
Winery RosemountThe Olympic Games
This wine generally goes well with poultry, beef or lamb.
Food and wine pairings with The Olympic Games
Pairings that work perfectly with The Olympic Games
Original food and wine pairings with The Olympic Games
The The Olympic Games of Winery Rosemount matches generally quite well with dishes of beef, lamb or poultry such as recipes of picadillo, leg of lamb with spices or ham and cheese cake.
Details and technical informations about Winery Rosemount's The Olympic Games.
Discover the grape variety: Gros Colman
From the South Caucasus, perhaps in Georgia, some writings give it as coming from Russia, a country close to the previous one. For a long time, it was grown in greenhouses, particularly in Belgium, but also in England, France, Holland and Japan. It was rarely cultivated in the field, but a few attempts were made without much success on the banks of the Rhine, in the Tarn et Garonne region and in Thomery in the Seine et Marne region. Today, it is no longer multiplied in nurseries and is therefore in danger of extinction. It is thought to be the result of a natural intraspecific cross between white tigvoasa or furjmony feher - a Romanian variety with female flowers - and black kadarka. There is a clone that takes on a very characteristic purple color in the fall, with larger berries, larger bunches and later ripening.
Informations about the Winery Rosemount
The Winery Rosemount is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 161 wines for sale in the of Australie du Sud to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Australie du Sud
SouthAustralia is one of Australia's six states, located (as the name suggests) in the south of the vast island continent. It's the engine room of the Australian wine industry, responsible for about half of the country's total production each year. But there's more to the region than quantity - countless high-quality wines are produced here, most from the region's signature Grape, Shiraz. These include such fine, collectible wines as Penfolds Grange, Henschke Hill of Grace, Torbreck The Laird and d'Arenberg The Dead Arm.
The word of the wine: Fade
Wine lacking in sapidity, flat, soft and without character.














