Yarden Mount Hermon Moscato (OK Kosher) 2016 Front Bottle Shot
Yarden Mount Hermon Moscato (OK Kosher) 2016 Front Bottle Shot Yarden Mount Hermon Moscato (OK Kosher) 2016 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

The 2016 Mount Hermon Moscato displays aromatic green apple, tangerine, lime, peach and pineapple fruit notes, rounded out by characters of fresh flowers. Lightly sparkling, this fun dessert wine is pleasantly sweet and wonderfully drinkable.

Mount Hermon Moscato is great to enjoy upon release, and is best consumed within some 18 months of vintage. We love serving the wine with fruit-based desserts such as summer fruit panzanella, raspberry pie, lemon pound cake, or lime and macadamia biscotti.

Yarden

Yarden

View all products
Image for Muscat / Moscato content section
View all products

While Muscat comes in a wide range of styles from dry to sweet, still to sparkling and even fortified, it's safe to say it is always alluringly aromatic and delightful. The two most important versions are the noble, Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains, making wines of considerable quality and Muscat of Alexandria, thought to be a progeny of the former. Somm Secret—Pliny the Elder wrote in the 13th century of a sweet, perfumed grape variety so attractive to bees that he referred to it as uva apiana, or “grape of the bees.” Most likely, he was describing Muscat.

Image for Israel content section
View all products

With a rich history of wine production dating back to biblical times, Israel is a part of the cradle of wine civilization. Here, wine was commonly used for religious ceremonies as well as for general consumption. During Roman times, it was a popular export, but during Islamic rule around 1300, production was virtually extinguished. The modern era of Israeli winemaking began in the late 19th century with help from Bordeaux’s Rothschild family. Accordingly, most grapes grown in Israel today are made from native French varieties. Indigenous varieties are all but extinct, though oenologists have made recent attempts to rediscover ancient varieties such as Marawi for commercial wine production.

In Israel’s Mediterranean climate, humidity and drought can be problematic, concentrating much of the country’s grape growing in the north near Galilee, Samaria near the coast and at higher elevations in the east. The most successful red varieties are Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Syrah, while the best whites are made from Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc. Many, though by no means all, Israeli wines are certified Kosher.

WWH145829_2016 Item# 256566