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#újbor
homregeszet · 10 months
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Az újbor hónapja
Ha az Alföld barbár népei tanakodtak volna azon, hogy mit adtak nekik a rómaiak, valószínűleg a bor is felkerült volna a listára. Régészetileg igen kevés nyom utal arra, hogy az itt élő népek szőlőtermesztéssel foglalkoztak volna, viszont díszes poharak, mint például a Faltenbecher, és amfora leletek bizonyítják a borfogyasztást. A sok ellenségeskedés ellenére is valószínűleg egyetérthettek a rómaiak és a barbárok abban, hogy in vino veritas, vagyis a borban az igazság.
Németh Attila
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Faltenbecher - horpasztott falú pohár (fotó: Baranczó Benedek)
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Faltenbecher és Terra sigillata-k (fotó: Baranczó Benedek)
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versinator · 2 years
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Esdőn gerezdje!
Indulásnak ezüstjén lech olvasásakor Eltörölnéd tékozoltak dombokra mállik Aktuális fényittas sírjainkon olykor? Szekerce pótoltad kövér? züllik
Kérdője verőn újbor aranykor Dankónak bánatokra! ringatta! letelik Özvegyasszony orgonaszavát elszenvedem utókor Torozom fanyarzöld fakítja bíborlik
Bronzszárnya akikért fiai! végtelent! Elnézted rezső endrének! megcsodálta Vesszek lagzin tudatosan szent!
Visszahajol sípos kopogtatott sugallta Statáriumára ügyünket baka lecsökkent Kincstárnak nótád taktust fölcsókolta
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bdpst24 · 2 years
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Szent Márton Újborfesztivál és Libator a Skanzenben
november 12-13. Az őszi időszak legismertebb jeles napja a Márton-nap, amelyhez számos népszokás, hiedelem, az újbor kóstolása és a libalakoma kapcsolódik. Márton-napi hagyományok, lámpás felvonulás, kézműveskedés, borkóstoló, a Skanzen Étteremben libaételek várják a látogatókat november 12-én és 13-án.    A Márton-napi mulatságok hangulatát a mosonmagyaróvári Lajta Néptáncegyüttes eleveníti…
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fugekavezo · 5 years
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Folyamatosan érkeznek az újborok. #fugekavezo #újbor #ujbor #vylyan #bogyole (helyszín: Füge bolt és kávézó) https://www.instagram.com/p/B4hSfQqhzVi/?igshid=18v3hbcgo8lt1
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pitkinofficial · 3 years
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"két és félszer annyit fizetett a szőlő kilójáért"
gyerekek, az újbor már a hordóban van, miről beszéltek?!
beleálltatok a primkóba, és bedurrantottátok a krumplikampányt. ráadásul nem a tizenöt kilós, hanem az öt kilós kiszerelésben.
most már csak kb az ördög ügyvédjétől vagy a kétfarkúaktól várom, hogy elkiáltsák végre: "a király meztelen!"
kíváncsi vagyok, lesz-e kacagás?
én már most kacagok.
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szivtelenkisgeci02 · 5 years
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Az első szerelem úgy forr, mint az újbor, de minél öregebb és tisztább, annál csendesebb lesz.
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mecsekalja · 7 years
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youtube
garantált fantasztikus szórakozás. frenetikus. (via In Vino - Magyarországi Újbor és Sajt Fesztivál (2017) - YouTube)
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wineanddinosaur · 5 years
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Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines
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Love it or hate it, the third Thursday of November means that it’s time once again for Beaujolais Nouveau, the “new wine” from Beaujolais that famously hits the shelves just a couple of months after the annual grape harvest. Often derided as “thin, alcoholic grape juice” and effectively little more than a successful marketing stunt, Beaujolais Nouveau is the very definition of a nouveau wine for most folks.
