Echeverria Cabernet Sauvignon 750ML

Echeverria Cabernet Sauvignon 750ML

Regular price $10.99 USD /bottle
Regular price Sale price $10.99 USD
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Product Details

  • Varietal Red Wine
  • Closure type Red Wine
  • Brand Echeverria
  • Country Chile
  • SKU 1220791
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Varietal

Red Wine

Country-Chile

Chile

Chile is a long, skinny ribbon of vineyards squeezed between the Andes and the Pacific. Cold ocean air, snowmelt breezes, and big day–night swings keep flavors bright. Result: clean, expressive wines that punch above their price—and a pisco culture that begs for a Sour.

What makes it special

  • Humboldt Current + Andes = natural “AC” for ripe fruit with fresh acidity.
  • Old vines, dry-farmed in Itata and Maule add grip, spice, and real character.
  • Clear labels often show Costa / Entre Cordilleras / Andes so you know if fruit is coastal, valley, or mountain.

Grapes and styles to know

  • Cabernet Sauvignon (Maipo/Alto Maipo): cassis, mint, graphite; structured and age-worthy.
  • Carmenère (Colchagua/Peumo/Apalta): plush plum and cocoa with a gentle green spice; Chile’s calling card.
  • Syrah: peppery and savory from Elqui/Limarí; richer and darker from Colchagua.
  • Pinot Noir (Casablanca/Leyda/Bío-Bío): red cherry, soft spice, silky texture.
  • Sauvignon Blanc (Casablanca/Leyda/San Antonio): lime, grapefruit, jalapeño, sea spray—zippy and clean.
  • Chardonnay (Limarí/Casablanca): citrus, white peach, chalky minerality; oak kept in check.
  • Carignan (Maule—look for VIGNO): sour cherry, spice, firm tannin—old-vine depth.
  • País (Itata/Maule): chillable red—strawberry, herbs, light tannin; weeknight joy.
  • Sparkling: traditional-method bottles from cool sites—green apple, lemon, brioche.
  • Pisco (Elqui/Atacama): Muscat-based brandy—grape blossom, citrus; built for Pisco Sours.

Regions at a glance

  • Maipo: classic Cabernet polish.
  • Colchagua: Carmenère, Syrah, generous reds.
  • Maule & Itata: old-vine Carignan and País; dry-farmed authenticity.
  • Casablanca/Leyda/San Antonio: coastal chill = Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Pinot.
  • Limarí & Elqui: high desert light—mineral whites, spicy Syrah, pisco grapes.
  • Aconcagua / Curicó / Bío-Bío: diverse, value-rich lanes across styles.

Flavor snapshot

Blackcurrant, plum, cocoa, pencil shavings in the reds; lime, grapefruit, white peach, and a salty snap in the whites. Sparkling brings green apple and fine bubbles. Pisco adds floral citrus and a clean finish.

Pairing playbook (veg-forward)

  • Cabernet/Carmenère: mushroom empanadas, charred peppers, aged cheeses.
  • Syrah: black-pepper tofu, roasted beets, olive tapenade.
  • Pinot Noir: mushroom risotto, soy-glazed veggies.
  • Sauvignon Blanc/Chardonnay: ceviche-style veg, herby salads, grilled zucchini, goat cheese.
  • País/Carignan: pizza night, tomato pasta, paprika-roasted potatoes.
  • Pisco Sour: salty snacks, citrusy salads, fresh corn dishes.

Buying tips

  • Coastal freshness: pick Casablanca or Leyda (Sauv Blanc/Chardonnay/Pinot).
  • Classic redsMaipo for Cabernet; Colchagua for plush Carmenère or Syrah.
  • Character and valueMaule/Itata old vines—seek VIGNO for serious Carignan.
  • Label cues like Reserva/Gran Reserva usually mean more selection and barrel time.
  • Costa / Entre Cordilleras / Andes” tells you climate: cool → moderate → structured.

Serving notes

  • Whites/Sparkling: 45–50°F
  • Pinot/País: 55–60°F (a short chill helps)
  • Cabernet/Carmenère/Syrah: 60–65°F; brief decant = better texture
  • Pisco: chilled in a Sour or over one cube with citrus

Bottom line

Chile delivers clarity and value: coastal whites with snap, confident reds with polish, and a pisco culture made for easy cocktails. Whether it’s a Leyda Sauvignon, a Maipo Cab, or a Maule Carignan, you get bright flavor and a clean finish every time.

FAQs

1) Is Carmenère always “green”?
Not when it’s ripe. Expect plush dark fruit with gentle herb and cocoa. Cooler or under-ripe examples show more bell pepper; top sites like Peumo keep it balanced.

2) What do Costa, Entre Cordilleras, and Andes mean on labels?
They mark origin bands: Costa (coastal, coolest and breezy), Entre Cordilleras (valley floor, ripe and flexible), Andes(higher, structured, fresher nights).

3) I’m new to Chile—where do I start?
Grab a Casablanca Sauvignon Blanc for zest, a Maipo Cabernet for structure, and a Maule País (chilled) or VIGNO Carignan for something distinctive and food-friendly.

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