The flavor of black cherries in wine of Black Sea Coast

Discover the of Black Sea Coast wines revealing the of black cherries flavor during the olphactive analysis (nose) and during the gustative analysis (mouth).

More information on of Black Sea Coast flavors

The wine region of Black Sea Coast of Georgia. Wineries and vineyards like the Domaine Vino M'artville or the Domaine Artwine produce mainly wines red, white and pink. On the nose of Black Sea Coast often reveals types of flavors of smoke, raspberry or non oak and sometimes also flavors of earth, oak or balsamic. We currently count 5 estates and châteaux in the of Black Sea Coast, producing 5 different wines in conventional, organic and biodynamic agriculture.

The wines of Black Sea Coast go well with generally quite well with dishes .

News on wine flavors

Grapevines first domesticated 11,000 years ago, says study

In a large-scale genetic analysis of grapevine varieties, scientists across 16 countries identified two separate domestication events that took place simultaneously ‘in Western Asia and the Caucasus’ around 11,000 years ago, says a new study in the Science journal. A map highlighting the key domestication centres, plus Cultivation Groups (CG) 1 and 2 and and their human dispersal routes. Image Credit: Science journal. Many ancient civilisations in Europe and Asia had wine-drinking tr ...

Andrew Jefford: ‘The situation holds Georgian wine developments in check’

I’d visited Kakheti, Kartli and Imereti before – Georgia’s dominant central wine-producing zones; but never the wild exterior. From the ice-crisped cemetery grass of the 11th-century church of St George, dominating the mountaintop village of Mravaldzali, we looked north across the mountains of the Greater Caucasus, Europe’s highest. The silence, and the vista, was daunting. Hundreds of dry, drab valleys lost themselves in as many snowy peaks. Russia lay beyond. There was, apparently, a way over: ...

Andrew Jefford: ‘Yeast: it’s an upheaval, a revolution’

No yeast; no wine. Yeast is the only ‘wine maker’ in that sense. Imagine a world in which we had to content ourselves with tasting and drinking grape juice: sweet, with no ability to alter our mood, and largely undifferentiated in sensual terms. Our interest would evaporate. Mysteriously, only yeast can unlock personality and even origin in must. Unlock? Perhaps even that word is misconceived. Yeast is, with grape juice, the progenitor of wine. It is not neutral, abstract, a twinkly wand that tr ...