
Winery Habánské SklepyVeltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr
This wine generally goes well with pork, vegetarian or lean fish.
Food and wine pairings with Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr
Pairings that work perfectly with Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr
Original food and wine pairings with Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr
The Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr of Winery Habánské Sklepy matches generally quite well with dishes of pork, rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) or shellfish such as recipes of banh mi sandwich, red tuna steak provençal style or aïoli.
Details and technical informations about Winery Habánské Sklepy's Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr.
Discover the grape variety: Koshu
One of the oldest varieties cultivated in Japan, generally in arbors/pergolas, most often used as a table grape and recently vinified and associated with other varieties. It is a Vitis vinifera also known in Australia, New Zealand, Germany, the United States... practically unknown in France.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Veltlínské Zelené Pozdní Sběr from Winery Habánské Sklepy are 2017, 2015, 2016, 0 and 2013.
Informations about the Winery Habánské Sklepy
The Winery Habánské Sklepy is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 42 wines for sale in the of Morava to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Morava
Moravia, with roughly 95 percent of the nation's Vine plantings, is the engine room of the Czech Republic's wine industry. The Center of intensively farmed bulk-wine production is also showing great promise as a producer of quality white wines. This is largely thanks to its cool Climate, comparable in many ways to that in Nahe or Pfalz, the white-wine specialists a few hundred miles west in Germany. Moravian winelands enjoy a Vineyard year well suited to the production of Complex aromatics with good Acidity.
The word of the wine: Chaptalization
The addition of sugar at the time of fermentation of the must, an ancient practice, but theorized by Jean-Antoine Chaptal at the dawn of the 19th century. The sugar is transformed into alcohol and allows the natural degree of the wine to be raised in a weak or cold year, or - more questionably - when the winegrower has a harvest that is too large to obtain good maturity.














