

我在网上查了查价钱,$6.99-9.99不等,买一箱有特价。
我从来没喝过,没法说啥。 他们自夸产世界上1/3的高档酒是胡说八道,不可思议的胡说八道。据那位总工声称,全球有1/3的高档酒都是他们产的。我觉得很匪夷所思。你们有谁喝过吗?
先是从南美和东欧进口白酒According to world's most pernickety wine statistics collator the OIV [l'Office International de la Vigne et du Vin], total vineyard area in China increased from 188,000 hectares in 1997 to 260,000 just three years later, an increase of 38 per cent or half the total area planted to vines in Australia in 2000. China is now one of the world's top ten producers of wine.
因为红酒对健康有益,开始种红酒In the early 1990s at the very beginning of the wine boom, encouraged by a government unhappy at the proportion of its cereals which went for distillation, white wine was in demand. Vast quantities of cheap wine were imported from South America and southern Europe and blended in with local produce to be sold as 'Chinese wine'. At one stage a significant proportion of what went into the bottle owed little to grapes.
Sinca碰到的张裕在泰国的确有生意,他们和泰国一家公司联合制酒But by 1997 the healthful effects of red wine consumption were officially promulgated. Over the next two years, out went the white wine vines and in, with typical Chinese efficiency, went the red - so much so that there is now a national shortage of white wine grapes. Meanwhile China has become much, much less dependent on bulk imports and dubious helpmeets. Wine imported in bulk, which reached a peak in 1997 and1998 and is currently chiefly from Chile, was down to well under 10 per cent of the total volume of wine sold in China last year, enough to fill 457 million bottles.
While Chinese wine investors are spreading their wings abroad - the country's largest wine company Changyu is feeling so confident that it has begun a partnership with its Thai importer to produce wine in Thailand -
Changyu - Century-old business based in Shandong and Asia's biggest wine operation overall with a well-established market. Now in partnership with the French, family-owned Castel company in China with heavily-advertised new tourist complex near Yantai.
Most wineries in China are currently working out whether to follow the French or New World wine model, and you can be sure that that decision will not be based on emotion. Changyu has clearly opted for France in an alliance with Castel of Bordeaux (owners of Nicolas, Oddbins et al) called Château Changyu-Castel. Other past outside investors include Jeanjean and William Pitters of France while Sella & Mosca of Sardinia, Torres of Spain and the owner of Norton in Argentina all have some sort of current involvement.