New Zealand Flashcards Preview

_My Cards > New Zealand > Flashcards

Flashcards in New Zealand Deck (82)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

T or F? NZ is the world’s easternmost and 2nd southernmost winemaking country

A

True!

2
Q

Southernmost vyd in the world?

A
  • No longer in New Zealand: Black Ridge Vyds in Central Otago at 45.15 degrees
  • Southernmost in Patagonia, Argentina: Sarmiento, at 45.5 deg S). Made by Otronia Patagonia Extrema by oil magnate Alejandro Bulgheroni
3
Q

Southernmost vyd in New Zealand

A

Black Ridge Vyds in Central Otago at 45.15 degrees

4
Q

Which region is the easternmost region in the world (the first vines in the world to see the sun each day)

A

Gisborne, North Island

5
Q

Which major wine regions is nearest to New Zealand in terms of total hectares under vine?

A

Burgundy

6
Q

This body of water has greatest moderating effect on the climate in Nelson. It lies to the ___ of NZ.

A

Tasman Sea, West

7
Q

Geography and latitude between NZ and Tasmania

A

same latitude, but Tasmania is 1200 miles due west of NZ

8
Q

In 1769 Captain James Cook first landed here in NZ

A

Poverty Bay (near Gisborne, the main center)

9
Q

In 1819, first vines were planted here ___ by a Christian missionary, Samuel Marsden, though no record of production

A

Kerikeri, Northland, North Island

10
Q

T or F? Late 1830s, first record of actual wine production with James Busby, early efforts in New South Wales, planted cuttings at his estate in Northland

A

True!

11
Q

Established in 1851, NZ’s oldest surviving winery

A

Mission Estate – in Taradale, near Hawke’s Bay

12
Q

Austrian viticulturist who studied NZ’s vineyards and to combat phylloxera

A

Romeo Bragato

13
Q

This company created the commercial vineyard in Marlborough in 1973 and released the 1st varietal wine (Gisborne Chard)

A

Montana

14
Q

This brand put the Marlborough wine region on the map in 1985. Now under Pernod Ricard NZ

A

Cloudy Bay

15
Q

Name a reason why New Zealand wine commands a higher price per bottle than any other country in the world

A

New Zealand has little land to spare; thus modern, bulk wine production is not economically feasible

16
Q

The first wine company in Marlborough to commercially release a New Zealand wine under screwcap

A

Kim Crawford, now owned by Constellation Brands

17
Q

The most exported wines in NZ

A

Montana’s Lindauer/Deutz brand sparkling wines (Marlborough)

18
Q

This major Champagne house collab with Montana

A

Deutz, 1988

19
Q

Body of water that separates the North Island from the South Island

A

Cook Strait

20
Q

Current number of GIs in NZ

A
  • 21: as of 2020, newest is North Canterbury GI

- including New Zealand GI, North Island GI, and South Island GI

21
Q

Certified Origin status announced in 1996

A
  • min 85% of a stated grapeor vintage for wines
  • whenlabeled with a GI, 85% of grapes must come from the stated GI
  • forspirits that are labelled with a GI, 100% of the spirit mustcome from the GI
  • as inother New World countries, there are no laws governing enrichment, acidification, pruning, yields, or irrigation techniques.
22
Q

Climatic difference btw North Island GI and South Island GI

A

North Island warme, less mountainous, generally much rainier

23
Q

GIs of North Island GI (6)

A
  • Nearly All Women Brag Giving Head Well
  • Northland
  • Auckland
  • Waikato
  • Bay of Plenty
  • Gisborne
  • Hawkes Bay
  • Wairarapa (official name Wellington)
24
Q

The hottest, wettest of regions, smallest area of production, oldest, with less than 1% of country’s production. Maritime climate

A

Northland

25
Q

T or F? Northland’s latitude is comparable to that of Jerez in Spain—although its climate is more often likened to Bordeaux

A

True!

