The Hidden Tells of Terroir: A Journey Through Breathtaking, Lesser-Known Grape Varieties Across the World Wine is a passport, not a bottle. For every glass poured, there is a story etched in soil, climate, and culture. On Wine in the World , we celebrate those stories by tracing the veins of terroir through both celebrated regions and hidden corners where grape varieties whisper their own distinctive notes. Today, we lift the veil on lesser-known varieties that illuminate the global tapestry of wine, reminding us that greatness often lies beyond the well-trodden path. The Language of Terroir Terroir is more than geography—it is a dialogue between sun, rainfall, soil mineralogy, and human tradition. In the world of wine, no two vineyards are identical, even when they share a grape. The same variety can taste radically different from one hillside to another, revealing itself as an ambassador of place. When we explore obscure grapes, we gain a richer vocabulary for talking about te...
Vines Without Borders: Tracing the Global Tapestry of a Renowned Wine Region's History Wine is a passport you can drink. Anywhere the sun touches a vine and the soil remembers its past, a story of place, people, and time unfolds in the glass. In this piece for Wine in the World, we stroll the globe to trace how a celebrated wine region’s history threads through vineyards, traditions, and tasting rituals far beyond its geographic cradle. A Prelude in Terroir: The Language of Grapes Every region begins with the soil, climate, and grape that define its voice. The art of winemaking is, at heart, a dialogue between variety and ground. In renowned regions—think Bordeaux, Burgundy, or Tuscany—the grapes carry centuries of selection, grafting, and adaptation. Yet the world is full of less-heralded varieties that whisper echoes of distant origins: Nerello Mascalese in Sicily, Garganega in Veneto, or the delicate Mencia from Galicia. These grapes remind us that a wine’s character is neve...