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🍇 Pedro Ximénez

Also known as: PX, Pedro Jiménez
White Origin: Montilla-Moriles/Jerez, Spain

About Pedro Ximénez

Pedro Ximénez (PX) is famous for producing intensely sweet, syrupy Sherry-style wines from sun-dried grapes. The grape is also used for dry wines in Montilla-Moriles, where it thrives in the heat.

Wine Colour & Appearance

Typical colour: Deep mahogany to black (sweet)

From pale (dry) to opaque (sweet)

Colour Variations by Region

PX Sherry: Opaque black-brown
Intensity Very Deep (sweet)
Clarity Dense
Viscosity Extremely High (sweet)

Wine Characteristics

Body
Full (sweet) / Light (dry)
Acidity
Low
Sweetness
Dry to Extremely Sweet

Aroma & Flavour Profile Le Nez du Vin Reference →

Aromas (Nose) [Le Nez aroma]

  • Raisin
  • Fig
  • Molasses
  • Coffee [M52 coffee]
  • Chocolate
  • Caramel [M51 caramel]

Flavours (Palate)

  • Intensely sweet
  • Dried fruit
  • Syrupy
  • Coffee
  • Chocolate

Notable Regions

🗺️ Coming soon
Jerez (PX Sherry), Spain Intensely sweet, syrupy
🗺️ Coming soon
Montilla-Moriles, Spain Dry and sweet styles

Region Map

Old World vs New World

Understanding regional style differences helps identify origin in blind tasting.

🏰 Old World (Europe)

Andalucía only

🌎 New World (Americas, Australasia)

Some Australian examples

Key Tells for Blind Tasting

Extremely sweet + dried grape + syrupy

Similar Grapes & Lateral Confusion

These grapes are commonly confused with Pedro Ximénez in blind tasting. Here's how to tell them apart:

Palomino

Why confused: sherry_companion

How to distinguish: Palomino is for dry Sherry

Blind Tasting Tips

Key identifiers: (Sweet style) Opaque, syrupy, intensely sweet, raisin/fig.

Food Pairings

🌱 Plant-Based & Vegetarian
Chocolate dessertsve Vanilla ice cream Blue cheese
🍖 Classic Pairings
Christmas pudding
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Page created: 28 January 2026 | Last updated: 28 January 2026

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Wine Colour

This section shows the typical appearance of wines made from this grape:

  • Colour swatches — Visual examples from young to aged expressions
  • Intensity — How deep or pale the colour typically appears
  • Clarity — Whether wines are typically clear, hazy, or have sediment
  • Viscosity — The "legs" or "tears" you see on the glass

Characteristics

Key structural elements that define the wine:

  • Acidity — How tart or fresh the wine tastes (low to high)
  • Body — The weight and texture in your mouth (light to full)
  • Alcohol — Typical alcohol range, sometimes with regional variations
  • Sweetness — Dry, off-dry, or sweet (where applicable)

Tannins (Red Wines)

For red wines, this section describes the tannin profile:

  • Level — Low, medium, or high tannin content
  • Texture — Velvety, silky, grippy, chalky, or sandy
  • Location — Where you feel them (front teeth, gums, cheeks, back of mouth)
  • Ageing potential — How tannins evolve over time

Aroma and Flavour Profile

Aromas (nose) and flavours (palate) are listed separately:

  • The Nose — What you smell before tasting
  • The Palate — What you taste and feel in your mouth
  • Le Nez numbers — References like [M15] correspond to Le Nez du Vin aroma kit bottles (M = Masterkit, O = Oak, F = Faults)
Tip: Le Nez Reference Click the "Le Nez du Vin Reference" link in the Aroma section header to see the full aroma reference chart.

Viticulture

Growing conditions this grape prefers:

  • Climate — Cool, moderate, or warm climate preferences
  • Soil — Preferred soil types (limestone, clay, gravel, etc.)
  • Vigour — How vigorously the vine grows
  • Challenges — Common growing difficulties (frost, rot, disease)

Notable Regions

Key wine regions where this grape excels:

  • Map thumbnails — Small preview maps for each region (where available)
  • Click to expand — Opens a larger interactive map
  • Wine region boundaries — Highlighted in wine-red where data is available
  • Zoom and pan — Explore the map interactively
  • Reset View — Returns to the original zoom level

Old World vs New World

Compares how the grape is expressed in different regions:

  • Old World — Traditional European expressions (France, Italy, Spain, etc.)
  • New World — Modern expressions (Australia, USA, Chile, etc.)
  • Differences in style, ripeness, oak use, and flavour profiles

Similar Grapes

Grapes that are often confused with this variety in blind tasting:

  • Why confused — What characteristics they share
  • How to distinguish — Key differences to look for

Blind Tasting Tips

Practical guidance for identifying this grape when tasting blind:

  • Key markers to look for
  • Common pitfalls and look-alikes
  • Diagnostic characteristics that set it apart

Food Pairings

Suggested foods that complement wines from this grape:

  • Vegan/Vegetarian — Plant-based options listed first, marked (ve) for vegan
  • Classic pairings — Traditional meat and seafood matches