Description
Waipapa Bay Marlborough Pinot Gris
Waipapa Bay is a place of stunning natural beauty – close to the vineyards where the wine is produced. A laid back surf spot beneath the snow-capped Kaikoura Mountains overlooking the Pacific Ocean – where whales are regularly spotted and which inspired the label. In tandem with the launch of the 2019 vintage in the USA, Waipapa Bay Wines has partnered with the Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) Charity as the nonprofit’s first wine industry corporate sponsor.
Winemaking
In 1987 husband and wife team, Brent and Shirley Rawston, planted three hectares of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir on the banks of the Halswell River in Canterbury, New Zealand. Then in 2004 they ventured into Marlborough and today this family-owned business grows internationally recognised award-winning varieties across 100 acres of vineyards in the Rapaura area of the Wairau Valley.
New Zealand’s cooler, maritime climate is ideal for Alsatian-inspired, unctuous, beautifully complex Pinot Gris wines. Pinot Gris is now the third most popular white variety in New Zealand and our wine highlights all the intense, lingering flavours, gentle acidity and marked freshness that have made this varietal so beloved in its native country.
Tasting Notes
Aromas of nectarine, peach, honeysuckle and summer herbs. Dry to taste, this medium-bodied wine exhibits flavors of summer stone fruits and honeysuckle.
Waipapa Bay Marlborough Pinot Gris Notes To Your Senses:
- TASTE: Dry, medium-bodied with notes of summer stone fruits and honeysuckle
- AROMA: Nectarine, peach, honeysuckle and summer herbs
- APPEARANCE: Straw yellow
- ABV: 13%
- PAIRING: Asian cuisine
White Wine:
Making it a must have in any household!
New Zealand:
Marlborough is considered New Zealand’s wine region. It’s a dry, sunny region that produces three-quarters of all New Zealand wine.
It’s best known for their Sauvignon Blanc. Sauvignon Blanc wine exploded into the “wine world” around the 1980s and 1990s. Marlborough valleys were created millions of years ago by a large glacier. Home to the region center, Wairau Valley and sub-regions have a warm, sunny climate that is cooled by winds from the Pacific Ocean.
The greatest part of this region is their soil. Which we know wine is all about the soil! The soil is geologically young and a perfect match for viticulture due to their fast drainage and low fertility. This forces vines to work hard for nutrients and hydration. That implies all of their hard work is focused on the production of small, concentrated grapes that convert into intense flavor in the finished wines.
Chardonnay, Pinot Gris, and Riesling are very common too! Pinot Noir vines are of age to be producing wines now too!
Master Sommelier Little Known, Big Facts:
- The color of wine depends on the fermentation extracts using skin, like Red wine as compared to white wine, leaving the skin behind
- The oldest bottle of wine dates back to A.D. 325; it was found in Germany inside two Roman sarcophaguses
- The worst place to store wine is usually in the kitchen because it’s typically too warm, in refrigerators, their warmest setting can be too cold
- Richer heavier foods usually pair well with richer, heavier wines; light wines pair with lighter foods
- Generally, a vintage wine is a product of a single year’s harvest, not when the wine is bottled
- A “dumb” wine refers to the lack of odor while a “numb” wine has no odor and no potential of developing a pleasing odor in the feature
- If a server or sommelier hands you a cork, don’t smell it, look for the date or other information ( mold, cracking, or breaks)
- Tannin is a substance that tingles the gums when you indulge your palate with a sip of wine, it’s an excellent antioxidant
- Smell is by far the most important sense when it comes to drinking wine
- Wine was first developed in Mesopotamia, not France
- French wines are labeled following the soil on which they are produced, not according to the grape used
- When chilling wine, adding salt to ice will cool it down faster
Warnings:
You must be 21 or over to purchase this product.
Instructions:
Serve chilled or at room temperature
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