Another wine company that now produces wine from the grape varieties of two continents is the Australian company Penfolds. Red grapes, made from Australian and California, and others mixing Australian and French are sold here. Again, they cannot be sold to the EU, but it is possible in the UK, the USA, Australia and other countries.
Penfolds calls these blends “world wine” and says they “possess an otherity that can best be described as Mir.” Whatever it meant.
Not surprisingly, some more traditional winemakers do not support such a development. One of these people is Jack Swon, an independent wine from Germany.
While the two -colored swimships from Shaputse and Penfolds are carefully made from quality grapes and have the appropriate price, it is afraid that if this trend increases, it will mean that the sale will do much cheaper wines of the low grade.
“I believe that there will be nothing left of these types of wine, even before they leave their continent,” she says. “These guilt only had a machine work, heavy supplements to maintain them clean, and made so that they were easy to drink with the masses.
“Why can’t consumers be more demanding? Consumer is madness.”