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The United States of America is the world’s fourth largest producer of wine and claims the world’s sixth highest acreage of land under vine.
California produces approximately 85% of all American wine, followed by Washington, New York, and Oregon. Compared with traditional wine-producing countries, the US has a large population, surpassing France in early 2011 to become the world’s largest wine consumer. Despite this, the US ranked only 62nd in per capita consumption by 2016, with just 30% of the population identifying as wine drinkers. In 2019, the US experienced its first decline in wine consumption in 25 years, as the industry lost market share to fast-growing categories such as canned hard seltzers, spirits, and craft beer. Still, the US continues to provide the world’s most substantial market for fine wines. Further, over the past 20 years, powerful American critics have had a significant influence on winemakers and markets worldwide.
In the early ninth century, the Viking Leif Eriksson brought his boat aground at L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, Canada, becoming the first European to definitively set foot on the North American continent. He christened his discovery Vinland—possibly a reference to the meadows before him or, as recounted in the 13th-century poem “Saga of the Greenlanders,” a tribute to the wealth of native grapevines. Unlike in South America, several species of wild grapevines awaited the first colonists of North America, including Vitis labrusca, Vitis rotundifolia, and Vitis aestivalis. Vitis vinifera, the source of fine wine
The section on the Central Coast includes the following text: ‘Chalone AVA, an appellation dominated by the producer of the same name in Monterey, lies to the south in the same range.’ As Monterey is the name of a city, a county, and an AVA in California, the paths to confusion are many here. Though the producer Chalone is located in Monterey County, they are not located in the Monterey AVA. There’s enough confusion with the appellation and the producer sharing the same name, and then a different appellation and the county sharing the same name, that I’m thinking that including the fact that the producer of Chalone is located in the county of Monterey adds little while yielding much opportunity for confusion–even if it were worded more precisely.