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Sale
Dessert/Fortified Wine
375ml
Bottle: $35.75 $36.40
12 bottles: $35.04
12 FREE
White
750ml
Bottle: $25.94
12 bottles: $25.42
In the nose, this wine is powerful and complex, It develops smoked and toasted aromas, and more particularly aromas...
12 FREE
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Red
750ml
Bottle: $16.57 $18.41
12 bottles: $13.17
The Crusher Petite Sirah is a deep, inky color with bold aromas of boysenberry, blackberry, and fig jam. The inviting...
Case only
Long-term Pre-Arrival
White
750ml - Case of 6
Bottle: $65.80
Bright clear yellow colour. The nose exhibits delicate ripe white fruits aromas (peach, nectarines….). The...

Ice Wine Petite Sirah Pinot Gris 2018

Petite Sirah was first brought from France to America in the 1880s. It later went on to become one of the only grapes to make it through the devastating Phylloxera virus in the 1890s, both World Wars, and the Great Depression. During Prohibition, it was a main ingredient used to make sacramental wines. In fact, through the 1960s it was a major blending grape in a number of the finest wines produced in California.

By itself, a bottle of Petite Sirah usually has no problem making a quick impression on consumers. With a large amount of natural color and tannins, wines made with the grape commonly feature intensive sweet fruit characteristics like fresh raspberry or blackberry jam, black pepper spice, and plenty of backbone or structure.

There are a number of different styles available. Some concentrate on highlighting fresh, fruity flavors; others are bigger, more voluptuous; and it keeps going up the ladder until you reach the powerful, more machismo-style category.

The Pinot Grigio or Pinot Gris grape varietal is now one of the most widely grown vines in the world, due to the surge in popularity of Pinot Grigio wines over the past twenty years or so. These grayish-blue fruits, which hang in their distinctively conical bunches, are responsible for a very broad range of wines famous for their variety of color tones and flavors Pinot Grigio varietal grapes are highly influenced by terroir, climate and particularly the skill and expertise of the vintners who process them. As such, there are full bodied, amber colored wines made from this grape, and there are equally delicious yet far leaner, paler, lighter bodied and crisp white wines made from the same species in other parts of the world.