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Ordinaire

Wine OrangerieslingOrdinary wine

ORDINAIRE
From "vin ordinaire," the term means any common wine of everyday quality. Some people think that Ordinaire is a notch higher than "Plonk" on the quality scale. I don't know that it makes any difference.

 


Vin Ordinaire: French term for common table wine.
Vinous: Having a characteristic similar to wine.
Vino de la tierra: (Spanish) country wine.

vin ordinaire...
French term for homely type of table wine; usually simple, but can be quite pleasant.
vinage...

Bourgogne Ordinaire, France
Blendng red. Small quantities
Burgundy, France
Moderately fruity, high tannin variety gives some grip to simple wines.

Vin doux naturel (french) A fortified sweet wine.
Vin ordinaire (French): Basic wine not subject to any regulations.
Vinification: The process of making wine.
Viticulture: The cultivation of grapes.

Most French wines are everyday vins ordinaires, of no outstanding regional, varietal, or vintage characteristics.

The grape is most widely found in south France, particularly in the Languedoc regions of Aude, Gard and Hérault where it is often made as Vin ordinaire and in some Vin de pays wines.

Melon de Bourgogne, white wine grape originating in Burgundy where it is now very rare but is permitted Bourgogne Grand Ordinaire.

Generally only the most inexpensive, mass-produced wines (or vin ordinaire) make use of these place names as semi-generic wine names; most of those now use the more popular varietal labeling.

A Marketing Feat Extraordinaire
September 12, 1937, was the day Beaujolais was officially recognized as a appellation in France.

The diversity of wine quality in the made it necessary to create a specific classification as follows: "crus paysans", "crus artisans", "crus bourgeois ordinaires", "crus bon bourgeois", "crus bourgeois supérieur" and "grands crus".

Jug Wine
Term used primarily in California to describe the most basic sort of generic table wine, an American counterpart to vin ordinaire in Europe.

The sole impact is one of high alcohol and "body" character. Little or no acid/tannin content. An everyday red wine, similar to a french "vin ordinaire" country wine sold by alcohol content, can be an example.

Omphacomel: See Mead Ordinaire: A wine having no vices and no virtues. Applied to vins du pays, usually natural wines without any fortification.

See also: Wine, Grape, Region, Taste, Quality

Wine OrangerieslingOrdinary wine

 
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