Wine Regions in Portugal

Viticulture in Portugal looks back on a long history and has undergone a great development over a long period of time, somewhat unnoticed by the wine-loving public. Phoenicians and Greeks already cultivated wine here, before the Romans took the reins and exported the wine from Portugal to Rome and the wider Roman Empire. However, the country's most important wine, port, was not developed until the end of the 17th century.
Today, about 195,000 hectares are under vine from the north to the south of the country. Portugal has a treasure like hardly any other country - a multitude of autochthonous grape varieties. Around 300 of these grape varieties grow here, many of which are approved for the production of wines that often provide a taste experience beyond the mainstream. However, since hardly anyone knows these grape varieties and they are sometimes difficult to pronounce, this is precisely what stands in the way of marketing them on a large scale. Approximately 6-7 million hectoliters of wine are produced annually in Portugal, which indicates that yields are not too high.
Portugal has become famous for its fortified wines, Port and Madeira, which are still very popular today, especially in English-speaking countries. The Douro Valley, with its spectacular topography, where the grapes for Port wine grow, provided Europe's first official provenance around 250 years ago, and today it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Portugal boasts a wide variety of terroirs and a climate that is ideally suited to viticulture. In the north, as well as near the Atlantic Ocean, it is rather cool, so that fresh white wines are produced here. The best known is the Vinho Verde from the northeast of the country, whose name, by the way, refers to the green landscape, not to the character of the wine. In the interior of the country it is usually much warmer and drier, from here come different, sometimes very rich red wines. The most famous grape varieties are Arinto, Fernao Pires, Verdelho, as well as Alvarinho, which is well known from Galicia. Well-known red wine varieties are, Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz, Alicante Bouschet, Trincadeira and Castelao. From the Setubal peninsula near Lisbon comes an excellent, but until today little known sweet wine, the Moscatel del de Setubal.
The cuisine of Portugal is very diverse, in the north because of the cold winters, rather focused on meat, further in the south fish and seafood dominate. Soups and stews play a major role, and the introduction to a multi-course meal is almost unthinkable without a soup. The country's national dish is the famous "bacalhau," dried cod, also called stockfish, prepared in a variety of ways. The dried fish refers to Portugal's great tradition as a seafaring nation, because almost only dried food could be carried on board the sailing ships. But the gastronomic scene is exciting; 7 restaurants are decorated with two stars, and 20 restaurants in the country can show at least one.

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Douro

The Douro is one of the largest, but even more so one of the most famous wine regions and is synonymous with one of the most famous fortified wines in the world, Port. It is also one of the most spectacular wine-growing regions of them all. The Douro River in the north of the country, which is...

Vinho Verde

Portugal's largest wine-growing area covers around 24,000 hectares and lies in the far northwest of the country. This verdant, green land stretches from the Minho River in the north, bordering Spain, down the Atlantic coast to the city of Porto. Constant rain from the Atlantic makes this one of the...

Alentejo

Alentejo is the name of a wine-growing region, as well as that of a province in southern Portugal. For a long time the gently rolling landscape was far less known for its wine than for its grain cultivation. "Land of Bread" is what the Portuguese call this stretch of land. Less appreciated is that...

Dao

Bordering Bairrada directly inland, Dão is one of Portugal's largest wine growing regions, with approximately 20,000 hectares of vines. Surrounded on three sides by granite mountains and also protected from the cool, damp influences of the Atlantic, Dão could produce the best red wines in the...

Tagus river

The Tejo region - formerly Ribatejo - is located in the heart of Portugal, northeast of Lisbon, and stretches along both banks of the River Tejo. The area is also known as the 'Garden of Portugal', because a lot of fruit and vegetables are grown on the fertile alluvial soils deposited by the river....

Extremadura

Estremadura is a province rather than a wine region, it is a long coastal strip to the north and west of the capital Lisbon and includes a total of nine subregions, the best known of which is probably Bucelas. Wines from the wider region are now labelled as 'Lisboa'. The climate on the coast - as...

Bairrada
For over a millennium, Bairrada, which is located south of the Douro River and sandwiched between...
Setubal
The Setúbal peninsula, located south of the capital Lisbon, provides the third great dessert wine...
Algarve
The southernmost wine-growing region of Portugal, directly on the coast, is primarily a tourist...
Madeira
The unique volcanic island of Madeira is located about 950 kilometres from the Portuguese coast in...