
Winery Burnt AcreBendigo Grenache
This wine generally goes well with beef and mature and hard cheese.
Food and wine pairings with Bendigo Grenache
Pairings that work perfectly with Bendigo Grenache
Original food and wine pairings with Bendigo Grenache
The Bendigo Grenache of Winery Burnt Acre matches generally quite well with dishes of beef or mature and hard cheese such as recipes of kafta bil saniyeh (lebanese dish) or bocconcini (veal rolls with ham and comté).
Details and technical informations about Winery Burnt Acre's Bendigo Grenache.
Discover the grape variety: Panse précoce
Most certainly finding its first origins in southern Provence, registered in the Official Catalogue of table grape varieties list A1. According to genetic analyses published in Montpellier (Hérault), it is the result of a cross between the bicane and the pascal blanc. It should not be confused with the foster' white grown in Italy and wrongly called panse précoce. Finally, it can also be confused with the Panse de Provence, which has downy-pubescent leaves and ripens in the second half of the year.
Informations about the Winery Burnt Acre
The Winery Burnt Acre is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 3 wines for sale in the of Victoria to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Victoria
Victoria is a relatively small but important Australian wine state. Located in the Southeastern corner of the continent, with a generally cool, ocean-influenced Climate, Victorian wine is remarkably diverse, producing all sorts of wines and styles in different climates. In all, the state covers almost 250,000 square kilometres (over 90,000 square miles) of land (almost the same Size as the US state of Texas), well under a quarter the size of its western neighbour, South Australia, and less than a third the size of New South Wales to the North. As such, Victoria's size - and to some extent, the state's viticultural history - can defy generalization.
The word of the wine: ODG
Organisation for the defence and management of wine, set up following the reform of the "syndicats de crus". The ODG is the collective organisation responsible for the defence and management of a product under an official sign of identification and quality and between wine appellations.











