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Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Hoke wrote:Mind you, this was long before the entrepreneurial folks who moved into Provence with an eye to making it a bigger player on the wine scene, and the standout estates that have since developed.
Bob Ross wrote:And on personal level,there's great confusion in the rose world between Provence and Provins roses.
Robin Garr wrote:Thomas wrote:the history is marvelous (though depressing) in that region--the area nearest Cathar.
Pedantry alert! The Cathars were in Languedoc, around Minervois, a long haul from Provence. Although you'll occasionally see "Provence" used to denote all of Southern France, it's really limited to the region east of the mouth of the Rhone, through Marseilles and Nice. Languedoc is west of the Rhone, through Montpellier to the Pyrenees, and that's where the Cathars lived and, sadly, died.
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Eve Lejeune wrote:Hoke wrote:Mind you, this was long before the entrepreneurial folks who moved into Provence with an eye to making it a bigger player on the wine scene, and the standout estates that have since developed.
What do you think of the rose de Provence you can find in a regular French supermarket at around 5 euros (it would sell in the States for $8-10)? I'm not talking about prestigious estates such as Tempier or Peyrassol but a nice typical rose wine served on your white meat during the winter and your barbecue in the summer: fruity, well balanced, light and refreshing - the one I enjoy.
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
On a personal level - as a lover of rose wines - I'm a little disappointed that Americans don't seem ready to share with us this enjoyment but I do understand they have many good local rosés. I enjoyed quite a few last summer in California and really liked them.
Eve Lejeune wrote:Hoke wrote:Mind you, this was long before the entrepreneurial folks who moved into Provence with an eye to making it a bigger player on the wine scene, and the standout estates that have since developed.
What do you think of the rose de Provence you can find in a regular French supermarket at around 5 euros (it would sell in the States for $8-10)? I'm not talking about prestigious estates such as Tempier or Peyrassol but a nice typical rose wine served on your white meat during the winter and your barbecue in the summer: fruity, well balanced, light and refreshing - the one I enjoy.
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