Binyamina Winery

Binyamina
Location Binyamina, Israel
Coordinates 32°31′14″N 34°56′50″E / 32.5206°N 34.9473°E / 32.5206; 34.9473
Wine region Galilee, Shomron, Jerusalem Hills, Negev
Formerly Eliaz Winery
Other labels Avnei Hachoshen, Yogev, Tiltan, BIN, Teva
Founded 1952 (1952)
Key people Sasson Ben Aharon, Chief Winemaker. Asaf Paz, Winemaker.
Parent company Hatzi Hinam
Distribution International
Website www.binyaminawines.co.il

The Binyamina Winery (Hebrew: יקב בנימינה) is Israel's fifth largest, producing about 2.8 million bottles of wine annually.[1][2]

History

The winery was founded in 1952 by Joseph Zeltzer as Eliaz Winery in the town of Binyamina.[1] In those early years it produced mostly sweet wines and table wines, although it was also known for producing liquers under the label Hard Nut, named after Israeli prime minister David Ben Gurion, who was a "hard nut to crack".[3] In 1994 it was purchased by a group of investors who renamed the winery and invested in new vineyards and technology.[3][4] In 2008 the winery was purchased by supermarket chain Hatzi Hinam.[5]

Wines

Binyamina's high-end wine label, Avnei Hachoshen, contains six wines. Each is names after one of the stones in the biblical priestly breastplate, called hachoshen in Hebrew.[1]

The Tiltan label, named after the Hebrew word for a clover (which contains three leaves), contains wines which use grapes from three different vintages.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "About Us". Binyamina Wine.
  2. "Wines of Israel". Israel Export and International Cooperation Institute. 2012.
  3. 1 2 "Binyamina Winery".
  4. 1 2 Rogov, Daniel (2012). The Ultimate Rogov's Guide to Israeli Wine. p. 123.
  5. Rogov, Daniel (January 19, 2011). "Binyamina Winery: My Annual Visit - With Tasting Notes (K)".

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 18, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.