Delaware (grape)

Delaware
Grape (Vitis)
SpeciesVitis × labruscana
OriginUnited States
Notable regionsNorth East and Mid West of United States, Japan
Notable winesSparkling and Icewines
VIVC number3498

The Delaware grape is a cultivar derived from the grape species Vitis labrusca or 'Fox grape' which is used for the table and wine production.[1]

The skin of the Delaware grape when ripened has a pale red, almost pinkish colour, a tender skin, and juicy sweet flesh. It has small fruit clusters with small berries that do not have the pronounced 'foxiness' of other V. labrusca grapes. It is a slip-skin variety, meaning that the skin is easily separated from the fruit. The grapes are used to make wines including dry, sweet, icewine but is famed for spicy sparkling wines that do not have much of the objectionable foxiness character that other V. labrusca grapes contribute to their wines.[2] The wine is light pink to white in colour.

It is a commercially viable grape vine which is grown in the Northeast and Midwest United States, and is vigorous when grafted onto a Phylloxera-resistant root stock. The Delaware grape is susceptible to downy mildew and ripens earlier than 'Concord'.[3]

The Delaware grape is also a table grape variety sold in supermarkets throughout South Korea and Japan, where V. labrusca grape varieties are popular for their fragrance. Delaware Punch is named for the Delaware grape from which its flavor is primarily derived.

  1. ^ "Delaware Grape".
  2. ^ "Delaware Grape".
  3. ^ "Delaware". Archived from the original on 2006-09-02. Retrieved 2007-03-02.

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search