The Wine Experience 
Wine Blends
You may be surprised to know that most
wines come from blending grape varieties. Yep, even if it says
Chardonnay on the label only seventy-five percent of the wine inside
has to be chard. And there's nothing wrong with that.
You see each grape type has unique
aroma, flavor and winemaking characteristics. Some are juicier.
Some are thicker skinned. Some are more acidic. Some ripen
sweeter and so on.
So part of the winemaker's art is taking
full advantage of those qualities.
The great wines of Bordeaux are blends.
They call it the "assemblage" of the wine. The Australians are
famous for blending varietals.
If there are two grape types on the
label the most is listed first. "Cabernet merlot" has more cab
than "merlot cabernet".
Around the world are other typical
blends. A few are Chardonnay with Semillon, Grenache with Syrah
and Cabernet with Sangiovese.
When you're
wine shopping, take a good look at
the back
label. It often tells you about blending and other
good stuff.
Pop the Cork.
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