Structural pillars

AcidityMedium
BodyMedium
AlcoholMedium
Color intensityMedium
Aromatic intensityMedium

Recognition cues

First checks

  • Look for bronze-fruit muscadine profile with foundational parent-line cues.
  • Anchor San Jacinto Muscadine via medium/medium frame.

Confidence signals

  • San Jacinto Muscadine profile
  • Coherent medium-bodied profile with medium acid anchor and orchard fruit lift.

Aromas

Signature

grape noteorchard fruitmineral notebronze fruit note

Common

pearapplehoney note

Occasional

foxy note

Commonly confused with

Classic anchors

  • Classic regions: Texas · Southeastern United States · Gulf Coast
  • Classic styles: Foundational muscadine parent documented in VIVC and historical pedigree records from T.V. Munson programs · Soft bronze-fruit heritage profile with low tannin and medium-minus acidity
  • Style examples: Southeastern heritage muscadine selection featuring San Jacinto lineage · Regional muscadine blend with San Jacinto heritage

Common questions

Is San Jacinto Muscadine a red or white grape variety?
San Jacinto Muscadine is a white wine grape variety. Sensium documents its structure, aromas, and confusion signals for blind tasting.
What does San Jacinto Muscadine smell and taste like?
Signature aromas of San Jacinto Muscadine include grape note, orchard fruit, mineral note and bronze fruit note. Structural profile: Medium body, Medium acidity, Medium alcohol.
What is San Jacinto Muscadine most often confused with in blind tasting?
San Jacinto Muscadine is most commonly confused with New River Muscadine, Watergate Muscadine and Chowan Muscadine. Sensium's Compare view leads with the decisive cues that resolve each call.
Where is San Jacinto Muscadine grown?
Classic regions for San Jacinto Muscadine include Texas, Southeastern United States and Gulf Coast.

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