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Mavrud

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Mavrud dry red wine from region of Brestovitsa.
Mavrud wine on the shelves in a supermarket in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. This particular wine is from Perushtitsa.

Mavrud (Template:Lang-bg, from Greek, μαυρό (mavró), "black") is a red wine grape that is used as both a blending grape and for varietal wines, indigenous to the Balkan region. It's growing in some regions in Albania, Thrace region in Bulgaria, some regions in Greece and in Rumania.[1]

The grape has been described as a characterful, low-yielding, small-berried and late-ripening grape capable of producing tannic, spicy wine with a potential for ageing.[2][3][4]

History

Regarded as one of the most highly esteemed local wines, Mavrud vineyards are mainly found around Asenovgrad and Perushtitsa, as well as more rarely near Pazardzhik, Stara Zagora and Chirpan.[citation needed]

There is speculation amongst grape growers that Mavrud may be an ancient clone of Mourvedre, imported into Bulgaria by the Romans.[citation needed]

Legend

A legend that the oenophiles of the Mavrud wine like to repeat in order to explain the restoration of this locality as wine-growing country[5] was that during the reign of Khan Krum of Bulgaria, all vineyards were ordered destroyed. Later, a lion escaped from its cage and terrorized the city. However, a fearless young man named Mavrud (now the name of a wine grape) confronted and slew the lion. The king summoned Mavrud's mother to learn the source of such courage. She said she had secretly saved a vine, made wine, and that this was the source of Mavrud's bravery. Khan Krum ordered the vineyards replanted.[6][5]

In the original Bulgarian version the legend says it was a monster called the lamyata (ламята) which was vanquished, according to one book on wine.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Pierre Galet: Dictionnaire encyclopédique des cépages. 1st edition. Hachette Livre, 2000, ISBN 2-01-236331-8.
  2. ^ Johnson, Hugh; Robinson, Jancis (2005). The World Atlas of Wine (5th ed.). London: Mitchell Beazley. p. 256. ISBN 1-84000-332-4.
  3. ^ Robinson, Jancis, ed. (1999). "Mavrud". The Oxford Companion to Wine (2nd ed.). winepros.com.au. Archived from the original on 2012-03-14.
  4. ^ Stevenson, Tom (2005). The Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia (4th ed.). London: Dorling Kindersley. p. 414. ISBN 0-7566-1324-8.
  5. ^ a b Šiškova, Elena; Ivanova, Marii︠a︡; Dimova, Rosit︠s︡a (1998), Destination: Bulgaria, Selekta, p. 87, ISBN 9781841621555
  6. ^ Kay, Annie (2008), Bulgaria: The Bradt Travel Guide, Bradt Travel Guides, p. 226, ISBN 9781841621555
  7. ^ Chalkov, Ivan (2001), Kak da napravim vino Как да направим вино [How to make wine], DIONIS, p. 7