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2001 Seña

Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

RATINGS

93Wine Spectator

A powerful display of dark chocolate, espresso bean, black currant and plum flavors here, with impressive concentration and serious structure. Long, dense finish is chock-full of fruit and toast...

90The Wine Advocate

...attractive bouquet of cedar, tobacco, spice box, cassis, and red cherry. On the palate there is ample ripe red fruit with soft tannins but the finish is slightly attenuated.

17.5Jancis Robinson

5% Cabernet Franc adds delicacy and freshness. Aromas of cedar and even a hint of orange. Grippy tannins, Bordeaux elegance, very slight vegetal note but still delicious.

REGION

Chile, Aconcagua Region

Chile has produced wine since the 16th century, when Spanish conquistadores brought grape vines and established vineyards. Sweet wines were favored until well into the 19th century, when French immigrants began making dry wines with a decidedly French character. Chile’s long, narrow, coastal geography has made the transportation of wines challenging over the centuries, though today it is a major exporter. To the west is the Pacific Ocean, to the east are the Andes. But the isolation has also meant that Chile vineyards have so far never been attacked by phylloxera, meaning that unlike viticulturalists in many other part of the world, Chilean vineyards can be planted with original rootstock, saving producers the laborious job of grafting vines onto phylloxera-resistant rootstocks. Chile started an appellation system in 1994, and there are five regions each with numerous sub-regions. Chile has attracted investment from European and American producers, including Robert Mondavi Winery, Kendall-Jackson, Lafite-Rothschild and Miguel Torres.

VINTAGE

2001 Seña