It is more than a bottle with a red Cordovan hat and jacket. It's more than a billboard on the road. It is more than a bright sign in Puerta del Sol. It is a bottled jewel, it is the sun and Andalusian joy made liquid. It is an icon of drinking and heritage of the “chin chin”. It is the Fino, the Sherry wine that since 1935 has been named after the uncle of its founder and that occupies a reserved space in every home minibar. That bottle that you loved so much when you were little and that fascinated you when you were old enough to try it. There is no summer day that at aperitif time you don't ask for a fine “very cold, please.”
It is more than a bottle with a red Cordovan hat and jacket. It's more than a billboard on the road. It is more than a bright sign in Puerta del Sol. It is a bottled jewel, it is the sun and Andalusian joy made liquid. It is an icon of drinking and heritage of the “chin chin”. It is the Fino, the Sherry wine that since 1935 has been named after the uncle of its founder and that occupies a reserved space in every home minibar. That bottle that you loved so much when you were little and that fascinated you when you were old enough to try it. There is no summer day that at aperitif time you don't ask for a fine “very cold, please.”