Muscat of Alexandria

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Muscat of Alexandria
Grape (Vitis)
Muscat of Alexandria in Viala & Vermorel
Color of berry skinBlanc
SpeciesVitis vinifera
Also calledMuscat d'Alexandrie and other synonyms
OriginEgypt
VIVC number8241

Muscat of Alexandria is a

Ancient Egyptians who used the grape for wine making. It is also a table grape used for eating and raisins.[1]

Muscat of Alexandria is cultivated very heavily on the island of

Valencia, and the Canary Islands. It is an important grape in the Australian wine and South African wine
industry.

Viticulture

The vine thrives in a hot climate and is particularly sensitive to the cold during its flowering season. In the northern hemisphere it is ripe in August, and is a seeded grape.[1]

Wine characteristics

Wine made from Muscat of Alexandria has a distinctive taste of grapes, and was popular in the postwar era when tastes tended towards the sweet and uncomplicated. The vines are prolific producers but are very susceptible to powdery mildew and so are only grown in the most arid regions.

Production was mainly in California, Australia and South Africa, but the wine styles originated in southern Europe and northern Africa, Turkey and the Levant. Much was used in the production of sherry and port as well as brandy, either distilled as brandy spirit or for base wine. As demand for these wines declined from the 1960s, gordo blanco was used to create still and sparkling wines using European-sounding labels like "Riesling", "Moselle" and "Champagne" and "Liebfrauwein" (until such use was banned by law and trade agreements) which bore only a stylistic resemblance to their inspiration. In Málaga the grape is often blended with Pedro Ximénez to create a strong wine that varies in color from gold to dark black. In Australia, the grape is used principally to increase the alcohol content in both white and red wines in a cool season, in wines sold as "Moscato", and in cheap bladder pack wines. In Portugal, Vinho Moscatel (Moscatel Wine) is a sweet wine widely produced in the Setúbal Peninsula region, just south of Lisbon, as well as in Favaios, Alijó and other areas of the Portuguese Douro, in northern Portugal. In Bolivia, the grape has been used since at least the 1700s to make "singani," the distinctive wine brandy produced in the Cinti Valley and in the Central Valley of Tarija.

C13-

norisoprenoids, such as 3-Oxo-α-ionol, are present in Muscat leaves.[3]

References