Sunday, September 7, 2025

Chilean National Wine Day 2025 with H.E. Juan Gabriel Valdes, Ambassador of Chile in the USA, at his Residence (August 4, 2025)












#Chile #wine Celebrating the 2025 Chilean National Wine Day with H.E. Juan Gabriel Valdes, Ambassador of Chile in the USA, at his residence in Washington DC, with @Julio Alonso Ducci, Director Vinos de Chile Wines of Chile North America and Annette Schiller Ombiasy Public Relations and Wine Tours cc Gary Russell 
 
gary.thewineguy.russell: On Thursday I had the honor of visiting the Chilean Ambassador’s Residence to celebrate National Chilean Wine Day. Ambassador Juan Gabriel Valdés and his wife were wonderful hosts. He was very generous with his time and talked with me one-on-one about his life & family. It was an unforgettable experience for me! The Chilean wines and conversations with other attendees flowed, and we even got to enjoy @monteswines incredible flagship wine, Alpha M. If you haven’t done a deep dive into Chilean Wine, do yourself a favor and start exploring. With a wine history almost twice the age of the United States, there is a lot to discover and fall in love with! #chileanwine @echile_eeuu
 
Andres Rodriguez Agricultural Minster at the Chilean Embassy: 
This September 4th we celebrated the National Day of Chilean Wine at the Official Residence of Chile in Washington, DC—an occasion that reminds us that Chilean wine is far more than a product; it is history, culture, and identity. We commemorate 480 years since Pedro de Valdivia first requested vines from King Charles V of Spain to start wine production in Chile. Chile’s wine sector has grown into a world-class industry, exporting to more than 100 countries—including the U.S., one of our closest partners. Each bottle tells the story of our land, from the Atacama Desert to Patagonia, and represents the passion of more than 12,000 producers who carry Chile’s traditions. A special thanks to Julio Alonso Ducci , Executive Director of Wines of Chile in New York, for his great work in connecting Chilean wine with consumers across the U.S. Salud to Chilean wine!

Chilean National Wine Day (GoogleAI based) 

Chilean National Wine Day, also known as
Día Nacional del Vino Chileno, is celebrated on September 4th every year. The date was officially established in 2015 to honor the country's rich winemaking history, which spans over 500 years. 

The celebration commemorates the day in 1545 when Pedro de Valdivia, a Spanish conquistador and the first royal governor of Chile, wrote a letter to King Charles V asking for grapevines and wine to be sent to the country. 

Chilean National Wine Day is marked with various events across the country, especially in Santiago and the surrounding wine valleys. 

Wine Country Chile (wine searcher)

Known affectionately as the "pais de los poetas" or "country of poets", Chile is one of South America's most important wine-producing countries. Occupying a thin strip down the western coast of the continent, it is home to a wide range of terroirs, and an equally wide range of wine styles.

The Chilean viticultural industry is often associated in export markets with consistent, good-value wines, but some world-class red wines are also made, commanding high prices.

Grape varieties

For red wines, the initial export mainstays have been Bordeaux varieties of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, But like many New World countries Chile has adopted a signature grape variety; here it is Carmenère, once widely grown in Bordeaux.

It was thought to be extinct following the European phylloxera outbreaks of the 19th Century but was rediscovered in Chile in the 1990s. Much of it was mixed up in vineyards with Merlot plants; the Carmenère vines were often assumed to be poorer-performing mutations of the former.

Once they were identified the fruit was allowed a week or two extra on the vine to fully ripen. Blends featuring Carmenère and single variety bottlings then began to gain traction. (NB this grape variety is often spelled Carménère - with two accents - outside Chile.)

Pinot Noir from the cooler parts of Chile is beginning to make an impression, and Syrah is increasing in popularity in many regions offering a wide variety of styles. The supporting cast of red wine grape varieties in Chile includes additional bit-part players from Bordeaux; Petit Verdot, Cabernet Franc and Malbec.

Emphasis on the latter has increased in light of Argentina's success with the variety, though plantings in Chile date back to the 19th Century. Cinsaut and Carignan join Syrah in the Southern French contingent.

White wine plantings are led by Chardonnay – also grown in many differing macroclimates – which can achieve very high-quality levels with prices to match, and Sauvignon Blanc. Viognier, Riesling, and Semillon are among those varieties grown on a smaller scale.

Geography

Chile spans 4300 kilometers (2700 miles) of land running north-south between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes Mountains. The topography is very favorable to viticulture, and despite the fact that Chile is only 160 kilometers (100 miles) wide, most climatic variation in the wine-growing regions happens from east to west, rather than from north to south.

The Pacific, with its Antarctic Humboldt Current, brings cooling breezes to more coastal vineyards in regions such as the Casablanca and Limari valleys. Meanwhile, the sheltering presence of the Coastal mountain range makes Chile's Central Valley relatively warm and dry.

Along the eastern edge of the country, in the foothills of the Andes, high altitudes and abundant meltwater rivers make for a different terroir again. With the Pacific Ocean on one side and the forbidding barrier of the Andes on the other, Chile's vineyards have remained protected from the phylloxera aphid.

History

Chile has been a wine-producing country since the first European settlers arrived in the mid-16th Century. The original vines, to make sacramental wine, were brought by Catholic missionaries directly from Spain or via Peru or California.

The Mission grape variety – known here as Pais – was widely planted during this time, and became the mainstay of country wines for domestic consumption. It is most common in Maule and Bio Bio in the south, mainly grown by older farmers making field blends, but it is beginning to feature in many high-quality bottlings.

It wasn't until the 19th Century that viticulture began to expand in Chile, mainly due to the spread of wealth associated with mining in the Atacama Desert. European trends started to infiltrate Santiago, and a wine industry sprang up to the south of the city, around the Maipo Valley.

Wine estates were built, with the styles of both wine and architecture heavily modeled on those of France. The estate vineyards of Concha y Toro, Cousino Macul and Santa Rita were established in this time.

Throughout the 20th Century, Chilean wine was limited to the domestic market, but a push toward quality in the latter half of the century saw an uptake in the international market. Whereas Chilean winemakers had traditionally used tanks and barrels made of beech wood, in the 1980s stainless-steel tanks and oak barrels were introduced, marking the start of a technology-driven era.

Residence of the Amabssador of Chile in the USA



Ambassador H.E. Juan Gabriel Valdes
 


Speeches
 




The Wines
 








Reception
 









Contacts
 
Samantha McCrimmon, Samantha M., Wine and Beverage Director/Certified Sommelier/Wine Judge, Restaurant Chophouse, Tyson's Corner
 
Gary Russell is an experienced sommelier with over 15 years in the hospitality industry, including five years leading wine programs for The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company. He is currently a sommelier at Fiola Mare in Washington, D.C. He also hosts a monthly wine tasting class at the restaurant, focusing on themes like "Big Red Wines." Fiola Mare is a seafood and Italian restaurant known for its exquisite food, stunning decor, impeccable service, and waterfront views. 
 
Julio Alonso Ducci, Executive Director Wines of Chile North America 

The Executive Director of Wines of Chile North America is
Julio Alonso Ducci. He holds this position and is quoted extensively in news articles and LinkedIn posts discussing Wines of Chile's initiatives, such as promoting the quality and diversity of Chilean wines and focusing on sustainability in the U.S. market 

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