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Grape Vine Springs Winery

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Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Grape Vine Springs Winery
Phone:
+1 817-329-1011

Hours:
Sunday12pm - 5pm
Monday11am - 7pm
Tuesday11am - 7pm
Wednesday11am - 7pm
Thursday11am - 9pm
Friday11am - 10pm
Saturday11am - 10pm


Malbec is a purple grape variety used in making red wine. The grapes tend to have an inky dark color and robust tannins, and are known as one of the six grapes allowed in the blend of red Bordeaux wine. The French plantations of Malbec are now found primarily in Cahors in South West France. It is increasingly celebrated as an Argentine varietal wine and is being grown around the world. Called Malbec in Bordeaux, Auxerrois or Côt Noir in Cahors, and Pressac in other places, the grape became less popular in Bordeaux after 1956 when frost killed off 75% of the crop. Despite Cahors being hit by the same frost, which devastated the vineyards, Malbec was replanted and continued to be popular in that area where it was mixed with Merlot and Tannat to make dark, full-bodied wines, and more recently has been made into 100% Malbec varietal wines.A popular but unconfirmed theory claims that Malbec is named after a Hungarian peasant who first spread the grape variety throughout France. However the French ampelographer and viticulturalist Pierre Galet notes that most evidence suggest that Côt was the variety's original name and that it probably originated in northern Burgundy. Despite a similar name, the grape Malbec argenté is not Malbec, but rather a variety of the southwestern French grape Abouriou. Due to the similarities in synonyms, Malbec has also been confused with Auxerrois blanc, which is an entirely different variety.The Malbec grape is a thick-skinned grape and needs more sun and heat than either Cabernet Sauvignon or Merlot to mature. It ripens mid-season and can bring very deep color, ample tannin, and a particular plum-like flavor component to add complexity to claret blends. Sometimes, especially in its traditional growing regions, it is not trellised and cultivated as bush vines . Here it is sometimes kept to a relatively low yield of about 6 tons per hectare. The wines are rich, dark and juicy.As a varietal, Malbec creates a rather inky red , intense wine, so it is also commonly used in blends, such as with Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon to create the red French Bordeaux claret blend. The grape is blended with Cabernet Franc and Gamay in some regions such as the Loire Valley. Other wine regions use the grape to produce Bordeaux-style blends. The varietal is sensitive to frost and has a proclivity to shatter or coulure.
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