26
Q

Unofficial subregions of Northland (3)

A
  • Kaitaia
  • Kerikeri
  • Whangarei
27
Q

The most northern vineyard in NZ

A

Karikari Estate in Kaitaia, in Northland, North Island

28
Q

Marsden Estate located

A

Kerikeri in Northland, North Island

29
Q

NZ’s largest wine region (in size), but less than 2% of country’s output

A

Auckland

30
Q

Auckland wineries

A
  • Babiche
  • Cable Bay
  • Constellation NZ (Nobilo, Monkey Bay, Kim Crawford)
  • Kumeu River
  • Mate Valley
  • Montana (Pernod-Ricard owned)
  • Pleasant Valley
  • Stonyridge
  • Villa Maria
31
Q

Top grapes grown in Auckland

A
  • Chardonnay: 62 ha
  • Merlot: 43 ha
  • Syrah: 40 ha
  • Pinot Gris: 29 ha
32
Q

Major Natural Features of Auckland

A

Pacific Ocean, Waitakere Ranges

33
Q

Auckland’s official subregions (3), which is the oldest

A
  • Matakana
  • Kumeu: oldest
  • Waiheke Island
34
Q

Auckland’s unofficial subregions (5)

A
  • Huapai
  • Henderson
  • South Auckland
  • West Auckland
  • Clevedon
35
Q

This official Auckland subregion is located in the Hauraki Gulf

A

Waiheke Island

36
Q

Auckland’s oldest subregion

A

Kumeu

37
Q

Bay of Plenty is to the (east or west?) of Waikato

A

East

38
Q

Unofficial subregions of Waikato (6)

A
  • Te Kauwhata
  • Te Awamutu
  • Coromandel Peninsula
  • Lake Taupo
  • Hamilton
  • Rotorua
39
Q

3 regions with highest production

A
  • Marlborough
  • Hawke’s Bay (highest in North Island)
  • Gisborne
40
Q

Unofficial subregions of Gisborne (9)

A
  • Ormond
  • Ormond Valley
  • Central Valley
  • Golden Slope
  • Riverpoint
  • Manutake
  • Patutahi Plateau
  • Patutahi
  • Waipaoa
41
Q

Major producers of Gisborne

A
  • mostly white

- Milton “Clos de Ste Anne” (makes single vyd wines from chard, viognier, chenin, syrah, pinot noir), Brunton Road

42
Q

Leading grapes of Hawke’s Bay

A
  • red: merlot is the leading grape…then cab sauv, malbec, pinot noir, syrah (most of NZ syrah is here)
  • white: sauv blanc, chard, p.gris
    (sauv blanc starts becoming dominant white variety here; before it’s chardonnay)
43
Q

T or F? Hawke’s Bay is NZ’s driest, oldest, largest wine region (in vines planted), 2nd largest region (in size), largest producer of red wines

A

True!

44
Q

Major producers of Hawke’s Bay

A
  • Bridge Pa
  • Craggy Range
  • Esk Valley Estate
  • Ngatarawa
  • Sacred Hill
  • Sileni
  • Te Mata
  • Trinity Hill
45
Q

Oldest existing winery in NZ with first record of commercial wine sales

A

Mission Estate Winery, Hawke’s Bay, North Island

46
Q

The Gimblett Gravels signature soil in Hawke’s Bay was revealed when this river changed its course in 1867

A

Ngaruroro River Valley

47
Q

Major cities for Hawke’s Bay

A

Hastings, Napier

48
Q

Sole official subregion in Hawke’s Bay

A

Central Hawkes Bay

49
Q

Unofficial subregions for Hawke’s Bay (4)

A
  • Coastal Areas
  • River Valleys
  • Alluvial Plains
  • Hillsides
50
Q

Gimblett Gravels, subregion of the Alluvial Plains, what are the rules?

