- Aromas and Flavors : honey, lemon,citrus, linden, hay, fig, lanolin “waxy”
- AKA: (White Bordeaux)Graves, Sauternes, Monbazillac, Wyndruif, meaning “wine grape” in South Africa
- Can be dry or sweet with low acid
- In warmer climates, there is always danger of sunburn and raisining of the grapes
- Grows mainly in the Bordeaux region and in the South West of France
- Used along with Sauvignon Blanc and Muscadelle in the making of Sauternes and Graves as they are quickly invaded by noble rot
- In Sauternes and Barsac it is traditionally blended 4:1 with Sauvignon Blanc, and a little Muscadelle
- Semillon grapes make up 80% of the blend in the most expensive and famous dessert wine in the world, Château d’Yquem
- Used to be the most planted varietal in Australia (often incorrectly labeled as Riesling)
- Most California Semillon today is blended with Sauvignon Blanc and rendered dry
- More grows in Chile than anywhere else on earth
- In 1956, winemaker Myron Nightingale, of Cresta Blanca winery, made a dessert wine by spraying spores of Botrytis cinerea on semillon and sauvignon blanc grapes to produce Sauternes-like results
- Until this time, the California climate had always been considered too arid for the Botrytis Mold to naturally exist at a high enough population level to any beneficial effect
- Cresta Blanca changed hands due to financial issues and production ceased after the 1966 vintage
Pinstripe Press
Wine and Spirits Education Trust
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