Chris Coad
Chris Coad
and a tropical fruit I called breadfruit.
Big bumpy green thing with tough leathery skin? Starchy?
and a tropical fruit I called breadfruit.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
and a tropical fruit I called breadfruit.
Big bumpy green thing with tough leathery skin? Starchy?
About $85 here.
My guess is that some of the Weissburgunder Grosses Gewchs wines may go for that price or more if imported to the US. The only one I see on wine-searcher is Rebholz 2006 for $53, but I would expect those from Baden-Wrttemberg-Franken to be more expensive.originally posted by Thor:
About $85 here.
I wonder if that makes it the most expensive pinot blanc in the world. Anyone have another contender? I've never seen anything from Alsace get to even half that.
originally posted by Thor:
About $85 here.
I wonder if that makes it the most expensive pinot blanc in the world. Anyone have another contender? I've never seen anything from Alsace get to even half that.
originally posted by Chris Coad:
I only ask because, although it grows in the tropics, I've never really thought of breadfruit as a "tropical fruit" in the usual sense of smelling sweet and aromatic. Breadfruit flesh smells kind of like raw potato with a hint of pine, the skin is like leathery green rubber and smells kind of chlorophylly and barky.
They make good footballs, though, and they're fun to smash. Takes some doing!
originally posted by VS:
... it seems this is always the case when such a natural mutation occurs ('tempranillo blanco', discovered in Rioja by the vineyard manager at Marqus de Murrieta, ...
No one has produced any commercially yet, so it isn't surprising!originally posted by Warren Edwardes:
Never seen it nor tasted the mutation.
originally posted by VS:
The vines are perfect tempranillo vines, Yixin. And I don't expect any commercial tempranillo blanco to be around for the next two or three years.
originally posted by VS:
The vines are perfect tempranillo vines, Yixin. And I don't expect any commercial tempranillo blanco to be around for the next two or three years.