
Winery GanadeJurancon Cuvée Maeva
This wine generally goes well with vegetarian, rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) or shellfish.

Food and wine pairings with Jurancon Cuvée Maeva
Pairings that work perfectly with Jurancon Cuvée Maeva
Original food and wine pairings with Jurancon Cuvée Maeva
The Jurancon Cuvée Maeva of Winery Ganade matches generally quite well with dishes of mature and hard cheese, fruity desserts or blue cheese such as recipes of tuna-kiri crisps, rice with milk or cheese ravioli on a bed of spinach.
Details and technical informations about Winery Ganade's Jurancon Cuvée Maeva.
Discover the grape variety: Red Globe
Table grape with long clusters and spherical red-purple berries, thin skin and crisp flesh, sweet fresh taste. Highly productive with excellent shelf life. One of the most exported table grapes worldwide, grown in California, China, Peru, Chile and Spain, massively distributed globally. Black American table grape variety obtained in 1958 in California by complex crossing for fresh consumption.
Informations about the Winery Ganade
The Winery Ganade is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 4 wines for sale in the of Jurançon to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Jurançon
Béarn jewel of whites at the foot of the Pyrenees: signature Petit Manseng as king white for sweet wines (on-vine raisining) — opulent and fresh with notes of honey, candied pineapple, mango, apricot, white flowers, cinnamon, nutmeg and a truffle touch, signature chiseled acidity balancing sugar. Gros Manseng as dry, lively and taut (citrus, exotic fruits, flowers). Courbu and Lauzet as complement. AOC (1936), ~1,000 ha on 25 communes south of Pau, clay-gravel terraces.
The wine region of South West
French mosaic of strong identities south of Bordeaux. Cahors and its Malbec ("black wine"): deep reds with notes of blackberry, plum, violet, tobacco and cocoa, firm tannins. Madiran and its dense, age-worthy Tannat. Jurançon whites: golden sweet (apricot, honey, pineapple) and lively dry from Petit Manseng.
The word of the wine: Classified growth
Place name or castle subject to a classification (Médoc classification of 1855, classified growths of Alsace...)












