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910 20 Alcoholic Beverages

Table 20.10. (continued)

Cultivar Wine Acid b Must Matura- Yield e Comments about wine f

type a weight c tion

characteristics

Red wine cultivars

Burgundy,

blue, late

Heroldrebe

2–3 2 4 2–3 Full-bodied, strongly flavored with

a rounded bouquet, dark red mellow

wine

A superior neutral wine with

a tannin-like astringency

Limberger, blue 2 2 5 2 Characteristically fruity, a somewhat

herbaceous, tarty and finely astringent

bluish-red wine

Muellerrebe

(black riesling)

2 2 4 2 Reminiscent of late Burgundy, but of

lower quality

Portuguese, blue 2 1–2 1 3 A neutral mellow bluish-red wine

with a bouquet deficiency

Trollinger, blue 2 2 3 A mellow refreshing light wine with

a pungent flavor and light-red in

color

a Quality German wines are classified as table wines (Tafelwein, Oechsle degrees less than 60), quality wines

(with all the required characteristics of the growing region and an Oechsle degree of at least 60) and the special

high quality wines (Oechsle degrees at least 73). The latter are denoted according to increasing quality as Kabinett,

Spaetlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese and for the top quality as Trockenbeerenauslese. In addition to the rating, the

label might carry a designation as Eiswein (ice-wine, see text).

R: Riesling group of wine (superior, fruity wine with distinct acidity)

S: Sylvaner group (neutral wine devoid of a distinct bouquet)

M: Mueller-Thurgau group (light, flowery with discrete bouquet)

T: Traminer group (wine with a fine bouquet)

B: Bouquet group of wine (wine with strong and aromatic bouquet)

A: Auslese group of wines (fullbodied great wines).

b 1: Low (approx. 50 g/l), 2: medium (approx. 5–10 g/l), and 3: high acidity (10–15 g/l).

c 1: 60–70 Oechsle degrees, 2: 70–85 ◦ C, and 3: >85 Oechsle degrees.

d 1: Very early maturing (beginning–middle of September), 2: early (middle–end of September, 3: early-medium

(end of September, beginning of October), 4: medium late (beginning–middle of October), 5: late (middle–end of

October), and 6: very late maturing cultivar (end of October beginning of November).

e 1: Low (60 hl/ha), 2: average (60–80 hl/ha), and 3: high yielding cultivar (≥90 hl/ha).

f The wine organoleptic quality description has its own wine dictionary. Terms classify and refer to wine (1) aroma

or bouquet, (2) body, (3) sweetness and acids, (4) variety or cultivar, (5) age and (6) wine taste harmony (i. e. to

which extent are the constituents of wine agreeably blended or related).

• Sylvaner – grown in Pfalz, Rheinhessen and

Franken regions of Germany.

• Mueller-Thurgau – grown widely in east

Switzerland and in Germany; it is a cross

between Riesling and Sylvaner.

• Gutedel (Chasselas, Fendant, Dorin) – often

found in Baden, Alsace, West Switzerland,

and France.

• Scheurebe – a favored cultivar in Germany, obtained

by crossing Sylvaner and Riesling.

• Morio-Muscat, a cultivar of exceptional bouquet.

• Veltliner – of significance in Austria, as is

• Zierfandler.

Grape cultivars providing top quality red wines

are:

• Pinot Noir – the famous red vine cultivated in

the Cote d’Or region of Burgundy, and also in

Germany along the river Ahr and in Baden.

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