
Winery CançãoMeio Seco
This wine generally goes well with

Details and technical informations about Winery Canção's Meio Seco.
Discover the grape variety: Allison seedless
Table grape with long clusters of golden seedless berries, thin skin, crunchy flesh, and a neutral sweet taste. Early-ripening and productive. Rarely vinified; when it is, it yields simple, low-aromatic whites. Grown mainly in California, Australia, and Chile for export markets. An American white table grape variety obtained by crossing for fresh consumption.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Meio Seco from Winery Canção are 0
Informations about the Winery Canção
The Winery Canção is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 10 wines for sale in the of Serra Gaúcha to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Serra Gaúcha
Brazil's wine capital, Rio Grande do Sul. Specialty: high-quality traditional-method sparklers, fine and fruity (apple, citrus, white flowers), elegant bubble, alpine expression of the south. Still wines mostly European: round fruity Merlot, firm Cabernet Sauvignon, more tannic Tannat, fresh Chardonnay, supple Riesling Italico, fine Pinot Noir. Marked by Italian immigration in 1875, humid climate tempered by altitude.
The wine region of Rio Grande do Sul
Brazil's winemaking heart (~80% of production), Italian tradition. Recognised specialty: traditional-method sparkling wines (espumantes), fresh and fruity, based on Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, among South America's finest. Accessible reds: supple, fruity Merlot (plum, cherry), fleshy Cabernet Sauvignon, dense, tannic Tannat. Round Chardonnay, light Riesling Italico, sweet, floral Moscato whites.
The word of the wine: Sorting
Action which consists in removing the bad grains, not ripe or affected by the rot. We often use vibrating sorting tables which, by shaking, make the impurities fall to the ground. In the case of sweet wines, we speak of harvesting by successive selections, in several passages, to select the very ripe grapes each time.














