America

AMERICA

Across the United States, terroir swings from Pacific fog to continental heat, and the AVA system maps that diversity as a federal appellation for wine. Coastal corridors and inland valleys translate elevation, exposure and soils—from volcanic to sandstone and loam—into place-driven styles, while Oregon and Washington sharpen the picture through mesoclimate and site focus. In parallel, spirits are framed by legal “standards of identity”: bourbon must be produced in the U.S., made from a mash bill of at least 51% corn, distilled within set limits and matured in new, charred oak. Rye, American single malt and craft distilling build on those rules. Regulation, geography and technique meet here like two languages sharing one grammar.
Argentina | Barbados | Brazil | Chile | Fiji | Guatemala | Jamaica | Mexico | Trinidad | USA

AMERICA

Across the United States, terroir swings from Pacific fog to continental heat, and the AVA system maps that diversity as a federal appellation for wine. Coastal corridors and inland valleys translate elevation, exposure and soils—from volcanic to sandstone and loam—into place-driven styles, while Oregon and Washington sharpen the picture through mesoclimate and site focus. In parallel, spirits are framed by legal “standards of identity”: bourbon must be produced in the U.S., made from a mash bill of at least 51% corn, distilled within set limits and matured in new, charred oak. Rye, American single malt and craft distilling build on those rules. Regulation, geography and technique meet here like two languages sharing one grammar.
Argentina | Barbados | Brazil | Chile | Fiji | Guatemala | Jamaica | Mexico | Trinidad | USA