Loading Page...

Is Madeira dry or sweet?

While it's similar to other fortified wines that have a higher alcohol content and longer shelf life, Madeira truly stands on its own. Not just a wine for cooking or dessert, Madeira is a hearty wine that ranges from dry to sweet and encompasses a variety of flavors.



People Also Ask

Madeira is a robust and long-lasting wine with a high alcohol content, since it's made with a distilled grape spirit, being around 17-20% alcohol content. It's made in different styles, from dry, used as an aperitif, to sweet, used as a digestif, depending on the amount of sugar it has (anywhere from 0-150 g/liter).

MORE DETAILS

Madeira is a robust and long-lasting wine with a high alcohol content, since it's made with a distilled grape spirit, being around 17-20% alcohol content. It's made in different styles, from dry, used as an aperitif, to sweet, used as a digestif, depending on the amount of sugar it has (anywhere from 0-150 g/liter).

MORE DETAILS

This scarcity, along with the rich flavor profiles, has catapulted the prices of some Madeira bottles. You'll have to shell out around $10,900 for the 1842 vintage of H.M Borges Terrantez 'T' Vintage - one of the most expensive fortified wines in the world.

MORE DETAILS

The average standard of living tends to be a bit lower than in mainland Portugal, and the local autonomous government gives generous subsidies coming from the tourist industry revenues and from the Portuguese national budget. Go where the locals go and everything will be cheap.

MORE DETAILS

In fact, Madeira was just voted Europe's “Leading Island Destination” in the World Travel Awards again (the sixth time in the last seven years). Less than four hours from London and with almost guaranteed sunshine, Madeira is an ideal winter break, or for that matter, anytime destination.

MORE DETAILS

If you don't already know, Funchal is the capital city of a magical Portuguese island archipelago in the middle of the Atlantic known as Madeira.

MORE DETAILS

ELECTRICITY AND WATER The electric current in the archipelago is 220 volts. There is plenty of water in Madeira and it is all drinkable and of excellent quality.

MORE DETAILS