
Winery Vinarství KristChardonnay Kabinetní Víno
This wine generally goes well with pork, vegetarian or poultry.
Food and wine pairings with Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno
Pairings that work perfectly with Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno
Original food and wine pairings with Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno
The Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno of Winery Vinarství Krist matches generally quite well with dishes of pork, rich fish (salmon, tuna etc) or vegetarian such as recipes of old-fashioned pork roll, salmon pavés en papillote or ham and comté quiche.
Details and technical informations about Winery Vinarství Krist's Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno.
Discover the grape variety: Chardonnay
The white Chardonnay is a grape variety that originated in France (Burgundy). It produces a variety of grape specially used for wine making. It is rare to find this grape to eat on our tables. This variety of grape is characterized by small bunches, and small grapes. White Chardonnay can be found in many vineyards: South West, Burgundy, Jura, Languedoc & Roussillon, Cognac, Bordeaux, Beaujolais, Savoie & Bugey, Loire Valley, Champagne, Rhone Valley, Armagnac, Lorraine, Alsace, Provence & Corsica.
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Chardonnay Kabinetní Víno from Winery Vinarství Krist are 0
Informations about the Winery Vinarství Krist
The Winery Vinarství Krist is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 57 wines for sale in the of Morava to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Morava
Moravia, with roughly 95 percent of the nation's Vine plantings, is the engine room of the Czech Republic's wine industry. The Center of intensively farmed bulk-wine production is also showing great promise as a producer of quality white wines. This is largely thanks to its cool Climate, comparable in many ways to that in Nahe or Pfalz, the white-wine specialists a few hundred miles west in Germany. Moravian winelands enjoy a Vineyard year well suited to the production of Complex aromatics with good Acidity.
The word of the wine: Tanin
A natural compound contained in the skin of the grape, the seed or the woody part of the bunch, the stalk. The maceration of red wines allows the extraction of tannins, which give the texture, the solidity and also the mellowness when the tannins are "ripe". The winemaker seeks above all to extract the tannins from the skin, the ripest and most noble. The tannins of the seed or stalk, which are "greener", especially in average years, give the wine hardness and astringency. The wines of Bordeaux (based on Cabernet and Merlot) are full of tannins, those of Burgundy much less so, with Pinot Noir containing little.














