
Winery Bruno LafonLe Sud Vieilles Vignes
This wine generally goes well with beef, veal or pasta.

Food and wine pairings with Le Sud Vieilles Vignes
Pairings that work perfectly with Le Sud Vieilles Vignes
Original food and wine pairings with Le Sud Vieilles Vignes
The Le Sud Vieilles Vignes of Winery Bruno Lafon matches generally quite well with dishes of beef, pasta or veal such as recipes of southern beef meatballs, macaroni and angel hair gratin or veal colombo.
Details and technical informations about Winery Bruno Lafon's Le Sud Vieilles Vignes.
Discover the grape variety: Grasevina
Crisp, aromatic dry whites with a pale golden colour, soft texture and preserved acidity, showing signature aromas of white flowers (acacia), citrus (lemon), almond and white-fleshed fruits. Also made as fresh sparkling wines and round botrytised dessert wines. The backbone of Croatian and Balkan white wine, it is the Croatian name for Welschriesling, unrelated to German Riesling.
Informations about the Winery Bruno Lafon
The Winery Bruno Lafon is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 25 wines for sale in the of Languedoc to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Languedoc
Sunny, generous southern reds: spicy, peppery Syrah, round, candied Grenache (ripe fruit, garrigue), deep Mourvèdre, structured Carignan, supple Cinsault. From robust Corbières and Minervois to fresher Terrasses du Larzac, via Faugères on schist or taut Pic Saint-Loup. Lively, iodised Picpoul de Pinet whites (oysters), ample Roussanne and Marsanne. 14 sub-appellations, ~10,000 ha in regional AOC.
The wine region of Languedoc-Roussillon
Largest single French vineyard, dominated by sunny, generous reds. Spicy Syrah, candied Grenache (ripe fruit, garrigue), structured Carignan, deep Mourvèdre, supple Cinsault. Stars: structured Corbières, Minervois, Faugères, Saint-Chinian; round Côtes-du-Roussillon. Legendary vins doux naturels: Banyuls and Maury (fortified Grenache) with notes of cocoa, fig, prune.
The word of the wine: Botrytis cinerea
This fungus, also called noble rot, develops during the over-ripening phase and is an ally of great sweet white wines, when it concentrates the juice of the berries. It requires the humidity of morning fogs and beautiful sunny days, gives musts very rich in sugar and brings to the wines the famous taste of "roasted".














