Isabella (grape)

Isabella
Grape (Vitis)

Isabella grapes
Color of berry skin Noir
Species Vitis x Labruscana
Also called Over 50 including; Alexander, Fragola & Izabella
Origin USA
Notable regions USA, India and Latin America.
Notable wines Fragolino and Uhudler
Isabella grapes must

The Isabella grape is a cultivar derived from the grape species Vitis labrusca or 'fox grape' which is used for table, juice and wine production.[1][2]

Appearance and use

The skin of Isabella when ripened is a dark purple, almost black with a tender green-yellow flesh. It has large well formed fruit clusters with thick bloom.[3] It is a slip skin variety, meaning that the skin separates easily from the fruit. The grapes are used to make wine, most notably Uhudler and Fragolino. The Isabella being of the genus Vitis x Labruscana imparts a "foxiness" to the wine and because of this is thought to be objectionable,[1] therefore it is not seen as a grape capable of making fine wines. For the table the flavour is good though with the astringent tough skin and "foxy" aroma is objectionable for some tastes.[3]

The deciduous vine is very easy to propagate. When the vine is bare of leaves in winter, it is good to prune the vine back by about one-third. Save the branches that are 15 cm long and pencil-thick. Cut straight across at the proximal end (nearest the root), and oblique at the distal end. Put a bundle of about 10 cuttings in potting mix, the flat ends down, and keep reasonable moist throughout winter. They will sprout leaves and roots in spring. Divide and plant out.

History

Isabella, although popularly classified as being of Vitis labrusca parentage, is almost certainly a cross with an unknown Vitis vinifera, illustrated by the susceptibility to mildew and black rot. It is thought that it resulted from random pollination when European Vitis vinifera grapes were attempted to be established in America.[4] It was popularly thought to have been discovered by a Mrs Isabella Gibbs of South Carolina in 1816,[1] however there is conflicting information with other sources stating it was found in Virginia, Delaware and Europe.[3] Isabella vines were heavily imported into Europe in the early 19th century and it is said that it is probably that the phylloxera was introduced into Europe on the roots of Isabella Isabella having a resistance to the phylloxera.

Modern history

Isabella is no longer a commercially important grape as it produces poor wines due to its labrusca inheritance and new plantings were banned in France after 1934,[1] however as a high yielding grape capable of withstanding tropical and semi-tropical conditions, it has been planted in Portugal, Bali, Japan, and various locations in the southern hemisphere such as in Colombia and Brazil, where it is a leading grape variety,[1] in the U.S. it is sparsely found in New York State.[2] It is grown due to its phylloxera resistance and its cold hardiness.[2] It was also brought to former Soviet nations of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Moldova from France through Odessa.[5] That's one of the reasons this variety is also called Odessa among Georgians.[6] Russian poet Osip Mandelstam had described Isabella as "fleshy and healthy like a cluster of night itself".[7] It is also found in the eastern parts of the Black Sea Region in Turkey. It is used for wine production named "zamura" in Trabzon and surroundings at Trebizond empire era even later with Christians especially Pontic Greeks.[8] Famously it is used for the production of Pekmez and its leaves for preparing Sarma.

Aliases

Isabella has over 50 aliases including: Albany Surprise, Alexander, Black Cape, Borgoña, Champania, Constantia, Dorchester, Fragola, Framboisier, Isabelle, Izabella, Odessa, Raisin De Cassis, Moschostaphylo, Kerkyraios,Tudum and Tzortzidika.[2][6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 winepros.com.au. The Oxford Companion to Wine. "Isabella".
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 appellationamerica.com Isabella
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 winemaking.jackkeller.net Winemaking Questions, Page 2: Isabella Grapes
  4. wineloverspage.com The Super Gigantic Y2K Winegrape Glossary: Isabella
  5. "ATLAS: IZABELLA". Retrieved 2011-02-15.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Грузинское вино. Сорта винограда" [Georgian wine. Grape varieties]. Retrieved 2011-02-15.
  7. Goldstein, Darra (1958). The Georgian feast: the vibrant culture and savory food of the Republic of Georgia. United States: University of California Press. p. 4. ISBN 0-520-21929-5. Retrieved 2011-02-15.
  8. Özhan Öztürk. Pontus: Antik Çağdan gümüze Karadeniz'in Etnik ve Siyasi Tarihi. Ankara, 2011. Phoenix Yayınları. s. 576