
Winery Vida PeterAltiora Cuvée
This wine generally goes well with
The Altiora Cuvée of the Winery Vida Peter is in the top 0 of wines of Szekszárd.

Details and technical informations about Winery Vida Peter's Altiora Cuvée.
Discover the grape variety: Franc noir de la Haute-Saône
Light and fresh reds for drinking young with a clear ruby colour, smooth tannins, an airy palate with lively acidity, and signature aromas of red fruits (cherry, redcurrant) and discreet floral notes. Confidential heritage profile. Almost extinct today, preserved in a few varietal conservatories; testifies to the ampelographic diversity of the Jura vineyard before phylloxera. Native French black variety from Franche-Comté.
Informations about the Winery Vida Peter
The Winery Vida Peter is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 26 wines for sale in the of Szekszárd to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Szekszárd
Southern Hungarian region, land of velvety, spicy reds. Signature Szekszardi Bikaver (local "Bull's Blood"): a blend of dominant Kekfrankos (Blaufrankisch) and native Kadarka, with signature notes of ripe cherry, plum, paprika, hibiscus, tobacco and sweet spice, velvety tannins and southern roundness — softer and sunnier than Eger's. Also peppery Cabernet Franc and dense Cabernet Sauvignon. Mild Pannonian climate, loess soils over limestone.
The wine region of Dél-Pannónia
Southern Hungary (Pécs, Szekszárd, Villány, Tolna), ~7,800 ha on loess and limestone, continental climate with Mediterranean influences — bastion of great Hungarian reds. Kékfrankos and Kadarka signatures as native red kings: spiced and structured with black cherry, blackberry, plum, paprika, pepper and smoky hint, firm tannins. Ripe Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon in Bordeaux blends at Villány. Specialities Szekszárdi Bikavér and unique Cirfandli white at Pécs (spiced, honeyed).
The word of the wine: Viscosity
Consistency of wine reminiscent of the tactile sensation of sugar syrup with varying degrees of fluidity, due to the alcohol and natural sugar in the grapes present in sweet wines. In excess, this sensation can make the wine pasty and heavy. To the eye, viscosity is referred to as tears.









