JavaScript seems to be disabled in your browser. For the best experience on our site, be sure to turn on Javascript in your browser.
Items 16-30 of 127
The Hoshen stones are gems that were set in the breatplate of the high priest during the time of the Second Temple. Just as these gems were meticulously chosen, so have we chosen the unique and quality wine grapes that go into creating these exciting wines that reflect our aspiration. After 16 months of maturing & aging the unique blend was created.
Gilgal Merlot exhibits abundant notes of berry and cherry, with attractive hints of fresh herbs and carob. This tasty and complex wine features a medium body with good fruit.
Dalton's Canaan Red is a flavorful blend of Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Petite Sirah. A medium-bodied red wine bursting with flavors of forest fruit, berries, and hints of vanilla and cloves, this is a wine that is easy to drink. Best if served at room temperature, around 61 to 64 degrees Fahrenheit. Pairs well with pasta and pizza.
The wine made from Merlot grapes from Vineyard Ein Zeitim in the Upper Galilee, considered one of the best growing areas in the country. The unique vineyards and barrels, have been carefully selected by the winery’s winemakers team specifically for this wine.
This wine is produced from exquisitely balanced grapes grown in Segal's Dishon Vineyard. The vineyard, in the Kadesh Valley in the northern Galilee, is planted on well-drained, dark soil at a height of 430 meters above sea level. Select blocks of the vineyard are densely planted, and strict vineyard management limits the yield, thus intensifying the grapes' natural sugar, acid, and color. Rich tannins enhance the fruit's quality.
This dry white wine is made from Chardonnay grapes grown in the Judea and Samaria regions of Israel. The grapes were harvested early, and matured for 10 months in French oak barrels, and underwent batonnage (stirring of the lees in a barrel) once a week.
In 1848, with the rejuvenation of the Jewish settlement in Jerusalem, Yitzhak Galina-Shor opened the first winery in Israel, in a basement adjunct to the Western Wall in Jerusalem. During the eight generations since its foundation, 1848 Winery continued to grow and gain recognition for its quality wines, re-positioned into several locations, but maintained a tradition of wine production as a way of life.