Full Review

Fulkerson

Fulkerson
NV Sparklin, Diamond, Finger Lakes

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Other Sparkling

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 8.5% RS: 6%
85 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$15

Fulkerson
NV Sparklin, Diamond, Finger Lakes

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Other Sparkling

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 8.5% RS: 6%
Golden yellow color. Aromas and flavors of racquetball, Welsh’s white grape juice, spun sugar, and lactic acid with a velvety, lively, spritzy, off-dry medium body and a smooth, intriguing, medium-long finish evoking notes of candied grape, green apple candies, sugar, and rubber. Bursting with fruit aromatics and flowers on the palate, this is a good wine to break out for brunch or dessert.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: racquetball, Welsh's white grape juice, spun sugar, and lactic acid
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of candied grape, green apple candies, sugar, and rubber
Sweetness Sweetness: Off-Dry
Enjoy Enjoy: Now with food
Recipes Pairing: Oven Fried Chicken, Chicken Kebobs, Cobb Salad
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Bursting with fruit aromatics and flowers on the palate, this is a good wine to break out for brunch or dessert.

The Producer

Fulkerson Winery

The Producer
5576 State Rte 14
Dundee, NY 14837
USA
1 607-243-7883

Other Sparkling

Wine Glass Champagne.jpg
Serve in a Champagne Flute
Sparkling wine covers many countries, grape types and quality levels. What all of these wines have in common are bubbles.

How the bubbles get there define the type and quality of the sparkling wine. The most famous sparkling wine of course is Champagne, from the eponymous region in France. These are made by what is known as the Champagne or "classic" method, where the secondary fermentation that produces the sparkle is done in an individual bottle. Other sparkling wines that use this method include Franciacorta and Alta Langa in Italy as well as Cava from Spain.

Other sparkling wines are made when the bubbles (or carbonation) is created in large tanks. While there are many inexpensive, simple sparkling wines made in this method, there are some excellent examples, most notably Prosecco.

Sparkling wines in many cases are meant to be drunk upon release, although the best examples of Champagne can age well for more than a decade. As sparkling wine is celebratory in nature, it is often used for toasting a special event, such as an anniversary or birthday. Yet the finest dry sparking wines work beautifully with a huge array of foods. These wines are arguably the finest food wines in the world.