Pinot Gris or Grigio – a real Shooting Star here in Australia and New Zealand
Whenever I stand in front of a fridge in a bottle shop here in Australia, my eyes become overwhelmed with the many logos, different wine names and last but not least the question: which wine matches the food, we are having tonight. It happened to me again today as I was visiting Will, a wine expert in one of the bottle shops here in the Southern Highlands.
Pinot Gris and Pinot Grigio - spot the difference
We started talking about the sales during the heat wave of the last weeks and he surprised me with the fact that Pinot Gris and Grigio were really on the rise here downunder. Let us think back: in 2003 a mere 329 hectares of Pinot Gris were planted in Australia representing 0.5% of all white grapes planted here. This number has changed substantially with 2,469 hectares (following 2008 Directory) planted as Pinot Gris – an increase of 650% since 2003, representing 3.4% of all white varieties planted in Australia.
Now where is the difference between Gris and Grigio: both terms mean ‘grey’: Gris is the french word and stems from the Alsace region in north-east France, Grigio is the name of the same grape originally from Italy. Australian wineries have adopted both terms in the past years, there is no true consistency to who uses it – I suspect a bit of a rivalry originating in French or Italian heritage of the winemaker or owner of the vineyard. I have to ask Sandro Mosele from the Mornington Peninsula about this actually, he is from an Italian family with nine brothers and sisters.
And where do the best Pinot Gris and Grigio come from: in New Zealand the Marlborough region produces outstanding ones, here in Australia the cool climate regions such as the Mornington Peninsula, Tasmania, Adelaide Hills, the Southern Highlands and the Canberra region all bring out some great white Pinots.
On my way to dinner now, we’ll try a Pinots Gris from the Canberra region with our chicken tonight, I’ll keep you posted.
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Pinot Gris und Grigio haben sich in den vergangenen Jahren hier in Australien enorm entwickelt. Die Anbaumenge hat sich zwischen 2004 und 2008 mehr als versechsfacht, heute sind 3.5% aller australischen Weissweine entweder Pinot Gris oder Grigio. Fuer die Verwendung des Namens gibt es keine Regel, die offiziellen Statistiken fuehren jedoch die Traube als Pinot Gris.
Wir werden heute abend einen Pinot Gris aus der Canberra Region zu unserem Huhn verkosten, ein Testbericht dazu folgt bald.
Ihr Michael Brecht
Related posts:
- Ein Pinot Gris aus den Southern Highlands: der Weisse aus dem cool climate!
- Wilde Fuechse aus den Adelaide Hills: der d’Arenberg Pinot Noir
- Stoney Rise: ein junger Pinot aus Tasmanien
- Eine Flasche aus dem Himmel: Kooyong’s Top Pinot Noir
- Interview with James Tilbrook from Tilbrook Estate in the beautiful Adelaide Hills
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[...] background to this tasting lies in the feed back I received to an article I wrote a few days back on the production and labeling of Pinot Gris versus Pinot Grigio in [...]