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🍇 Poulsard

Also known as: Ploussard, Mescle
Red Origin: Jura, France

About Poulsard

Poulsard is the Jura's most planted red grape, producing extraordinarily pale, delicate wines that can appear more rosé than red. Despite the colour, these wines have genuine complexity and structure.

The grape's thin skin produces minimal pigment, but the wines offer red fruit, spice, and mineral character unique to the Jura.

Wine Colour & Appearance

Typical colour: Very pale ruby to rosé-like

Extremely pale

Colour Variations by Region

Arbois: Pale salmon-ruby
Intensity Very Pale
Clarity Brilliant
Viscosity Low

Wine Characteristics

Body
Light
Tannin
Low
Acidity
High
Sweetness
Dry

Aroma & Flavour Profile Le Nez du Vin Reference →

Aromas (Nose) [Le Nez aroma]

  • Strawberry [M12 strawberry]
  • Red cherry
  • Rose [M28 rose]
  • Spice
  • Smoke
  • Earth

Flavours (Palate)

  • Delicate red fruit
  • Mineral
  • Smoky
  • Ethereal

Notable Regions

🗺️ Coming soon
Arbois/Jura, France Pale, ethereal, unique

Region Map

Old World vs New World

Understanding regional style differences helps identify origin in blind tasting.

🏰 Old World (Europe)

Jura only

🌎 New World (Americas, Australasia)

Rarely planted in the New World.

Key Tells for Blind Tasting

Extremely pale + delicate + smoky

Similar Grapes & Lateral Confusion

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

Trousseau

Why confused: jura_companion

How to distinguish: Trousseau is darker, more structured

Blind Tasting Tips

Key identifiers: Rosé-like colour but structured; smoky, ethereal character.

Food Pairings

🌱 Plant-Based & Vegetarian
Mushroomsve Comté cheese
🍖 Classic Pairings
Light charcuterie Fish Poultry
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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