
Winery Robert HallMuscat Orange
This wine generally goes well with spicy food and sweet desserts.

Food and wine pairings with Muscat Orange
Pairings that work perfectly with Muscat Orange
Original food and wine pairings with Muscat Orange
The Muscat Orange of Winery Robert Hall matches generally quite well with dishes of spicy food or sweet desserts such as recipes of monkfish with curry or king's cake with frangipane.
Details and technical informations about Winery Robert Hall's Muscat Orange.
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.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Muscat Orange from Winery Robert Hall are 2013, 0, 2014
Informations about the Winery Robert Hall
The Winery Robert Hall is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 49 wines for sale in the of Paso Robles to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Paso Robles
Powerful, sun-drenched reds of California's Central Coast: ripe, concentrated Cabernet Sauvignon (40%) with notes of plum and chocolate, round tannins. Emblematic Rhône grapes — fleshy peppery Syrah, fruity Grenache, structured Mourvèdre, Viognier in white. Spicy old-vine Zinfandel, a local signature. AVA of San Luis Obispo, 11 sub-AVAs, Mediterranean climate with thermal swings on limestone soils.
The wine region of California
Powerful, sunny reds: dense Napa Cabernet Sauvignon (blackcurrant, chocolate, tobacco, ample tannins), spicy, jammy Zinfandel from the Sierra Foothills, silky red-fruited Pinot Noir on the cool coast (Sonoma, Russian River, Central Coast). Opulent, buttery Chardonnay, notes of yellow fruit and vanilla. Varied climate, from the hot interior to the Pacific-cooled coast. 80% of US production, 139 AVAs including Napa (1st AVA, 1981).
The word of the wine: Performance
Quantity of grapes harvested per hectare. In AOC, the average yield is limited on the proposal of the appellation syndicate, validated by the Inao. The use of high-performance plant material (especially clones) and better control of vine diseases have increased yields. This is not without consequences on the quality of the wines (dilution) and on the state of the market (too much wine). We must not over-simplify: low yields are not synonymous with quality, and it is often in years with generous harvests that we find the greatest vintages (1982 and 1986 in Bordeaux, 1996 in Champagne, 1990 and 2005 in Burgundy...).