But in fact, Beaujolais Nouveau is just one of dozens of new wines produced throughout the Old World. Known as vin nouveau, vin (de) primeur, vin jeune or vin de l’année in France and various other names elsewhere in Europe, such young wines are generally made with early ripening varietals like the Gamay grape used in Beaujolais, appearing on the market sometime between the end of October and Christmas. If you’re interested in trying a vin nouveau beyond the ubiquitous bottles of Georges Duboeuf, there are actually plenty of options.
In the Gaillac appellation close to Toulouse in southwest France, the new wine Gaillac Primeur has the same release date as Beaujolais Nouveau and is similarly made with the technique of carbonic maceration, in which hand-picked grapes are fermented whole in a vat filled with carbon dioxide prior to crushing, resulting in low levels of tannins.
(A quick heads-up: primeur or vin de primeur, meaning a new wine, is very different from en primeur, the practice of buying expensive wines from Bordeaux and other renowned French regions in advance of their release.)
Like Beaujolais Nouveau, Gaillac Primeur uses early-ripening Gamay grapes. Unlike the famous-slash-infamous new wine from Beaujolais, Gaillac Primeur is basically unknown outside its home region. But it compares quite favorably, says Jessica Hammer, an American who runs Taste of Toulouse, a local tour-guide service.
“Last year I tasted a Beaujolais and a Gaillac Primeur side by side, and to me the Gaillac had a bit more body, and more depth of flavor,” Hammer says. “This is a bit of a warmer climate here, and I thought that was expressed.”
Gaillac Primeur and other French young wines like the Loire Valley’s Touraine Primeur actually enjoy a decent reputation among the cognoscenti. But unlike Beaujolais Nouveau, you’re unlikely to see Japanese drinkers bathing in giant pools of the stuff.
Farther east, in the natural-wine-loving Czech Republic, the annual St. Martin’s Day holiday on November 11 marks the release of Svatomartinské Víno, or “St. Martin’s Wine,” an early wine required to use a limited number of early, Central European grape varietals, many of which are rarely seen outside the region. For whites, they includes Müller-Thurgau, Frühroter Veltliner (under its local name, Veltlínské Červené Rané), and Muškát Moravský, a version of Muscat from the country’s eastern winemaking region of Moravia. While these new wines are not produced using carbonic maceration, they must receive a minimum score in a blind tasting and undergo evaluation at the Czech state winemaking institute, which has owned the rights to the Svatomartinské Víno name since 2005.
In the Medieval era, local winemakers traditionally first tasted their new wines each year around St Martin’s Day, putting the term Svatomartinské Víno into common use by the late 18th century. Since the concept was relaunched by the Czech winemaking institute in 2005, the number of winemakers producing a Svatomartinské Víno has grown from 31 to 110, with the volume soaring from 125,000 bottles in the first year to 2.2 million in 2018.
Farther east, the holiday itself is an even bigger event in Hungary, the actual birthplace of St. Martin. As in the Czech Republic, the day has traditionally involved holiday goose dinners and the first taste of the year’s new wines, often called Márton bora, or “wine of St. Martin,” or újbor, meaning “new wine.”
“Well, the first wines to be released are the fresh, mostly aromatic white wines, some rosés, and some red wines for fresh consumption,” says Ágnes Nemeth, the editor of HungarianWines.eu. “St Martin is celebrated all over the country with goose dishes. We have goose feasts everywhere.”
While most Hungarian new wines are not made with carbonic maceration, Nemeth notes one big exception: Vylyan’s Bogyólé, a fresh, fruity red that puns upon the name of the most famous vin nouveau (with proper Hungarian pronunciation, the name sounds more or less like “Beaujolais,” though with a couple of noticeably longer vowels). Other young wines are occasionally produced in Hungary, though without as many rules and regulations as elsewhere.
“They are just usually a small lot of wines for early consumption, in some cases with a special label,” says Nemeth. “The only rule is that the terms újbor or primőr can be used only for wines bottled in the year of the harvest.”
