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Black Muscat

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Originalfamousjohnsmith (talk | contribs) at 17:18, 5 November 2009 (black muscat is the PARENT of muscat hamburgh, not the same thing at all.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Black Muscat
Grape (Vitis)
SpeciesVitis vinifera
Also calledGolden Hamburg, Muscat Hamburg, Black Hamburg (US); Muscat de Hambourg (France); Moscato di Amburgo (Italy; Muscat Gamburgskiy (Russia)
OriginGermany
Notable regionsCalifornia, Virginia, Pacific Northwest, Vancouver Island, China, Eastern Europe
VIVC number8226

Black Muscat is a Vitis vinifera grape variety derived from the crossing of the Schiava Grossa and Muscat of Alexandria varieties. It is known under a variety of local names such as Golden Hamburg, and Black Hamburg in the US; Muscat de Hambourg (or Hamburgh) in France; Moscato di Amburgo in Italy; and Muscat Gamburgskiy in Russia and former Soviet Union countries. Confusingly, Black Hamburg is also used as a synonym for its maternal parent. It is commonly produced as table wine but in California's Central Valley it has been used in the production of dessert wine. As a dessert wine it can be highly aromatic with a rich coloring. In the US it is grown in wine appellations in California, Virginia, Oregon, Texas, and Washington. In Canada, it is also found on Vancouver Island. [1]

In France, the grape is used chiefly as a component of fruit baskets. In Eastern Europe, the grape produces a light, dry red wine. It is also starting to gain popularity as a table wine component in China. [2]

Horticulturist Walter Clore has postulated that this grape might have been one of the first Vitis vinifera varieties planted in Washington State in the early 19th century. [3]

References

  1. ^ Appellation America Grape details
  2. ^ Jancis Robinson Vines, Grapes & Wine pg 188 Octopus Publishing 1986 ISBN 978-1-85732-999-5
  3. ^ R. Irvine & W. Clore The Wine Project pg 38 Sketch Publications 1997 ISBN 978-0-9650834-9-2