Regner

Regner is a white German wine grape variety that is a crossing of the table grape Seidentraube (also known as Luglienga bianca) and the Vitis vinifera red grape variety Gamay. The variety was developed in 1929 and by 1990 there was almost 420 acres (170 hectares) of Regner planted in Germany, mostly in the Rheinhessen. By the late 20th century, wine growers in England were also experimenting with the variety.[1]

People with the surname

Viticulture

Regner is an early budding and ripening vine that can accumulate high must weights but low acidity levels if harvested very late in the season.[1]

gollark: > arguably, UK politics are a lot less fucked than australian politics.well, yes, somewhat.
gollark: hmm, yes, fair.
gollark: Hmmm, maybe English *causes* this insanity? Something something sapir-whorf hypothesis.
gollark: At this point I would probably quite like to go to a saner country in some years, but there are not really that many majority-english-speaking ones which also are good.
gollark: yeees, except *slightly* less insane.

References

  1. J. Robinson Jancis Robinson's Guide to Wine Grapes pg 151 Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0198600984
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