
Winery SzecskoPinot Gris
This wine generally goes well with rich fish (salmon, tuna etc), shellfish or mature and hard cheese.

Wine flavors and olphactive analysis
On the nose the Pinot Gris of Winery Szecsko in the region of Hungary often reveals types of flavors of earth.
Food and wine pairings with Pinot Gris
Pairings that work perfectly with Pinot Gris
Original food and wine pairings with Pinot Gris
The Pinot Gris of Winery Szecsko matches generally quite well with dishes of rich fish (salmon, tuna etc), shellfish or mature and hard cheese such as recipes of tuna, goat cheese and mustard pie, easy seafood gratin or gluten-free ham and olive cake.
Details and technical informations about Winery Szecsko's Pinot Gris.
Discover the grape variety: Pinot gris
Rich, ample whites with a golden robe, showing aromas of pear, quince, honey, smoke, ginger and spice. Made as structured dry wines (Alsace AOC), off-dry and sumptuous late-harvest sweet (vendange tardive, sélection de grains nobles). Lighter and crisper in Italy as Pinot Grigio (Veneto, Friuli). Also in Germany (Grauburgunder), Hungary (Szürkebarát) and Oregon. A grey mutation of Pinot Noir.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Pinot Gris from Winery Szecsko are 0, 2013, 2012
Informations about the Winery Szecsko
The Winery Szecsko is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 8 wines for sale in the of Hungary to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Hungary
Millennia-old Central European wine country, 65,000 ha across 22 regions, 70% whites. Legendary Tokaji Aszú (UNESCO): golden botrytised sweet wines with signature notes of honey, candied apricot, orange peel and spice, taut acidity — one of the world's greatest sweet wines. Dry Furmint booming (lively and mineral), perfumed Hárslevelű. Egri Bikavér ("Bull's Blood") as a fleshy Kékfrankos red.
The word of the wine: Passerillage
Concentration of the grape by drying out, under the influence of wind or sun, as opposed to botrytisation, which is the concentration obtained by the development of the "noble rot" for which Botrytis cinerea is responsible. The word is mainly used for sweet wines.














