
Winery Kakhetian Traditional WinemakingSpecial Collection Mukuzani
This wine generally goes well with

Details and technical informations about Winery Kakhetian Traditional Winemaking's Special Collection Mukuzani.
Discover the grape variety: Saperavi
Deeply coloured, powerful reds with inky robe (teinturier grape with red flesh) and tight tannins, with intense aromas of blackberry, blackcurrant, black plum, spices, leather and balsamic notes. High acidity and fine ageing potential. Often made by the ancestral qvevri method (buried clay jar), it signs the great Georgian reds of Kakheti (Mukuzani, Kvareli, Napareuli). Also in Russia, Ukraine and Australia. Ancient Georgian variety.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Special Collection Mukuzani from Winery Kakhetian Traditional Winemaking are 2018, 0
Informations about the Winery Kakhetian Traditional Winemaking
The Winery Kakhetian Traditional Winemaking is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 39 wines for sale in the of Mukuzani to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Mukuzani
Georgian micro-AOC in Kakheti at the Caucasus foothills, clay-limestone soils. Saperavi monovarietal signature (native teinturier with red pulp, 5-6 millennia in Kakheti). Signature full-bodied deep reds with notes of black candied cherry, blackberry, plum, ink, leather, tobacco, dried herbs and a balsamic oaky touch, firm tannins and dense palate — dark robe, minimum 3-year oak ageing, long-keeping. Venerable Caucasus gastronomic wine.
The wine region of Kakheti
Cradle of amber and orange wines, vinified in qvevri (buried clay jars, UNESCO). Skin-macerated Rkatsiteli whites: signature notes of dried apricot, walnut, honey, orange peel and black tea, fine tannins and controlled oxidation. Deep, tinctorial Saperavi reds with black fruit, plum, spice and firm tannins, age-worthy. Also Mtsvane and Kisi in white, fresh and floral.
The word of the wine: Oenologist
Specialist in wine-making techniques. It is a profession and not a passion: one can be an oenophile without being an oenologist (and the opposite too!). Formerly attached to the Faculty of Pharmacy, oenology studies have become independent and have their own university course. Learning to make wine requires a good chemical background but also, increasingly, a good knowledge of the plant. Some oenologists work in laboratories (analysis). Others, the consulting oenologists, work directly in the properties.














