Aveleda Alvarinho 2023 Front Bottle Shot
Aveleda Alvarinho 2023 Front Bottle Shot Aveleda Alvarinho 2023 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

An incomparable single-varietal wine with Alvarinho grapes from the Vinho Verde region, giving a unique personality to the queen grape of Portuguese white wines. Clear and pale lemon-yellow in appearance, Aveleda Alvarinho presents delicate aromas of passion fruit, grapefruit, and orange blossom. It is a well-balanced, surprisingly structured, and velvety white wine with delicious notes of orange peel, pineapple, and lime flower.

This wine has good acidity and mouth depth, pairing well with more structured poultry dishes or those with thicker sauces, and fatty fish such as salmon or tuna.

Professional Ratings

  • 91
    Punches above its weight for the price, enticing from the first sniff to the lingering finish. It's a crowd pleaser but not one-dimensional, thanks to layers of fleshy nectarine, creamy papaya and sweet citrus, wet-stone minerality and zippy acidity.
  • 91
    Pineapple with a hint of grapefruit and a notion of crusted salt. The palate is medium- bodied, delicate and briny, offering persistent notes of grapefruit interwoven with melon. Great value.
Aveleda

Aveleda

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Aveleda Guedes Family Home, Penafiel Estate Winery Image

Aveleda is a name which spans several generations. The first records of the sale of bottled wine date back to 1870, with Manuel Pedro Guedes (1837-1899), known for his strong enterprising spirit and believed to be the founder of the business as we know it today. His work bore fruit and the quality of the Aveleda wines started to be recognised, as the gold medals won in the international competitions in Berlin (1888) and Paris (1889) attest.

Today the Guedes family still owns 100% of the company, always committed to maintaining this family legacy which spans several generations. The son of Manuel Pedro Guedes, Fernando Guedes da Silva da Fonseca (1871-1946) continued his father's work, significantly increasing the production capacity at the Estate. He had seven children and it was Roberto Van-Zeller Guedes (1899-1966) who led the family business, dedicating his whole life to working at Aveleda. The 4th generation includes the six children of Roberto Van-Zeller Guedes: Fernando, Luís, António, Maria Isabel, Maria Helena and Roberto – who today manage the company's future, together with the following generation: 14 cousins who make up the fifth generation.

Aveleda became a Certified B Corporation in 2024.

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Bright and aromatic with distinctive floral and fruity characteristics, Albariño has enjoyed a surge in popularity and an increase in plantings over the last couple of decades. Thick skins allow it to withstand the humid conditions of its homeland, Rías Baixas, Spain, free of malady, and produce a weighty but fresh white. Somm Secret—Albariño claims dual citizenship in Spain and Portugal. Under the name Alvarinho, it thrives in Portugal’s northwestern Vinho Verde region, which predictably, borders part of Spain’s Rías Baixas.

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Best known for intense, impressive and age-worthy fortified wines, Portugal relies almost exclusively on its many indigenous grape varieties. Bordering Spain to its north and east, and the Atlantic Ocean on its west and south coasts, this is a land where tradition reigns supreme, due to its relative geographical and, for much of the 20th century, political isolation. A long and narrow but small country, Portugal claims considerable diversity in climate and wine styles, with milder weather in the north and significantly more rainfall near the coast.

While Port (named after its city of Oporto on the Atlantic Coast at the end of the Douro Valley), made Portugal famous, Portugal is also an excellent source of dry red and white Portuguese wines of various styles.

The Douro Valley produces full-bodied and concentrated dry red Portuguese wines made from the same set of grape varieties used for Port, which include Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz (Spain’s Tempranillo), Touriga Franca, Tinta Barroca and Tinto Cão, among a long list of others in minor proportions.

Other dry Portuguese wines include the tart, slightly effervescent Vinho Verde white wine, made in the north, and the bright, elegant reds and whites of the Dão as well as the bold, and fruit-driven reds and whites of the southern, Alentejo.

The nation’s other important fortified wine, Madeira, is produced on the eponymous island off the North African coast.

QUIAVAW237_2023 Item# 1953223