Reunion Where I Travel - Gastronomy Guide - Domaine Bousquet
Reunion Where I Travel - Gastronomy Guide - Domaine Bousquet pbV8d
A long, narrow sliver of desert landscape, the Mendoza region is home to two of Argentina’s claims to fame – the Andes and wine. The city itself is lively and cosmopolitan and the surrounding area boasts hundreds of wineries offering tours – an educational (and occasionally intoxicating) way to spend an afternoon or a month.
If you love bold Malbecs and grilled grass-fed Argentinean steak as much as we do, now's the time to plan a visit to one of the most stunning wine regions on earth. Argentina's wine capital, Mendoza, it's open and in expansion. That’s great news for the smart wine lovers who flock here, to what’s essentially South America’s Napa Valley: a sun-bathed, insanely scenic region in the foothills of the Andes, famed for its stellar Malbecs (among other wines), architecturally arresting wineries and world-class restaurants.
In this edition, we have concentrated on the regions of Valle de Uco, Lujan de Cuyo, and San Rafael de Mendoza, which are often unjustly forgotten in the tours and are worth it. . .
Let's raise our glasses and welcome a promising year in this exotic and placid place.
A long, narrow sliver of desert landscape, the Mendoza
region
is home to two of Argentina’s claims to fame
–
the
Andes
and
wine
. The city itself is lively and cosmopolitan and the surrounding area boasts hundreds of wineries offering tours
–
an educational (and
occasionally
intoxicating) way to spend an afternoon or a month.
If you
love
bold
Malbecs
and grilled grass-fed Argentinean steak as much as we do,
now
's the time to plan a visit to one of the most stunning
wine
regions
on earth. Argentina's
wine
capital, Mendoza, it's open and in expansion. That’s great news for the smart
wine
lovers who flock here, to what’s
essentially
South America’s Napa Valley: a sun-bathed,
insanely
scenic
region
in the foothills of the
Andes
, famed for its stellar
Malbecs
(among other
wines)
,
architecturally
arresting wineries and world-
class
restaurants.
In this edition, we have concentrated on the
regions
of
Valle
de Uco,
Lujan
de Cuyo, and San Rafael de Mendoza, which are
often
unjustly
forgotten in the tours and are worth it.
.
.
Let
's raise our glasses and welcome a promising year in this exotic and placid place.
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