Other new wines appear throughout the fall in Spain, Austria, and Italy. Of those, Italy’s vino novello, with its annual release date of October 30, might be the one you’re most likely to find in North America, though both production and imports are rather limited. Even if you’re traveling somewhere in Europe this fall, you often only have a limited amount of time to sample the Old World’s new wines, after which they’re quickly forgotten.
“It’s great, because it brings in some energy — the word they were giving me is dynamisme — to the wine shops and the wine bars,” says Jessica Hammer. “Everybody goes out and celebrates. And then two weeks later, nobody wants it anymore.”
The article Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/european-nouveau-wine-guide/
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johnboothus · 5 years
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Beyond Beaujolais: The Short Happy Lives of Europes Other Nouveau Wines
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Love it or hate it, the third Thursday of November means that it’s time once again for Beaujolais Nouveau, the “new wine” from Beaujolais that famously hits the shelves just a couple of months after the annual grape harvest. Often derided as “thin, alcoholic grape juice” and effectively little more than a successful marketing stunt, Beaujolais Nouveau is the very definition of a nouveau wine for most folks.
But in fact, Beaujolais Nouveau is just one of dozens of new wines produced throughout the Old World. Known as vin nouveau, vin (de) primeur, vin jeune or vin de l’année in France and various other names elsewhere in Europe, such young wines are generally made with early ripening varietals like the Gamay grape used in Beaujolais, appearing on the market sometime between the end of October and Christmas. If you’re interested in trying a vin nouveau beyond the ubiquitous bottles of Georges Duboeuf, there are actually plenty of options.
In the Gaillac appellation close to Toulouse in southwest France, the new wine Gaillac Primeur has the same release date as Beaujolais Nouveau and is similarly made with the technique of carbonic maceration, in which hand-picked grapes are fermented whole in a vat filled with carbon dioxide prior to crushing, resulting in low levels of tannins.
(A quick heads-up: primeur or vin de primeur, meaning a new wine, is very different from en primeur, the practice of buying expensive wines from Bordeaux and other renowned French regions in advance of their release.)
Like Beaujolais Nouveau, Gaillac Primeur uses early-ripening Gamay grapes. Unlike the famous-slash-infamous new wine from Beaujolais, Gaillac Primeur is basically unknown outside its home region. But it compares quite favorably, says Jessica Hammer, an American who runs Taste of Toulouse, a local tour-guide service.
“Last year I tasted a Beaujolais and a Gaillac Primeur side by side, and to me the Gaillac had a bit more body, and more depth of flavor,” Hammer says. “This is a bit of a warmer climate here, and I thought that was expressed.”
Gaillac Primeur and other French young wines like the Loire Valley’s Touraine Primeur actually enjoy a decent reputation among the cognoscenti. But unlike Beaujolais Nouveau, you’re unlikely to see Japanese drinkers bathing in giant pools of the stuff.
Farther east, in the natural-wine-loving Czech Republic, the annual St. Martin’s Day holiday on November 11 marks the release of Svatomartinské Víno, or “St. Martin’s Wine,” an early wine required to use a limited number of early, Central European grape varietals, many of which are rarely seen outside the region. For whites, they includes Müller-Thurgau, Frühroter Veltliner (under its local name, Veltlínské Červené Rané), and Muškát Moravský, a version of Muscat from the country’s eastern winemaking region of Moravia. While these new wines are not produced using carbonic maceration, they must receive a minimum score in a blind tasting and undergo evaluation at the Czech state winemaking institute, which has owned the rights to the Svatomartinské Víno name since 2005.
In the Medieval era, local winemakers traditionally first tasted their new wines each year around St Martin’s Day, putting the term Svatomartinské Víno into common use by the late 18th century. Since the concept was relaunched by the Czech winemaking institute in 2005, the number of winemakers producing a Svatomartinské Víno has grown from 31 to 110, with the volume soaring from 125,000 bottles in the first year to 2.2 million in 2018.
