
Winery Northwest Wine AcademyMüller Thurgau
This wine generally goes well with

Details and technical informations about Winery Northwest Wine Academy's Müller Thurgau.
Discover the grape variety: Müller-Thurgau
Light, aromatic whites with a tender palate and moderate acidity, with muscat-like aromas of white flowers, apple, citrus, peach and honeyed notes. Made as easy dry whites, popular semi-dry wines and some sparkling cuvées. Widely planted in Germany (Rheinhessen, Baden), northern Italy (Alto Adige, Trentino), Austria, Switzerland, Hungary and Japan. Cross of riesling × madeleine royale created in 1882 by Hermann Müller in Geisenheim.
Informations about the Winery Northwest Wine Academy
The Winery Northwest Wine Academy is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 19 wines for sale in the of Puget Sound to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Puget Sound
Washington State's only AVA west of the Cascades (~121 planted acres), temperate oceanic climate with warm dry summers, glacial sandy-gravelly soils. Pinot Noir signature as cool-climate red: elegant and silky with red cherry, raspberry, undergrowth and fine spices, fine tannins and freshness. Star Madeleine Angevine native white (early Loire cross, citrus, flowers), taut Riesling, aromatic Müller-Thurgau and Siegerrebe. Fresh maritime niche whites.
The wine region of Washington
2nd US producer by volume, on the arid, sunny Columbia Valley. Star Cabernet Sauvignon (~60% of reds): powerful and structured with signature notes of blackcurrant, blackberry, cedar, dry herbs and graphite, firm tannins. Fleshy, peppery Syrah (black fruits, smoked meat). Round, fruity Merlot, historic mineral Riesling (dry and off-dry), precise Chardonnay and ample Sémillon.
The word of the wine: Tressallier
White grape variety from the Allier region, identical to the Sacy variety grown in Burgundy. Rarely vinified on its own, it is used in the blending of Saint-Pourçain white wines, associated with chardonnay, the main grape variety of the appellation. Syn.: sacy.














