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Deal: Sample Canada’s best icewines with this pass -- and save

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What’s the upside to harvesting grapes in freezing temperatures? Icewine, of course, and Canada’s Niagara Falls area celebrates with a festival held over three weekends in January.

Those intent on sampling the chilly good stuff should buy a pass that saves 50% on the cost of individual tastings.

The deal: The Niagara Icewine Festival will mark its 20th year in 2015. During the wintry harvest, grapes aren’t picked until temperatures plummet to around 18 degrees.

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Regardless of when the harvest begins, the festival goes on.

More than 35 winemakers in Wine Country Ontario open their doors for tastings and specialties such as peaches and triple-cream brie tartlet paired with a 2013 Vidal Icewine, or icewine marshmallows to be roasted over an open fire.

Buy a Discovery Pass for $40 Canadian ($34 U.S.) and you can sample wine and food at eight stops along the Wine Route. You’ll take home a souvenir wine glass too. (Download a Discovery Pass Guide for a description of each winery.)

In addition, you can sip icewine, tour ice sculptures and hang out in front of a fire at street festivals in Twenty Valley, Niagara-on-the-Lake and Niagara Falls, not far from the U.S.-Canada border.

When: The pass is available for purchase online and good Jan. 9-11, 16-18 and 23 to 25.

Tested: Wine stops at the festival normally cost $10 Canadian each for advanced purchase tickets. So eight wineries for $40 means a good half-off deal.

There’s also a Driver’s Discovery Pass for $30 Canadian that covers food samples for designated drivers.

Info: Niagara Icewine Festival Discovery Pass

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