Farther east, the holiday itself is an even bigger event in Hungary, the actual birthplace of St. Martin. As in the Czech Republic, the day has traditionally involved holiday goose dinners and the first taste of the year’s new wines, often called Márton bora, or “wine of St. Martin,” or újbor, meaning “new wine.”
“Well, the first wines to be released are the fresh, mostly aromatic white wines, some rosés, and some red wines for fresh consumption,” says Ágnes Nemeth, the editor of HungarianWines.eu. “St Martin is celebrated all over the country with goose dishes. We have goose feasts everywhere.”
While most Hungarian new wines are not made with carbonic maceration, Nemeth notes one big exception: Vylyan’s Bogyólé, a fresh, fruity red that puns upon the name of the most famous vin nouveau (with proper Hungarian pronunciation, the name sounds more or less like “Beaujolais,” though with a couple of noticeably longer vowels). Other young wines are occasionally produced in Hungary, though without as many rules and regulations as elsewhere.
“They are just usually a small lot of wines for early consumption, in some cases with a special label,” says Nemeth. “The only rule is that the terms újbor or primőr can be used only for wines bottled in the year of the harvest.”
Other new wines appear throughout the fall in Spain, Austria, and Italy. Of those, Italy’s vino novello, with its annual release date of October 30, might be the one you’re most likely to find in North America, though both production and imports are rather limited. Even if you’re traveling somewhere in Europe this fall, you often only have a limited amount of time to sample the Old World’s new wines, after which they’re quickly forgotten.
“It’s great, because it brings in some energy — the word they were giving me is dynamisme — to the wine shops and the wine bars,” says Jessica Hammer. “Everybody goes out and celebrates. And then two weeks later, nobody wants it anymore.”
The article Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines appeared first on VinePair.
Via https://vinepair.com/articles/european-nouveau-wine-guide/
source https://vinology1.weebly.com/blog/beyond-beaujolais-the-short-happy-lives-of-europes-other-nouveau-wines
0 notes
isaiahrippinus · 5 years
Text
Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines
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Love it or hate it, the third Thursday of November means that it’s time once again for Beaujolais Nouveau, the “new wine” from Beaujolais that famously hits the shelves just a couple of months after the annual grape harvest. Often derided as “thin, alcoholic grape juice” and effectively little more than a successful marketing stunt, Beaujolais Nouveau is the very definition of a nouveau wine for most folks.
But in fact, Beaujolais Nouveau is just one of dozens of new wines produced throughout the Old World. Known as vin nouveau, vin (de) primeur, vin jeune or vin de l’année in France and various other names elsewhere in Europe, such young wines are generally made with early ripening varietals like the Gamay grape used in Beaujolais, appearing on the market sometime between the end of October and Christmas. If you’re interested in trying a vin nouveau beyond the ubiquitous bottles of Georges Duboeuf, there are actually plenty of options.
In the Gaillac appellation close to Toulouse in southwest France, the new wine Gaillac Primeur has the same release date as Beaujolais Nouveau and is similarly made with the technique of carbonic maceration, in which hand-picked grapes are fermented whole in a vat filled with carbon dioxide prior to crushing, resulting in low levels of tannins.
(A quick heads-up: primeur or vin de primeur, meaning a new wine, is very different from en primeur, the practice of buying expensive wines from Bordeaux and other renowned French regions in advance of their release.)
Like Beaujolais Nouveau, Gaillac Primeur uses early-ripening Gamay grapes. Unlike the famous-slash-infamous new wine from Beaujolais, Gaillac Primeur is basically unknown outside its home region. But it compares quite favorably, says Jessica Hammer, an American who runs Taste of Toulouse, a local tour-guide service.
“Last year I tasted a Beaujolais and a Gaillac Primeur side by side, and to me the Gaillac had a bit more body, and more depth of flavor,” Hammer says. “This is a bit of a warmer climate here, and I thought that was expressed.”
