Vino de la tierra

Vino de la tierra is a quality of Spanish wine that designates the rung below the mainstream quality wine classification of denominación de origen protegida (DOP).[1] It is the equivalent of the French vin de pays. It represents a higher quality than table wine, and covers still wine, sparkling wine, and fortified wine. Since 2016 the classification is called indicación geográfica protegida (IGP), but wines can still use the traditional name of vino de la tierra.[1][2] The labels of vino de la tierra wines are allowed to state the year of vintage and the grape varieties used in production.

Location of vinos de la tierra
Label on vino de la tierra wine

In 2019 there were 42 registered vino de la tierra wines in Spain.[1]

Current IGP / VdlT designations

Andalusia

Aragon

Balearic Islands

Cantabria

Castile and León

Castilla–La Mancha

Extremadura

Galicia

La Rioja

Murcia

Navarre

Valencia

Similar wine classifications in Europe

Levels corresponding to Vino de la Tierra in other countries are:

  • Indicazione geografica tipica for equivalent quality wines from Italy.
  • Landwein for equivalent quality wines from Germany, Austria and South Tyrol.
  • Landwijn for equivalent quality wines from Netherlands.
  • Regional wine for equivalent quality wines from the United Kingdom.
  • Vin de pays for equivalent quality wines from France, Luxembourg and Val d'Aosta.
  • Vinho regional for equivalent quality wines from Portugal.
  • Viño da terra for equivalent quality wines from Galician-speaking regions in Spain.
  • Vi de la terra for equivalent quality wines from Catalan-speaking regions in Spain.
  • Ονομασία κατά παράδοση (traditional name) or τοπικός οίνος (regional wine) for equivalent quality wines from Greece.

References

  1. Driscoll, Killian. "Classification order of Spanish Wine appellations – What do DOP, DOCa, DOQ, VP, VC, IGP Mean?". artobatours.com. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  2. "Ministerio de Agricultura,Pesca y Alimentación". www.mapa.gob.es. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
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