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The
Etchart family, on the maternal side, has been in the wine business since
1850: its ancestors in Cafayate are the family of Flavio Lema Niño,
whose clay wine storage jars still survive to this day.
Arnaldo Benito Etchart bought the property and winery “La Florida”
in the first half of the 20th century and it is his son Arnaldo who developed
the “Etchart” brand with great success in Argentina and abroad.
This winery was sold to the Pernod Ricard group in 1996, and a year prior,
Arnaldo already had in the works the wines of the new undertaking: San
Pedro de Yacochuya.
Chronology:
1988: Arnaldo Etchart enlists Michel Rolland to help develop the red wines
of the Etchart winery--the beginning of a professional and personal relationship
with one of the best oenologists in the world. This was one of the first
of Rolland’s consulting projects outside of France.
1989: Wine Spectator magazine features Rolland on one of that year’s
covers, elevating his prestige to a worldwide scale.
1990: Arnaldo Etchart and Michel Rolland release one of the first premium
wines of Argentina: Arnaldo B. Etchart Cosecha 1989.
1995: The first wines of San Pedro de Yacochuya (white and red) enter
the domestic market.
1998: The labors of the new winery in Yacochuya begin, resulting in the
first harvest in February of 1999.
2001: The San Pedro de Yacochuya winery begins to export its first premium
wine (Yacochuya M. Rolland Cosecha 1999), while still meeting the needs
of the local market. San Pedro de Yacochuya is located at more than 6,500
feet above sea level, making it one of the highest viti-vinicultural sites
in the world. The property is 39.5 acres: 22 acres of Malbec, 10 acres
of Cabernet Sauvignon, 2.5 acres of Tannat and 5 acres of Torrontés.
The winery has a capacity of 90,000 liters, and is equipped with the most
recent modern technology.
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