Grape Varieties White Flashcards
Aligote
Aligote is vigorous vine producing aromatic fruit. It crafts wines with high acidity, medium body and pretty jasmine and vanilla perfume. The variety is a natural Pinot x Gouais Blanc Cross.
Regions: Beaujolais, Bourgogne, Rhone(Diois), Savoie
Altesse
This vine is a very shy producer. A 25hl/ha harvest is considered a bumper crop. Fortunately, it is very resistant to rot and can deliver uncompromised clusters despite a long hang time. Genetic research links this grape to Chasselas (which is native to this area surrounding Lake Geneva). Current theory is that Altesse is indigenous to Savoie. The wine has lively acidity with hints of honey and almond. It is full-bodied with spicy aromatics and is long-lived.
Regions: L-R IGP, Savoie
Auxerrois
Auxerrois ripens to high sugar and low acid levels and crafts a fairly neurtral white wine. It is a natural Pinot x Gouais Blanc cross and is believed to have originated in Alsace-Lorraine.
Regions: Alsace
Bourboulenc
Bourboulenc is a vigorous variet that requires high temperatures to ripen its clusters. It produces wines of moderate alcohol and high acidity with aromas of citrus and smoke. It has been grown in southern France for centuries but is of unknown origin.
Regions: L-R, Provence, Rhone
Chardonnay
Chardonnay is a natural Pinot x Gouais Blanc cross indigenous to Bourgogne. The grape achieve high sugar and high extract levels but often run the risk of being low acid. As a wine, Chardonnay displays primary fruit aromas of apple and citrus with secondary and tertiary aromas of butter, nuts, ginger and nutmeg. It is pale white to yellow gold in color depending on age, winemaking practices and its specific terroir.
Synonyms: (Bourgogne) Beaunois; (Jura) Gamay Blanc, Melon d’Arbois, Melon a Queue Rouge; (Loire) Auvernat
Regions: Alsace, Beaujolais, Bourgogne, Champagne, Corsica IGP, Jura, L-R, Loire, Provence, Rhone (Diois), Savoie, South-West
Chasselas
Chasselas is an ancient grape variety believed to be native to the area surrounding Lake Geneva in Switzerland. It boasts abundant but inconsistent yields and is fairly neutral grape; on good sites it picks up a distinctive hint of flint or smoke midst a flavor profile of hay and flowers. In the 1800s, French ampelographer Victor Pulliat (1827-1896) developed a way to categorize grape varieties based upon their ripening times. He used Chasselas Dore as the “standard” or “baseline” for all other varities because this grape was one of the most widely planted at that time and could be used as a reference point throughout Western Europe.
Regions: Alsace, Loire, Savoie
Chenin Blanc
Chenin is related to Savagnin Blanc, leading to the assumption that it is native to the nothern part of France; however, DNA analysis has determined that Agudelo, a grape said to be native to Galicia in Spain, is a direct match. Research as to its origin is ongoing.
Chenin Blanc is a high-vigor variety that is quite adaptable to different climates and soils. The vine is cold hardy, wind- and disease-resistant. It crafts wines of high acidity and high extract. Because of its susceptibility to botrytis and its ability to retain acidity, it is often made into a sweet wine. Its high extract levels and its bracing acidity enable its wines to age for decades.
Synonyms: (Loire) Gros Pineau, Pineau de la Loire; (SW) Rouchelein.
Regions: L-R, Provence, Rhone, South-West
Clairette
Clairette is an extremely vigorous vine believed to have originated in the Herault departement of Languedoc. It perfers warm, rocky, dry sites as a rule and crafts wines that are high in alcohol and low in acidity with delicate hints of apricot, apple, peach, fennel and lime coupled with aromas of acacia and hawthorn. It is prone to oxidation.
Regions: L-R, Provence, Rhone, South-West
Colombard
Colombard is a natural Chenin Blanc x Gouais Blanc cross native to the Charente departement in Nouvelle-Aquitatine. The vine is a prolific producer delivering fruit with floral notes, high acidity and high sugar levels.
Regions: Bordeaux, L-R IGP, Loire, South-West
Courbu Blanc
This grape matures to high sugar levels; it is made into both dry and sweet wines. Despite its aromatic expression of grapefruit, it is only moderately acidic. It is unrelated to Courbu Noir and seems unrelated to Petit Courbu.
Synonyms: (Spain) Hondarrabi Zuri
Regions: South-West
Folle Blanche
Folle Blanche is a productive vine believed to be native to South-West France. It produces a delicately flavored high-acid wine with refreshing notes of citrus and green apple. Interestingly, although Folle Blanche is referred to as Picpoul in Armagnac, it is not the same grape as the Picpoul of Languedoc Fame. Current DNA research has shown that Gouais Blanc is one of its parents.
Synonyms: (Loire) Gros Plant
Regions: Loire,South-West
Gouais Blanc
Gouais Blanc is a productive vine producing big clusters with big berries. It was a dominant grape variety during the Middle Ages but is not commercially grown today. Its claim to fame lies in the number of its offspring! Aligote, Auxerrois, Chardonnay, Gamay Noir a Jus Blanc, Melon de Bourgogne, Romorantin, Sacy, Colombard, Folle Blanche, Grolleau Noir, Arbois and Riesling all have Gouais as a parent.
Regions: Champagne
Grenache Blanc
Grenache Blanc is a vigorous variety producing fairly full-bodied white wines with low to moderate acidity and good extract. It is prone to oxidation. Look for green apple and pear fruit and white flower aromatics. Grenache Blanc, Gris and Noir share the same DNA fingerprint with different phenotypes or outward expressions of those genes.
Synonyms: (Spain) Garnacha Blanca
Regions: L-R, Provence, Rhone
Gringet
Gringet has been grown in Savoie for centuries. Although legend says it was brought to the area by bishops from Cyprus, it could very well be native. It is mid-ripening with floral aromatics, brought acidity and yellow plum fruit.
Regions: Savoie
Gros Manseng
Gros Manseng is the larger-berried, thinner-skinned offspring of the Petit Manseng. It delivers high-acid, high-sugar grapes that are crafted into wines accented by citrus and spice. The aromatics are less intense than those of Petit Manseng.
Regions: L-R IGP, South-West
Jacquere
This prolific producer could easily deliver a crop of 100 hl/ha each year. It produces lightly perfumed, high-acid whites with hints of wildflower and citrus.
Regions: Savoie