 percent of each pack of smokes with grisly images of the perils of the habit. One shows a grotesquely disfigured baby, another a haggard woman languishing on a hospital bed, while a third is a closeup of mouth cancer.
The company protested, not on grounds of dubious taste but that the obligatory gallery of horrors partially covered the company logo, amounting to an undue expropriation of profits without compensation, and so violating Uruguay’s free-trade pact with Switzerland, Philip Morris’s operational headquarters. Both sides are digging in, but this is not a revolt of rancorous Third-World lefties eager to stick a thumb in the eye of the transnational empire. For its defense, Uruguay has amassed world-weight allies, including the health ministers of 171 nations, the Pan American Health Organization, and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. A rabid anti-smoker, the mayor has donated thousands of dollars from his Bloomberg Philanthropies and legal aid to Uruguay, whose “leaders did the right thing.”
It’s an odd alliance. President Mujica, a one-time gun-toting guerrilla, dedicated much of his previous political existence railing at über-capitalists like Bloomberg. Today, at age 75 and in charge of a nation, he’s turned into a militant pragmatist, dedicated to parsimony and fighting the bureaucratic monster. Since taking office in March, he has slashed spending, faced down a general strike, and asked Congress to enact a sweeping reform of the oversized state. Most recently, he had to order government employees to work at least six hours a day, and was rewarded by a lawsuit. “Anything you do in this country is like going through labor pains,” he recently complained.
What’s impressive is how much Uruguay has already done. A wedge of land created by European colonial powers as a buffer between giants, this nation seemed destined to be a backwater. Instead, successive governments plowed money into education, health, and infrastructure, turning Uruguay into a Latin Singapore or Hong Kong, says Walter Molano of BCP Securities. It breezed through the Great Recession (growing 2.9 percent in 2009) and its GDP is expanding at 7.8 percent a year, more than three times the average of the past half-century. It was recently named the most prosperous nation in Latin America, according to the London-based Legatum Institute, which ranks nations by variables that include economic fundamentals, public health, education, and even general happiness.
Part of this success owes to Uruguayan society’s ability to adapt to historic circumstances, and the good sense to preserve policies that work, regardless of what party or ideological banner is in power. The other part i
Hi everyone, thanks for helping me.
Questions: why is it surprising to hear that mujica is the ally of someone like bloomberg?
Why is it the "mother of asymmetric battles"?
Does the autor believe that Uruguay actually has a chance against Big Tobacco?
Why does Margolis talk about the history of Uruguay? What point is he trying to make?
Why is this seemingly small case important for the tobacco industry?
Thanks a lot, and of course i just want to have indications.
:D
Read more..
Except over a glass of ruby Tannat wine or a sizzling tenderloin, most people pay little mind to Uruguay. But just mention this demure South American nation to the tobacco industry and watch the smoke billow. A long-burning row between the government in Montevideo and cigarette maker Philip Morris is slowly turning into the mother of asymmetric battles.
Earlier this year, little Uruguay (68,000 square miles, half again the size of Cuba), with a population of 3.5 million and a GDP of $44 billion, tightened the already drastic restrictions on local sales of cigarettes. The international tobacco colossus, with a market capitalization of $107 billion and legions of high-priced lawyers and lobbyists from Bern to the Washington Beltway, struck back, filing a complaint with the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes. The battlefield is minuscule, the size of a pack of smokes. But the case is starting rows over national sovereignty, free trade, and public health that show little sign of dissipating any time soon. Through it all, Uruguay has stood firm, showing it can go toe to toe with giants.
By muscle alone, the multinational should have the upper hand or at least the ability to snarl the authorities in Montevideo in a drawnout and costly lawsuit. But a win over a diminutive adversary could cost Big Tobacco dearly, tarring its reputation and global brand. And that is where this Latin Lilliput is showing its poise. President José Mujica, who took office in March, recently ordered Philip Morris, maker of Marlboro, to cover at least 80 percent of each pack of smokes with grisly images of the perils of the habit. One shows a grotesquely disfigured baby, another a haggard woman languishing on a hospital bed, while a third is a closeup of mouth cancer.
The company protested, not on grounds of dubious taste but that the obligatory gallery of horrors partially covered the company logo, amounting to an undue expropriation of profits without compensation, and so violating Uruguay’s free-trade pact with Switzerland, Philip Morris’s operational headquarters. Both sides are digging in, but this is not a revolt of rancorous Third-World lefties eager to stick a thumb in the eye of the transnational empire. For its defense, Uruguay has amassed world-weight allies, including the health ministers of 171 nations, the Pan American Health Organization, and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. A rabid anti-smoker, the mayor has donated thousands of dollars from his Bloomberg Philanthropies and legal aid to Uruguay, whose “leaders did the right thing.”
It’s an odd alliance. President Mujica, a one-time gun-toting guerrilla, dedicated much of his previous political existence railing at über-capitalists like Bloomberg. Today, at age 75 and in charge of a nation, he’s turned into a militant pragmatist, dedicated to parsimony and fighting the bureaucratic monster. Since taking office in March, he has slashed spending, faced down a general strike, and asked Congress to enact a sweeping reform of the oversized state. Most recently, he had to order government employees to work at least six hours a day, and was rewarded by a lawsuit. “Anything you do in this country is like going through labor pains,” he recently complained.
What’s impressive is how much Uruguay has already done. A wedge of land created by European colonial powers as a buffer between giants, this nation seemed destined to be a backwater. Instead, successive governments plowed money into education, health, and infrastructure, turning Uruguay into a Latin Singapore or Hong Kong, says Walter Molano of BCP Securities. It breezed through the Great Recession (growing 2.9 percent in 2009) and its GDP is expanding at 7.8 percent a year, more than three times the average of the past half-century. It was recently named the most prosperous nation in Latin America, according to the London-based Legatum Institute, which ranks nations by variables that include economic fundamentals, public health, education, and even general happiness.
Part of this success owes to Uruguayan society’s ability to adapt to historic circumstances, and the good sense to preserve policies that work, regardless of what party or ideological banner is in power. The other part i
Read more..
Rioja Bordón Crianza 2007 Tinto (Español),Paternina Banda Dorada Blanco (Rioja España),Don Pascual Shiraz Tannat Reserva(Uruguayo) Bs 430
Wed, 23 May 2012 19:30:02
@CocinayVino @kathy_chacon un tannat creo le puede ir muy bien
Wed, 23 May 2012 19:00:56
CASA PERINI TANNAT 2008 http://t.co/sWczPX5L #vinho
Wed, 23 May 2012 17:58:48
DAYMAN TANNAT – VINOS FINOS H. STAGNARI – URUGUAY http://t.co/GfB4PMi1 http://t.co/EBBDarFE
Wed, 23 May 2012 17:27:56
DAYMAN TANNAT – VINOS FINOS H. STAGNARI – URUGUAY http://t.co/TK5rnJrC via @sharethis
Wed, 23 May 2012 17:27:12