- Aromas and Flavors: tart and lemony, crisp, tropical fruit
- AKA: Verdello, planted in Italy’s Umbria region, may well be the same variety
- There is also a purple variety, Verdelho Tinto (called Gouvieo in the Douro Valley)
- High in acidity
- Varies from herbaceous, when grown in cooler vineyards or picked earlier, to tropical fruit, when grown in warmer vineyards or picked fully mature
- Used to make both dry table wines and sweet, fortified wines
- Barrel fermentation and oak aging can add richness and complexity
- Over-ripening may produce high alcohol and too much extraction or maceration can make the wine coarse
- The Verdelho variety has been cultivated in Portugal since at least the 1400s
- It is one of the grapes used in the making of Madeira
- Since the late nineteenth century European outbreak of Phyloxera, there are very few Verdelho vines planted in Portugal
- Western Australia, and South Australia and New South Wales have had success with Verdelho as a dry table wine
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