Gaillac Primeur and other French young wines like the Loire Valley’s Touraine Primeur actually enjoy a decent reputation among the cognoscenti. But unlike Beaujolais Nouveau, you’re unlikely to see Japanese drinkers bathing in giant pools of the stuff.
Farther east, in the natural-wine-loving Czech Republic, the annual St. Martin’s Day holiday on November 11 marks the release of Svatomartinské Víno, or “St. Martin’s Wine,” an early wine required to use a limited number of early, Central European grape varietals, many of which are rarely seen outside the region. For whites, they includes Müller-Thurgau, Frühroter Veltliner (under its local name, Veltlínské Červené Rané), and Muškát Moravský, a version of Muscat from the country’s eastern winemaking region of Moravia. While these new wines are not produced using carbonic maceration, they must receive a minimum score in a blind tasting and undergo evaluation at the Czech state winemaking institute, which has owned the rights to the Svatomartinské Víno name since 2005.
In the Medieval era, local winemakers traditionally first tasted their new wines each year around St Martin’s Day, putting the term Svatomartinské Víno into common use by the late 18th century. Since the concept was relaunched by the Czech winemaking institute in 2005, the number of winemakers producing a Svatomartinské Víno has grown from 31 to 110, with the volume soaring from 125,000 bottles in the first year to 2.2 million in 2018.
Farther east, the holiday itself is an even bigger event in Hungary, the actual birthplace of St. Martin. As in the Czech Republic, the day has traditionally involved holiday goose dinners and the first taste of the year’s new wines, often called Márton bora, or “wine of St. Martin,” or újbor, meaning “new wine.”
“Well, the first wines to be released are the fresh, mostly aromatic white wines, some rosés, and some red wines for fresh consumption,” says Ágnes Nemeth, the editor of HungarianWines.eu. “St Martin is celebrated all over the country with goose dishes. We have goose feasts everywhere.”
While most Hungarian new wines are not made with carbonic maceration, Nemeth notes one big exception: Vylyan’s Bogyólé, a fresh, fruity red that puns upon the name of the most famous vin nouveau (with proper Hungarian pronunciation, the name sounds more or less like “Beaujolais,” though with a couple of noticeably longer vowels). Other young wines are occasionally produced in Hungary, though without as many rules and regulations as elsewhere.
“They are just usually a small lot of wines for early consumption, in some cases with a special label,” says Nemeth. “The only rule is that the terms újbor or primőr can be used only for wines bottled in the year of the harvest.”
Other new wines appear throughout the fall in Spain, Austria, and Italy. Of those, Italy’s vino novello, with its annual release date of October 30, might be the one you’re most likely to find in North America, though both production and imports are rather limited. Even if you’re traveling somewhere in Europe this fall, you often only have a limited amount of time to sample the Old World’s new wines, after which they’re quickly forgotten.
“It’s great, because it brings in some energy — the word they were giving me is dynamisme — to the wine shops and the wine bars,” says Jessica Hammer. “Everybody goes out and celebrates. And then two weeks later, nobody wants it anymore.”
The article Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/european-nouveau-wine-guide/ source https://vinology1.tumblr.com/post/189291789344
0 notes
delfinamaggiousa · 5 years
Text
Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines
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Love it or hate it, the third Thursday of November means that it’s time once again for Beaujolais Nouveau, the “new wine” from Beaujolais that famously hits the shelves just a couple of months after the annual grape harvest. Often derided as “thin, alcoholic grape juice” and effectively little more than a successful marketing stunt, Beaujolais Nouveau is the very definition of a nouveau wine for most folks.
But in fact, Beaujolais Nouveau is just one of dozens of new wines produced throughout the Old World. Known as vin nouveau, vin (de) primeur, vin jeune or vin de l’année in France and various other names elsewhere in Europe, such young wines are generally made with early ripening varietals like the Gamay grape used in Beaujolais, appearing on the market sometime between the end of October and Christmas. If you’re interested in trying a vin nouveau beyond the ubiquitous bottles of Georges Duboeuf, there are actually plenty of options.
