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Zinfandel



         


Zinfandel (Zin) is a red-skinned wine grape popular in California for its intense fruitiness and lush texture. Vintners use Zinfandel grapes to produce a wide range of wine styles including sweet White Zinfandels, light bodied reds reminiscent of Beaujolais Nouveau, full bodied dry reds, sweet late harvest dessert wines, and ports.

Vintners have grown Zinfandel in California in quantity for over one hundred years. Many of the oldest wineries in the state grow Zinfandel and the vines are now treated almost like historic landmarks. The vineyards survived Prohibition because the thick skins of the grape allowed it to survive shipping to home winemakers in eastern states. The invention of White Zinfandel in the 1970s further saved the vines. In the 1990s the market for premium wine increased sufficiently that Castoro Cellars

In Italy Zinfandel is known as Primitivo. The grape originally came from Croatia, where it is known as Crljenak Kaštelanski. The link between Zinfandel and Crljenak was discovered through the work of Carole Meredith, a UC Davis geneticist.

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