Winery in Ziros, Greece
Economou Winery
500ptsEastern Cretan Terroir Viticulture

About Economou Winery
Economou Winery sits in Ziros, a village at the eastern edge of Crete in the Sitia regional unit, producing wine from one of the island's most geologically distinct corners. The estate holds a Pearl 2 Star Prestige award for 2025, placing it in a small tier of recognized Greek producers. For visitors making the journey to Lasithi's far east, it represents a serious stop in a region whose viticulture remains largely outside mainstream wine tourism circuits.
Where Eastern Crete Makes Its Argument for Terroir
The easternmost reaches of Crete do not announce themselves with vineyards you pass on the highway. The land around Ziros, sitting inland from the Libyan Sea in the Sitia regional unit of Lasithi, operates on its own quiet register. Limestone ridges push up through thin topsoil. The wind, particularly from the north, comes in without obstruction. Summers run long and dry, moderated only slightly by altitude. These are conditions that, in any serious wine region, would produce wines of concentration and structure — and in Crete's eastern fringe, they do. Economou Winery, located at the village itself on the road through Sitia municipality, is the producer that has drawn sustained international attention to what this corner of the island can yield. Its 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition is the kind of award signal that positions an estate not merely as a regional curiosity but as a serious participant in a broader conversation about Greek wine.
The Sitia Zone and What the Soil Carries
Crete's wine production concentrates heavily in the centre and west of the island, around Heraklion and Chania, where the Peza cooperative and larger Minoan-branded producers dominate visitor footfall. Sitia PDO, the eastern appellation, is smaller in volume and considerably harder to reach, which has historically kept it off the standard itinerary for wine tourists circling the island. That geographic isolation has functioned, paradoxically, as a form of quality control. Producers in this zone have largely avoided the pressure to scale for export markets, and the native varieties — Liatiko and Vilana being central to the regional identity , have continued to express themselves with relatively little intervention from international grape trends. The soils here carry significant minerality. Limestone dominates across the Sitia plateau and its surrounding hills, and the diurnal temperature swings at elevation preserve aromatic complexity in ways that coastal viticulture cannot replicate. For a winery in Ziros, these are not abstract conditions. They are the reason the wines taste the way they do.
Among Greek wineries earning recognition in 2025, Economou sits in a cohort of estates whose awards reflect depth of place-expression rather than commercial volume. Producers at this tier , found also in Nemea with estates like Acra Winery, or in northern appellations like Aidarinis Winery in Goumenissa and Alpha Estate in Amyntaio , tend to be small, allocation-constrained, and leading understood as regional specialists rather than national-volume players. The contrast with a historically large Peloponnesian operation like Achaia Clauss in Patras illustrates how differently Greek wine identity can organise itself across geography and scale.
Reading a Pearl 2 Star Prestige Award in Context
The Pearl 2 Star Prestige designation Economou holds for 2025 is not the ceiling of the Pearl framework, but it is solidly inside the upper bracket of recognised producers. In a country whose wine culture has spent twenty years building international credibility after decades of bulk-production associations, awards at this level carry particular weight as a corrective signal. They tell buyers and visitors that a producer has cleared a standard of consistency and quality that the market cannot simply assume from Greek provenance alone. The Cretan wine sector has benefited from several such estates anchoring credibility for the appellation system, and Economou's presence in the eastern Sitia zone adds a geographical dimension to that credibility: it demonstrates that the island's quality argument extends well beyond the zones that receive most of the tourist traffic.
For context on how this positions Economou within the national picture, it is worth noting that several Greek wineries operating in less-visited appellations have used similar award frameworks to move from obscurity toward allocation demand. Anatolikos Vineyards in Xanthi and Abraam's Vineyards in Komninades represent comparable cases of producers whose regional remoteness did not prevent award recognition from widening their reach. The pattern suggests that Greek wine's current moment rewards those willing to seek out producers in less-trafficked zones , a journey that, in Economou's case, requires commitment but returns something the island's more accessible producers cannot easily replicate.
Getting to Ziros and Planning the Visit
Ziros sits roughly 25 kilometres west of Sitia, the nearest town of meaningful size, via a road that climbs into the plateau interior of eastern Crete. Heraklion, the island's main transport hub, is approximately two and a half hours by car , a significant distance that makes Economou most sensibly visited as part of a dedicated eastern Crete itinerary rather than a day trip from the centre of the island. Ierapetra, on the southern coast, offers a closer base for those approaching from the Libyan Sea side. Given that specific booking details, hours, and contact information for the winery are not publicly available in structured form, visitors are advised to approach through local tourism offices in Sitia or through wine-focused tour operators covering eastern Crete before making the journey. The remoteness of the location means that turning up without prior arrangement carries real risk. Eastern Crete's wine tourism infrastructure is thinner than the centre of the island, which reinforces the case for building any visit to Economou into a broader itinerary that takes in the Sitia PDO zone systematically rather than as a single destination stop. For a fuller picture of what the region offers beyond the winery itself, our full Ziros wineries guide covers the local producer landscape, while our Ziros restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide help frame the full picture of what a stay in this part of Lasithi can look like.
Why the Eastern Cretan Model Matters Now
Greek wine is in a phase where the most interesting developments are happening at the margins of the appellation map, not in its established centres. The Sitia PDO and its neighbouring zones represent a version of this shift that is still early enough to follow with genuine discovery value. Economou, holding Pearl 2 Star Prestige status and sitting in one of the island's most geologically compelling terroirs, is as coherent a reason as any to make that eastern journey. Producers operating at this tier in comparably remote international contexts , whether in northern Spain's plateau regions, as with Abadía Retuerta in Sardón de Duero, or in Scotland's whisky tradition at places like Aberlour , have demonstrated that remoteness and award-level quality are not contradictions. They are often the same thing. The same logic applies with force in eastern Crete. Other Greek producers working in less-visited zones and earning recognition for it include Aiolos Winery in Palaio Faliro and Akrathos Newlands Winery in Panagia, both of which reflect the same broader shift toward quality-first production outside the island's tourist-heavy wine corridors.
Visitor Questions
- How would you describe the overall feel of Economou Winery?
- Economou operates in a register that is closer to a working estate in an overlooked appellation than a purpose-built wine tourism destination. Ziros is a small village on Crete's eastern plateau, and the winery sits within that agricultural context rather than above it. The 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige award signals that this is a serious producer, but the setting is austere and remote in the way that eastern Lasithi tends to be. Visitors who have made the journey to comparable award-recognised estates in under-visited Greek zones describe the experience as genuinely immersive in regional viticulture rather than staged for general tourism. For pricing context, Sitia PDO wines at this quality tier generally position above entry-level Cretan table wine but remain competitive relative to comparable award-holding producers in other European regions.
- What do visitors recommend trying at Economou Winery?
- The Sitia PDO's native varieties are the primary reference point for understanding what Economou produces. Liatiko, the red grape most closely associated with this appellation, is capable of producing wines that range from light and aromatic to deeply structured depending on vineyard site and winemaking approach. Vilana is the corresponding white variety with regional identity. For a producer holding Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition in 2025, the expectation is that the estate-level expressions of these varieties will reflect the limestone terroir and altitude conditions of the Ziros plateau. Given the winery's limited public profile and the absence of structured tasting notes in accessible form, the most reliable recommendation is to arrive with an open brief and allow the current vintage selection to set the agenda, as small Sitia producers tend to move in cycles that do not always align with advance research.
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