A
  • producer must be a member of the association
  • harvest grapes from a vineyard with 95% of the appellation’s defined soil characteristics
  • min 95% of the fruit from within the appellation
51
Q

Oldest soils in Hawke’s Bay in Alluvial Plains

A

Bridge Pa, Heretaunga Plains, red metal

52
Q

Subregions for the Unofficial Coastal Areas, in Hawke’s Bay

A
  • Te Awang(Hawke’s Bay most Maritime and Coastal region — further away from sea and higher elevation)
  • Northern Esk Valley
53
Q

Subregions for the Unofficial River Valleys, in Hawke’s Bay

A
  • Mohaka
  • Esk River Valley
  • Tutaekuri River Valley
  • Ngaruroro River Valley
  • Dartmoor Valley
54
Q

Subregions for the Unofficial Alluvial Plains, in Hawke’s Bay

A
  • Gimblett Gravels
  • Korokipo
  • Bridge Pa
  • Ohiti
55
Q

Sole subregion for the Unofficial Hillsides, in Hawke’s Bay

A

Havelock North

56
Q

Oldest winery in Gimblett Gravels and oldest Syrah vines in New Zealand (1982)

A

Stonecroft

57
Q

What type of soil is Greywacke and where is it found in NZ and in the world

A
  • Sandstone. Agillaceous rock that could been formed as recently as a few thousand years ago by rivers depositing mudstone, quartz , and feldspar
  • Hawke’s Bay (Gimblett’s Gravels), Marlborough, Gisborne, Canterbury and Nelson
  • also found in Germany, South Africa, Portugal, Barossa, Russian River Valley
58
Q

The Gimblett Gravels signature soil was revealed when this river changed its course in 1867

A

Ngaruroro River Valley

59
Q

Official name for Wairarapa GI

A

Wellington

60
Q

Main grapes for Wairarapa GI

A

pinot noir, sauv blanc, p-gris (in decreasing acreage)

61
Q

Official subregions in Wairarapa (2)

A
  • Gladstone

- Martinborough

62
Q

Sole unofficial subregion in Wairarapa

A

Masterton

63
Q

T or F? South Island is the larger of the 2 islands and divided along its spine by the Southern Alps

A

True!

64
Q

Describe the rain shadow effect in the South Island

A

rainclouds moving eastward from the Tasman Sea deposit all their moisture high in the mountains

65
Q

T or F? Nelson is NZ’s sunniest wine-producing region and also the rainiest

A

True!

66
Q

Unofficial subregions of Nelson (4)

A
  • Waimea Plains
  • Motueka
  • Tataka (Golden Bay)
  • Upper Moutere (Moutere Hills)
67
Q

This major natural feature divides Marlborough and Nelson

A

Richmond Ranges

68
Q

T or F? As of2017 over nearly 70% of NZ’s vineyards were located in Marlborough, andover half of the country’s total acreage was planted with sauv blanc

A

True!

69
Q

Unofficial subregions of Marlborough (3)

A
  • Wairau Valley
  • Southern Valleys
  • Awatere Valley (southernmost)
70
Q

T or F? Marlborough is the largest region in NZ (in vyds planted), with ~2/3 of nation’s total

A

True!

71
Q

Sole official and unofficial subregion in Canterbury

A
  • Official: Waipara

- Unofficial: Canterbury Plains

72
Q

Banks Peninsula, Christchurch, Omihi, Waitaki Valley, Weka Pass located which region

A

Canterbury

73
Q

Newest GI in South Island in 2018

A

Waitaki North Otago / Waitaki Valley

74
Q

T or F? Central Otago is the only region in the country to experience a truly continental climate

A

True!

75
Q

What explains the ripeness of Central Otago Pinot Noir in spite of its latitude

A

high levels of solar radiation (from a hole in the ozone layer)

76
Q

T or F? The world’s southernmost region, and the country’s highest in altitude

A

True!

77
Q

Major natural features of Central Otago

A

Southern Alps, Lake Wanaka, Waitaki River (North Otago)

78
Q

Unofficial subregions of Central Otago (7)

A
  • Wanaka
  • Bendigo
  • Cromwell Basin
  • Gibbston
  • Bannockburn
  • Alexandra Basin
79
Q

Which unofficial subregion has the highest concentration of vineyards in Central Otago

A

Cromwell Basin

80
Q

Major producers of Central Otago

A

Felton Road, Mt Difficulty, Rippon (by Lake Wanaka), Peregrine

81
Q

Subregions of South Island (4)

A
  • No Man Can Cook Well
  • Nelson
  • Marlborough
  • Canterbury
  • Waitaki North Otago / Waitaki Valley
  • Central Otago
82
Q

Name 2 important rivers in Marlborough

A

Awatere Valley and Wairau Valley