
Winery TamayaLate Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria
This wine generally goes well with spicy food and sweet desserts.
Food and wine pairings with Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria
Pairings that work perfectly with Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria
Original food and wine pairings with Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria
The Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria of Winery Tamaya matches generally quite well with dishes of spicy food or sweet desserts such as recipes of spaghetti all 'amatriciana or rice with milk.
Details and technical informations about Winery Tamaya's Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria.
Discover the grape variety: Rousseli
Most certainly Provençal and more particularly, as its name indicates, from the Var department. It is in the process of disappearing because it is practically no longer multiplied in nurseries, although it is registered in the Official Catalogue of wine grape varieties, list A. It is probably a descendant of the white gouais and the black ouliven, to be continued! Rousseli is practically unknown in other wine-producing countries, in France it was used both as a table grape and as a wine grape.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Late Harvest Muscat Of Alexandria from Winery Tamaya are 0, 2011
Informations about the Winery Tamaya
The Winery Tamaya is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 43 wines for sale in the of Limarí Valley to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Limarí Valley
Limarí Valley is one of the Northernmost winegrowing regions in Chile, located 200 miles (320km) north of the Chilean capital, Santiago. This location places it at a latitude of 30° South, well beyond the latitudes traditionally associated with winegrowing. To provide context, the equivalent parallel in the Northern Hemisphere passes through Egypt, Iraq and northern Mexico. Despite all of this, Limarí Valley is not Chile's most northerly region; a further 50 miles (80km) north Lies the Elqui Valley.
The wine region of Coquimbo
The Elqui Valley wine region is located 400 kilometers (250mi) North of the Chilean capital, Central-valley/maipo-valley/santiago">Santiago, at the very southern edge of the Atacama Desert. Its latitude of 29° makes it Chile's northernmost wine region, for now at least; the country's determined wine pioneers are now setting their sights as far north as the Atacama. Traditionally the region focused exclusively on producing Chile's trademark brandy, Pisco, but today Elqui Valley vineyards are producing Bright, intensely Aromatic wines, most notably from Sauvignon Blanc and Syrah. As might be expected in an arid, largely uninhabited region surrounded by desert, the valley is hot and Dry making irrigation essential in all vineyards here.
The word of the wine: Filling
Gentle transfer from one barrel to another to oxygenate the wine, eliminate some of the lees and reduce the carbon dioxide (fizz) that was released during the fermentations.














