Pione (grape) explained

Pione
Color:Noir
Color Alt:Purple
Origin:Japan
Pedigree1:Kyoho
Pedigree2:Cannon Hall Muscat
Regions:Yamanashi Prefecture, Nagano Prefecture
Selection Year:1957

Pione (ピオーネ pione) is a large-berried, purple skinned, table and rosé wine grape variety that has been grown in Japan since 1957.

Table and wine producing grape

First developed in Shizuoka Prefecture by Hideo Ikawa, the grape is a hybrid tetraploid cultivar of the widely planted Kyoho and Cannon Hall Muscat grapes.[1] Kyoho is itself a red fruited hybrid developed in Japan in 1937. The Cannon Hall Muscat is a large white table grape connected to seed originally brought from Greece in 1813, by John Spencer Stanhope resident of Cannon Hall near Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England.[2]

Noted for large, generally seedless, purple skinned fruit. Grown in Okayama, Hiroshima, Nagano and Yamanashi Prefectures. Ranks third behind Kyoho and Delaware in terms of total volume of table grape production in Japan.[3]

Commands a price premium as a table grape, but also occasionally used to produce rosé single varietal wine.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Badenes. Marisa. Fruit Breeding. 2012. Springer. New York. 978-1-4419-0762-2. 237.
  2. Web site: Furse. Jane. Cannon Hall and its 1760 Kitchen Garden. Garden Trusts UK. The Association of Garden Trusts. 24 September 2015.
  3. Book: Robinson. Jancis. The Oxford Companion to Wine. 2015. Oxford University Press. Oxford. 978-0-19-870538-3. 391. 4th.