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Baden (bah-d'n) One of the larger German wine regions. It is bordered by France on the West, and and Switzerland in the South. The grapes tend to be planted along the foothills of the Black Forest.
BADEN A wine region in Southwest Germany BAG IN A BOX Wine retailed in quantities of a liter or more. The box has a tap and often a soda siphon which slows the oxidation of the remaining wine.
Baden, 3530 ha Franconia, 2260 ha Palatinate of the Rhine, 3195 ha Rheinhessen, 5000 ha Saale-Unstrut, 144 ha Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, 1660 ha Nahe, 713 ha ...
AnbaugebietThe thirteen German growing regions, namely Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, Rheingau, Rheinhessen, Nahe, Pfalz, Mittelrhein, Ahr, Baden, Franken, Hessische Bergstrasse, Württemberg, Saale-Unstrut and Sachsen.
Returning to the Rhine, however, once past Mainz and Wiesbaden the first wine village of interest is Walluf, where Becker makes good quality, firmly structured wines from the Walkenberg vineyard, a southeasterly slope just above the village.
Widely planted in the Rheinhessen, Baden and Pfalz regions of Germany and also planted in Hungary, Austria, England, northern Italy and New Zealand. It is a high yielding, early ripening grape that is prone to both frost and rot.
The Baden region, divided in two parts, one located in the central area of Germany, east from Alsace, and the other in the vicinity of lake of Constance, near the Swiss border, ...
ACOLON: Variety developed and subsequently released from the Weinsberg/Württemberg Research Station, Baden, Germany in November, 1999. Has synonym name WE 71-816-102. Derived from a Dornfelder x Lemberger V.vinifera cross.
Traminer is to be found in Central Europe, in Germany especially in the regions of Baden and the Rheinpfalz, in France especially in Alsace, in Italy, Austria, the United States especially California, New Zealand and Australia.
GUTEDEL: aka Weisser Gutedel. Is the german synonym name for the french Chasselas grape when grown in the Baden region of Germany.
See also: Wine, Sweet, Region, Grape, Quality
 
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