Iowa wine explained

Iowa
Official Name:State of Iowa
Type:U.S. state
Year:1846
Country:United States
Sub Regions:Upper Mississippi Valley AVA, Loess Hills District AVA[1]
Climate Region:Continental
Soil:clay and gravel base
Total Size:56272sqmi
Planted:1300acres
Vineyards:316[2]
Grapes:Bluebell, Catawba, Cayuga, Chambourcin, Chancellor, Chardonel, Concord, De Chaunac, Edelweiss, Frontenac, Frontenac, Geisenheim, La Crosse, Leon Millot, Marechal Foch, Marquette, Niagara, Norton, Seyval blanc, St. Croix, St. Pepin, St. Vincent, Steuben, Traminette, Valiant, Vidal blanc, Vignoles[3]
Wineries:97[4]

Iowa wine refers to wine manufactured in the U.S. state of Iowa. Iowa presents many challenges to viticulture including very warm summer days that can promote fungal vine diseases, and extremely cold winter nights that can kill many varieties of grapevines. Most commercial viticulture in Iowa focuses on French hybrid and native American grape varieties, with relatively few plantings of Vitis vinifera grapes. Many Iowa wineries also import grapes and juice from other states and countries in order to produce wine varietals otherwise not possible due to Iowa's harsh winter months that will not permit such grapes to survive. Iowa is home to 100 commercial wineries and more than 300 vineyards covering 1,200+ acres. Northeastern Iowa is included in the Upper Mississippi Valley AVA while the western part of the state is in the new AVA designation named Loess Hills.[1] [3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Brownlee, Mike . Winemakers celebrate new federal designation . 2 May 2021 . The Daily Nonpareil . 2016-06-23 . Council Bluffs, IA.
  2. Web site: Iowa's Grape & Wine Industry . Iowa Wine Growers Association . 2 May 2021 . About.
  3. Web site: Iowa: Appellation Profile . Appellation America . 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150405015113/wine.appellationamerica.com/wine-region/Iowa.html . 2015-04-05 . live.
  4. Web site: Iowa Wineries . American Winery Guide.com . 2 May 2021.