Marechal Foch An early ripener with cranberry-currant flavors and a bright red color. Chancellor Quite tannic and known for its plum-cedar aroma, this grape is susceptible to powdery mildew and must be carefully scrutinized before crushing.
Marechal Foch (Mah-reh-shal Fosh) - French-hybrid grape used to make red wines in the Eastern U.S. Margaux (Mahr-goe) - One of the top sub-regions of the Medoc in Bordeaux, centered on the first-growth property that shares its name.
MARECHAL FOCH A French hybrid grape used to make red wines, mostly in the Eastern United States. MARGAUX One of the most well known sub regions of the Medoc region of Bordeaux, France.
MARECHAL FOCH: (pronounced "mar-esh-shall-fosh"). Short season french-american Kuhlmann hybrid small-cluster grape with good tolerance to cold and diseases, ripening in early September.
MARECHAL FOCH: A french-american hybrid grape, with french Alsace Gamay origins, noted for producing deeply colored and strongly varietal wines considered by some to have a "Burgundian" character. Also known under the name Foch. (See above).
Eugene Kuhlmann: Originating from Alsace and known for the varieties Lucie Kuhlmann, Marechal Foch and Leon Millot Albert Seibel: Probably the best-known breeder, who developed an immense number of breeding between 1886 and 1936 in Aubenas.
See also: Wine, Hybrid, Grape, Pinot, Traminer
 
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