Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Boal (grape)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Color of berry skin
  
Blanc

Notable wines
  
Madeira wine

Origin
  
Portugal

Wine color
  
White wine

Higher classification
  
Common Grape Vine

Also called
  
Bual

Notable regions
  
Portugal, Madeira, Spain

Sweetness of resulting wine
  
Semi-sweet or sweet

Scientific name
  
Vitis vinifera 'Boal'

Boal (grape) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Sercial, Verdelho, Tinta Negra Mole, Common Grape Vine, Trousseau

Boal is a name given to several varieties of grape cultivated in Portugal, notably in the production of medium-rich fortified wines from Madeira Island. On many wine labels of Madeira wine, the variety's name is anglicized as Bual. Madeira from Bual is typically less sweet than that from Malmsey, but more sweet than Sercial or Verdelho. The vines are also common in Portugal and Spain, where the fruit is used in the same way for fortified wines.

Contents

Madeira Boal

Most of the Boal grown on Madeira is more fully known as Boal Cachudo (a synonym for the Spanish variety Doña Blanca, though the two may be different grapes), which has been shown by DNA profiling to be identical to the Malvasia Fina grown in the Douro valley.

Notable Boal

Buckingham Palace holds 25,000 bottles of wine, the oldest being a bottle of bual from 1815.

References

Boal (grape) Wikipedia