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  2. Vitis rotundifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitis_rotundifolia

    Vitis rotundifolia. Vitis subg. Muscadinia. Michx. Vitis rotundifolia, or muscadine, [1] is a grapevine species native to the southeastern and south-central United States. [2] The growth range extends from Florida to New Jersey coast, and west to eastern Texas and Oklahoma. [3] It has been extensively cultivated since the 16th century. [4]

  3. Scuppernong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuppernong

    Some muscadines in a bowl; the green ones are scuppernongs. The scuppernong is a large variety of muscadine (Vitis rotundifolia), [1] a species of grape native to the Southern United States. It is usually a greenish or bronze color and is similar in appearance and texture to a white grape, but rounder and larger and first known as the 'big ...

  4. Muscat (grape) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscat_(grape)

    A bowl of table grapes that includes a mixture of Muscat Ottonel and Chasselas Rouge de Foncé. Like Muscat of Hamburg, Muscat Ottonel is a relatively recent addition to the Muscat family, being bred in the Loire Valley wine region of France in the 1850s. The grape is a cross of the Swiss wine grape Chasselas and Muscat d'Eisenstadt (also known ...

  5. Catawba (grape) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catawba_(grape)

    Catawba (grape) Catawba is a red American grape variety used for wine as well as juice, jams and jellies. The grape can have a pronounced musky or "foxy" flavor. [2] Grown predominantly on the East Coast of the United States, this purplish-red grape is a likely a hybrid of the native American Vitis labrusca and the Vitis vinifera cultivar ...

  6. Vine-Glo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vine-Glo

    Vine-Glo. Vine-Glo was a grape concentrate brick product sold in the United States during Prohibition by Fruit Industries Ltd, a front for the California Vineyardist Association (CVA), from 1929. It was sold as a grape concentrate to make grape juice from but it apophatically included a warning with instructions on how to make wine from it. [1 ...

  7. Vitis riparia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitis_riparia

    Vitis riparia Michx, with common names riverbank grape or frost grape, [1] is a vine indigenous to North America. As a climbing or trailing vine , it is widely distributed across central and eastern Canada and the central and northeastern parts of the United States , from Quebec to Texas , and eastern Montana to Nova Scotia .

  8. Chaptalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaptalization

    Chaptalization is the process of adding sugar to unfermented grape must in order to increase the alcohol content after fermentation. The technique is named after its developer, the French chemist Jean-Antoine-Claude Chaptal. [1] This process is not intended to make the wine sweeter, but rather to provide more sugar for the yeast to ferment into ...

  9. Muscadet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscadet

    Muscadet. Muscadet (UK: / ˈmʌskədeɪ, ˈmʊsk -/ MU (U)SK-ə-day, US: / ˌmʌskəˈdeɪ, ˌmʊsk -/ MU (U)SK-ə-DAY, French: [myskadɛ] ⓘ) is a French white wine. It is made at the western end of the Loire Valley, near the city of Nantes in the Pays de la Loire region. It is made from the Melon de Bourgogne grape, often referred to simply ...