Chinese Wine 1 Items
- All Nested Region
- Italy 8856
- California 7361
- Spain 5383
- Portugal 3139
- France 1483
- Washington 1359
- Australia 1258
- South Africa 882
- Chile 857
- Argentina 759
- Other U.S. 462
- Israel 317
- Greece 314
- Austria 298
- Oregon 163
- Mexico 102
- Lebanon 75
- Hungary 61
- Other 59
- New Zealand 44
- Turkey 40
- Switzerland 34
- Croatia 31
- Germany 20
- South America 20
- Uruguay 20
- Macedonia (FYROM) 15
- Country of Georgia 11
- Slovenia 9
- Armenia 8
- Canada 7
- Moldova 7
- Bulgaria 3
- England 3
- Brazil 2
- Japan 2
- Romania 2
- Cyprus 1
- Peru 1
- China clear Nested Region filter
-
Gift Type Any
-
Occasion Any
-
Variety Any
-
Varietal Other Red Blends
-
Region China
-
Availability Include Out of Stock
-
Size & Type Any
-
Fine Wine Any
-
Vintage Any
-
Reviewed By Any
-
Sort By Most Interesting
-
Domaine de Long Dai Qiu Shan Valley 2017Other Red Blends from China
- JS
- D
0.0 0 RatingsSold Out - was $579.98Ships Fri, Apr 5Limit 6 per customerSold in increments of 0
Browse by Category
Red White Sparkling Rosé Spirits GiftsLearn about Chinese wine, common tasting notes, where the region is and more ...
China’s wine regions are spread throughout the country. In terms of volume, China ranks among the world’s top 10 wine producing nations. Interest in wine (particularly red wine) is growing here, especially among the younger generations.
China’s most lauded appellation, Helan Mountain, on the border of the popular region of Ningxia, close to the Yellow River, is known for Cabernet blends. Ningxia as well as Shanxi are at higher elevations, receive a lot of sunshine and experience large diurnal temperature variation, ideal conditions for winegrowing. The humid, eastern coastal regions of Shangdong and Hebei Province are responsible for over half of China's yearly wine production. Here the key variety of Chinese wine is called Cabernet Gernischt, which has proven to actually be Carmenere.
Though China has been producing wine from its own native varieties for 1,500 years, the Chinese wine industry didn’t gain any real inertia until the end of the 19th century when about 100 European varieties arrived. Today many international companies (Moet Hennessy, Remy Cointreau, Pernod Ricard, Torres and Barons de Rothschild) have a stake in the country’s Chinese wine scene. However, the Chinese government continues to invest, now exceeding foreign funding.