
Winery Artisan WinesZweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure
This wine generally goes well with blue cheese, pork or lamb.
Wine flavors and olphactive analysis
On the nose the Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure of Winery Artisan Wines in the region of Weinland often reveals types of flavors of red fruit.
Food and wine pairings with Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure
Pairings that work perfectly with Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure
Original food and wine pairings with Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure
The Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure of Winery Artisan Wines matches generally quite well with dishes of lamb, pork or mature and hard cheese such as recipes of lamb mice confit and melting carrots, rabbit with hunter's sauce or franco-comtois beef.
Details and technical informations about Winery Artisan Wines's Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure.
Discover the grape variety: Zweigelt
Intraspecific crossing between the saint laurent and the limberger realized in 1922 and in Austria by Fritz Zweigelt (1888/1964) who named it rotburger. Very well known in Austria, it can be found in most Eastern countries, Japan, Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Canada, the United States, etc. In France, it is not very well known and yet this variety has interesting qualities when vinified as a single variety for both red and rosé wines. - Synonyms: rotburger, klosterneuburger, zweigelt blau, blauer-zweigelt in Germany, zweigeltrebe in Austria, Great Britain and the Czech Republic, blauer zwelgetrabe in Hungary, etc. (for all the synonyms of the grape varieties, click here !)
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Zweigelt Rosé Frizzante Pure from Winery Artisan Wines are 2019, 0, 2017
Informations about the Winery Artisan Wines
The Winery Artisan Wines is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 23 wines for sale in the of Burgenland to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Burgenland
Burgenland is a large wine-producing region on the eastern border of Austria. Despite the country's image as the producer of some of the world's finest white wines, Austria is also home to a thriving red wine culture: Burgenland, with its sunny, continental summers, is the country's key red wine region, with its wines based mainly on the Blaufränkisch and Zweigelt grape varieties. Sweet, botrytized wines are also a specialty of the region, particularly in the Terroir surrounding the Neusiedlersee lake. The region occupies a narrow strip of land that runs from the Danube River down to Steiermark in the South.
The wine region of Weinland
Weinviertel DAC – whose name translates as "wine quarter" – is an appellation in Niederösterreich (Lower Austria). It is by far the largest Districtus Austriae Controllatus wine region in Austria. It was also the first Austrian wine region to be given that title, in 2002, with a DAC Reserve designation added in 2009. The designation applies only to white wines from the Grüner Veltliner Grape variety.
The word of the wine: Oxidative (breeding)
A method of ageing which aims to give the wine certain aromas of evolution (dried fruit, bitter orange, coffee, rancio, etc.) by exposing it to the air; it is then matured either in barrels, demi-muids or unoaked casks, sometimes stored in the open air, or in barrels exposed to the sun and to temperature variations. This type of maturation characterizes certain natural sweet wines, ports and other liqueur wines.














