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Grey Ruländer (Pinot Gris) Origin: It is a bud mutant clone of Pinot Noir grape. It was created probably in Burgundy and from here, it spread to all the France, especially to Champagne.
RULÄNDER: (See Pinot Gris above). SAGRANTINO: Red-wine grape used to make "Montefalco" sweet local wines in Umbria, Italy. (No other details known as yet other than this variety is also under trial by certain growers located in Victoria, Australia).
Ruländer (Austria and Germany, Romania, sweet) Grauburgunder or Grauer burgunder (Austria and Germany, dry) Grauklevner (Germany) Malvoisie (Loire Valley, France and Switzerland) ...
In Germany and Austria it is known as the Ruländer or Grauer Burgunder where it is used to make pleasant, young, white wines in the southern regions. Similar aliases are used in the german settled regions of Australia.
Where planted in Germany, it is known as ruländer. It is of little commercial significance in either locale.
It is one of the chief dry white varieties in Alsace, but also produces some deliciously sweet, ageworthy, late-harvest styles. It is the same grape as northern Italy's Pinot Grigio, Germany's Grauburgunder or Ruländer and Hungary's Szürkebarát and ...
In Australia also known as Pinot Grigio. In France also known as Pinot Beurot, Gris Cordelier, Auvernat Gris, Malvoisie, Tokay d'Alsace and Fromentot. In Germany known as Ruländer and in Italy as Pinot Grigio. History ...
As Pinot Gris, it used to be grown in Burgundy and the Loire , though it has been supplanted, but it comes into its own in Alsace --where it's known as Tokay. Southern Germany plants it as Ruländer.
Sainte Marie, Pineau Blanc, Pino Sardone, Pino Shardone, Pinot Blanc à Cramant, Pinot Blanc Chardonnay, Pinot Chardonnay, Pinot de Bourgogne, Pinot Giallo, Pinot Planc, Plant de Tonnerre, Romere, Romeret, Rouci Bile, Rousseau, Roussot, Ruländer Weiß, ...
See also: White Wine, Grape, Rich, Full, Burgundy
 
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