In the Gaillac appellation close to Toulouse in southwest France, the new wine Gaillac Primeur has the same release date as Beaujolais Nouveau and is similarly made with the technique of carbonic maceration, in which hand-picked grapes are fermented whole in a vat filled with carbon dioxide prior to crushing, resulting in low levels of tannins.
(A quick heads-up: primeur or vin de primeur, meaning a new wine, is very different from en primeur, the practice of buying expensive wines from Bordeaux and other renowned French regions in advance of their release.)
Like Beaujolais Nouveau, Gaillac Primeur uses early-ripening Gamay grapes. Unlike the famous-slash-infamous new wine from Beaujolais, Gaillac Primeur is basically unknown outside its home region. But it compares quite favorably, says Jessica Hammer, an American who runs Taste of Toulouse, a local tour-guide service.
“Last year I tasted a Beaujolais and a Gaillac Primeur side by side, and to me the Gaillac had a bit more body, and more depth of flavor,” Hammer says. “This is a bit of a warmer climate here, and I thought that was expressed.”
Gaillac Primeur and other French young wines like the Loire Valley’s Touraine Primeur actually enjoy a decent reputation among the cognoscenti. But unlike Beaujolais Nouveau, you’re unlikely to see Japanese drinkers bathing in giant pools of the stuff.
Farther east, in the natural-wine-loving Czech Republic, the annual St. Martin’s Day holiday on November 11 marks the release of Svatomartinské Víno, or “St. Martin’s Wine,” an early wine required to use a limited number of early, Central European grape varietals, many of which are rarely seen outside the region. For whites, they includes Müller-Thurgau, Frühroter Veltliner (under its local name, Veltlínské Červené Rané), and Muškát Moravský, a version of Muscat from the country’s eastern winemaking region of Moravia. While these new wines are not produced using carbonic maceration, they must receive a minimum score in a blind tasting and undergo evaluation at the Czech state winemaking institute, which has owned the rights to the Svatomartinské Víno name since 2005.
In the Medieval era, local winemakers traditionally first tasted their new wines each year around St Martin’s Day, putting the term Svatomartinské Víno into common use by the late 18th century. Since the concept was relaunched by the Czech winemaking institute in 2005, the number of winemakers producing a Svatomartinské Víno has grown from 31 to 110, with the volume soaring from 125,000 bottles in the first year to 2.2 million in 2018.
Farther east, the holiday itself is an even bigger event in Hungary, the actual birthplace of St. Martin. As in the Czech Republic, the day has traditionally involved holiday goose dinners and the first taste of the year’s new wines, often called Márton bora, or “wine of St. Martin,” or újbor, meaning “new wine.”
“Well, the first wines to be released are the fresh, mostly aromatic white wines, some rosés, and some red wines for fresh consumption,” says Ágnes Nemeth, the editor of HungarianWines.eu. “St Martin is celebrated all over the country with goose dishes. We have goose feasts everywhere.”
While most Hungarian new wines are not made with carbonic maceration, Nemeth notes one big exception: Vylyan’s Bogyólé, a fresh, fruity red that puns upon the name of the most famous vin nouveau (with proper Hungarian pronunciation, the name sounds more or less like “Beaujolais,” though with a couple of noticeably longer vowels). Other young wines are occasionally produced in Hungary, though without as many rules and regulations as elsewhere.
“They are just usually a small lot of wines for early consumption, in some cases with a special label,” says Nemeth. “The only rule is that the terms újbor or primőr can be used only for wines bottled in the year of the harvest.”
Other new wines appear throughout the fall in Spain, Austria, and Italy. Of those, Italy’s vino novello, with its annual release date of October 30, might be the one you’re most likely to find in North America, though both production and imports are rather limited. Even if you’re traveling somewhere in Europe this fall, you often only have a limited amount of time to sample the Old World’s new wines, after which they’re quickly forgotten.
