I was really enthusiastic about this visit, as I always wanted to see a real wine cellar. As I descended into the cellar, there were lots of butts of different sizes along the pathway.

In the cellar
Noble mould on the walls
Tokaj - Hegyalja wine region is a well know wine region in Hungary, with the famous Tokaji Aszú, a sort of sweet white dessert wine, made of dried grapes.
According to the story, in 1630, during a Turkish raid, the people vintage in mid November, with a delay of several weeks. The grapes had shrivelled and become dry by then. They produced an unequalled wine from this vintage. This was the first dessert wine produced by adding dried grapes.
Here is the technology of the Tokaji Aszú wine. (aszú = shrivelled)

After fermentation the Aszú grapes are removed from the new wine by a process of careful pressing and the wine is aged for at least 3 years in a wooden casks.
The different butts of Aszú also mean the distinction
according to remaining sugar content: the 3-butt Aszú contains 60–90 g/l, the 4-butt Aszú 90–120 g/l, the 5-butt Aszú 120–150 g/l, and the 6-butt Aszú 150–180 g/l of leftover sugar.
A 6-butt Tokaji Aszú with honey-like colour
We were served with 6 different sort of wines:
furmint, a dry fresh white wine,
hárslevelű ("linden-leaf") 2005, medium sweet white wine,
hárslevelű 2006 - late vintage, medium sweet white wine,
szamorodni, an other speciality of the region: the regular berries and dried raisins are processed together as they ripen. Depending on the sugar content of the must – and the amount of Aszú raisins – the wine will be dry or sweet after fermentation.
aszú 3-butt,
aszú 6-butt.
Hárslevelű - late vintage 2006
For more about Tokaji wines, see the link: http://www.kfki.hu/~rw2003/bor.html
Visit the cellar we spent a wondeful evening: http://www.evinor.hu/
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