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Wine is usually made from one or more varieties of the European
species, Vitis vinifera. When one of these varieties, such as Pinot
Noir, Chardonnay, or Merlot, for example, is used as the predominant
grape (usually defined by law as a minimum of 75 or 85%) the result
is a varietal, as opposed to a blended wine. Blended wines are in
no way inferior to varietal wines; some of the world's most valued
and expensive wines from the Bordeaux, Rioja or Tuscany regions,
are a blend of several grape varieties of the same vintage.
Table wines
May have an alcohol content that is no higher than 14% in the U.S..
In Europe, light wine must be within 8.5% and 14% alcohol by volume.
As such, unless a wine has more than 14% alcohol, or it has bubbles,
it is a table wine or a light wine. Table wines are usually classifed
as White, Red or Rosé, depending on their color. In Europe
'vins de table' (in French), 'vino da tavola' (in Italian) or 'vino
de mesa' (in Spanish), which translate to 'table wine' in English,
are cheaper wines that often on the label do not include the information
on the grape variety used or the region of origin.
Sparkling wines
such as champagne, are those with carbon dioxide, either from fermentation
or added later. To have this effect, the wine is fermented twice,
once in an open container to allow the carbon dioxide to escape
into the air, and a second time in a sealed container, where the
gas is caught and remains in the wine.[20] Sparkling wines that
gain their carbonation from the traditional method of bottle fermentation
are called 'Bottle Fermented', 'Méthode Traditionelle', or
'Méthode Champenoise'. The latter designation is considered
wrong by those who hold that Champagne refers to the origin as well
as the method of production. Other international denominations of
sparkling wine include Sekt or Schaumwein (Germany), Cava (Spain),
Spumante [[Italy). 'Semi Sparkling wines' are Sparkling Wines that
contain less than 2.5 atmospheres of carbon dioxide at sea level
and 20 degrees C. Some countries such as the UK impose a higher
tax on fully sparkling wines. Examples of Semi-Sparkling wines are
Frizzante Italy, Vino de Aguja Spain, Petillant France.
Dessert wines
range from slightly sweet (with less than 50 g/L of sugar) to incredibly
sweet wines (with over 400 g/L of sugar). Late Harvest Wines such
as Spätlese are made from grapes harvested well after they
have reached maximum ripeness. Dried grape wines, such as Recioto
and Vin Santo fron Italy, are made from grapes that have been partially
raisined after harvesting. Botrytized wines are made from grapes
infected by the mold Botrytis cinerea or noble rot. These include
Sauternes from Bordeaux, Numerous wines from Loire such as Bonnezeaux
and Quarts de Chaume, Tokaji Aszú from Hungary, and Beerenauslese
from Germany and Austria. Eiswein is made from grapes that are harvested
while they are frozen.
Fortified wines
are often sweeter, and generally more alcoholic wines that have
had their fermentation process stopped by the addition of a spirit,
such as brandy, or have had additional spirit added after fermentation.[21]
Examples include Port, Madeira and Banyuls.
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