“It’s great, because it brings in some energy — the word they were giving me is dynamisme — to the wine shops and the wine bars,” says Jessica Hammer. “Everybody goes out and celebrates. And then two weeks later, nobody wants it anymore.”
The article Beyond Beaujolais: The Short, Happy Lives of Europe’s Other Nouveau Wines appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/european-nouveau-wine-guide/
source https://vinology1.wordpress.com/2019/11/25/beyond-beaujolais-the-short-happy-lives-of-europes-other-nouveau-wines/
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wisbechtownuk · 6 years
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The New Wine and Che
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The New Wine and Cheese Festival comes to the fairytale Vajdahunyad Castle in Budapest’s City Park on 24 November. Packed with stalls offering spreads of local cheeses and bottles of újbor (young wine from the newest vintage), it’s the perfect occasion to learn about Hungarian wine and nibble on some craft cheese.
via Lonely Planet https://ift.tt/2QnASCb
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versinator · 4 years
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Horpad újbor
Nagykörút magyart! keszkenőmet! utódaid Köpenyegben szemek! elűzte aktoraid Ébredezve áléivá biztatólag túrjam Mívese! corda! bella megtagadtam Szegez rácson! szele? kigyúlna Indiákban borotválgat törnek véna
Akarja! írott gyalul köhögős Kihágási varga! aranynapoknak évajkettős Pártja csíra trükk hajlítsd Rózsikában márki gáspár juttasd Bolyongnak írjátok hauser fojtogatna Emeljük bússá szállók kápolna
Igazságtalan! köpenyem búvó éveid Komolyat tavasztalanúl kolozsvár szeretőid Csöndességben faragva zsírszóda megszoktam Bezengi bitorolt vadrózsafa méláztam Párosz keresztes süllyesztőjéből madonna Sárkánynak ujjongón befalazzuk verbéna
Letenni álmukból nek ösmerős! Fölemelni pásztonnóták sic sürgős Forrva! szégyenelnem debrecen! hirdesd Batthyány halottam! eltiport megmutasd Glóriáját nyájak elkíséri hajolna Vésőre szállhatok gyanitja anna?
Carmen artsd köveit virágaid Gyújtá türelme árulók rímeid Farsang tavaszmezőnkön rágondol lapoztam Szentséget lángolások munkával állhattam Feszülethez melpomenéje! lerombolva meglátna Lehervasztott omladékán túrán kinyitna
Elfelejtünk virágként szonetté toldiős Igric lukas sírkert felős Megálljt bajának összegyűjtött esd Lóról rombolásra beszed tekintsd Papucs tájakról emlékre széna Rilke alvajáróképpen bele? elbánna
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bdpst24 · 3 years
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Szent Márton Újborfesztivál és Libator a Skanzenben
november 13-14. A Mihály naptól Katalin napig (szeptember 29. – november 25.) tartó kisfarsang a bálok, lakodalmak őszi időszaka és a gazdasági év lezárásának ideje. Legismertebb jeles napja a Márton-nap, amelyhez számos népszokás, hiedelem, az újbor kóstolása és a libalakoma szokása kapcsolódik. Márton-napi népszokások, kézműveskedés, borkóstoló, koncertek és meseelőadások várják a látogatókat…
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gyilkostanc · 4 years
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Nincs szebb halál, mint egy diófa alatt, a borospince előtt, ősszel, közvetlenül szüret után, mikor az újbor már szunnyad és erjed a hordókban, a diót leverték a fáról, s a napnak szelíd ereje van még, mint az öreg ember szerelmének.
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ftuner · 7 years
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Mondott nekik egy példázatot is: „Senki sem tép ki foltot új ruhából, hogy régi ruhára varrja, mert így az újat is eltépné; és nem is illene a régihez az új ruhából való folt. Senki sem tölt újbort régi tömlőbe, mert az újbor szétrepesztené a tömlőt, és elfolyna, sőt a tömlő is tönkremenne.
Lukács 5:36-37
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