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🧳 Plan Your Wine Trip

🧭 Step 1: Pick a Region
🍇 Step 2: Select an Experience
🚶 Step 3: Start Exploring

Listen. Watch. Sip. Feel.

Wine is not only tasted — it’s heard, seen and remembered. In this section, we bring Greek wine to life through multimedia storytelling.

Discover:

  • Short videos pairing wine with music, poetry or place
  • Podcast interviews with winemakers, artists & historians
  • Digital tasting experiences with Lefki & Achilleas as your guides
  • Virtual explorations of Greek vineyards & wine regions

Each piece is created to:

  • Inspire emotional connection
  • Educate with beauty
  • Extend the story beyond the bottle

 

Coming soon – stay tuned.

This is the soundscape of Greek wine.
Press play. Pour a glass. Begin the journey.

🍇 Discover Greek Grape Varieties

📚 Wine Word Origins

🌿 Symposion → From ‘σύν’ (together) + ‘πίνειν’ (to drink)
Not just a drinking party, but a ritualized gathering — the birthplace of philosophical dialogue over shared cups.

🍇 Ampelos → From ‘ἄμπελος’
The Greek word for vine — source of the term ampelography, the study of grape varieties.

🍷 Krater → From the Greek ‘κρατήρ’
A large vessel used to mix wine with water during symposia — the heart of ancient wine culture.

🍾 Retsina → From ‘ῥητίνη’ (retini)
Named after the pine resin once used to seal amphorae and later became part of the flavor — an ancient tradition still alive today.

🏺 Oinos → From Mycenaean Linear B
The ancient word for wine.

🎁 Featured Wine-Themed Gifts

📖 “Did You Know?” Greek Wine Facts

Assyrtiko is one of the few white grapes that can age gracefully for decades.

In Greek, “moscho” means fragrant, and it lives up to Moschofilero's name.

Savvatiano is Greece’s most planted grape — and it thrives in the heat where other grapes fade.

Vidiano is Crete’s rising white star — once nearly extinct, now hailed as Greece’s next great white grape.

Malagousia was nearly lost — until a winemaker’s instinct brought this aromatic gem back to life.

Agiorgitiko is known as the “Blood of Hercules” in myth.

Xinomavro is often called the “Barolo of Greece” — bold, complex, and built to age.

Contact us

GW The Greek wine routes

  (+30) 694 70 93 331

   sales@gw-wineroutes.com

   www.gw-wineroutes.com

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