Does this interest anybody


ShirazViognier Blend a trend
I think the sun and the soil make it difficult to duplicate the S-V blend in the US and southern hemisphere. To me its like Pinot Noir & Burgundy. Even...

Hello, Several months ago I asked in this forum about the origin of the term TOkay d'Alsace - soon to be prohibited by EU law. THere is, as everybody who has taken an interetst in Alsace eines know, a legend concerning the (toatally historical) LAzare Schwendi who is said to have imported the variety (really pinot gris) from Hungary, and that´s why it is called Tokay - the problem being that, historically, pinot gris has not been cultivated in Tokay. Now, after pestering various knowledgeable Alsatians, I have learned, from the very friendly and helpful Mr Daniel Bornemann, that, in fact, the first mention of Tokay was c 1750, and that the variety was imported to Würtemberg by an official, from Hungary, a few years earlier. From Würtemberg it was spread to parts of Alsace apparently under the same jurisdiction (Alsatian history is difficult to get a grip on, I thought it was French from 1648). So, it would seem that the "legende aimable" is little more than a legend. That, if Lazare imported vines from Hungary, these most likely disappeared in the very chaotic century that followed his rest (1584). Interested? Maybe not. But this appears to be the true story.

TN: '00 Lambrays, others at a charity dinner
Saturday I went to a fundraiser for social action needs at a local church. I'm not a churchgoer, but the minister is my best friend, the chef for the fundraiser...

Cheers

Nils Gustaf


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