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Published 2006
Portugal’s usefully versatile, second most planted vine variety, having been definitively overtaken by Tinta Roriz (tempranillo) by 2012 when total Castelão plantings fell to 14,414 ha/35,602 acres. It makes varied but generally fruity, sometimes surprisingly long-lived reds all over southern Portugal. It is known variously as Periquita in Setúbal, João de Santarém in Oeste, and
© Jancis Robinson and Oxford University Press 1994, 1999, 2006, 2015