# Ahr # Mittelrhein # Rheingau # Mosel Saar Ruwer # Nahe # Rheinhessen # Hessische Bergstrasse # Franken # Baden # Pfalz # Wurtemmberg # Saschsen # Saale-Unstrut
Saale-Unstrut
madrid
A type of round wine bottle: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bocksbeutel (You could have just typed in "Bocksbeutel" into Wikipedia). A Bocksbeutel is a large flattened flask shaped bottle (750 ml) mainly used in northern Germany. Wine regions in Germany famous for employing this unusual shaped bottle are Franken and Baden.
La Bourgogne (Burgundy), Bordeaux, Alsace, The Loire Valley, Champagne, the Rhone Valley, are famous wine regions in France.
Wine is a major export of Italy.
John Beeston has written: 'The wine regions of Australia' -- subject(s): Wine and wine making, Guidebooks, Wine industry, Wine districts, Wineries, Directories
the U.S.
Burgundy, or Aquitaine (the area of Bordeaux), are large producers of wine. Both regions are in France.
Wine connoisseurs or oenophiles practice the art of tasting wine. A wine connoisseur usually has taken a course or has read extensively about the countries and regions where specific grapes are grown for the production of wine.
According to Sevier Wines, a wine seller, there are 7 primary wine regions in France: Alsace, Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, Loire, Provence and the Rhone Valley. Wine.about.com omits Champagne but includes Languedoc-Roussillon in their 7. Still another website, About-France.com, lists 11 main French wine regions, adding Cognac/Charentes, Jura and Medoc to the previously mentioned regions. So, I guess it depends on who you ask.:)
Historically, beer has been a very popular drink for centuries in many regions of Europe, especially in the more northerly parts. Incidentally, in parts of Germany, for example the Rhineland, wine is just as popular, so I'd hesitate to call beer the national drink of Germany!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Beer
Leibfraumilch is produced in Germany.