Structural pillars

AcidityMedium
TanninMedium
BodyMedium
AlcoholMedium
Color intensityMedium
Aromatic intensityMedium

Recognition cues

First checks

  • Look for dark-fruit muscadine profile with USDA breeding-line cues.
  • Lock fruit weight against USDA 19-11 Muscadine baseline before naming alternatives.

Confidence signals

  • USDA 19-11 profile
  • Coherent medium/medium frame plus grape note — typical USDA 19-11 Muscadine read.

Aromas

Signature

dark fruit notegrape notered fruit

Common

plumblack cherryearth note

Occasional

foxy note

Commonly confused with

Classic anchors

  • Classic regions: Southeastern United States · North Carolina · Coastal Plain
  • Classic styles: Historical USDA muscadine breeding line documented in VIVC as Dulcet x USDA 27-9B and tied to Fry pedigree records · USDA 19-11 Muscadine: medium body, medium acid, medium tannin red expression
  • Style examples: Southeastern USDA breeding-line muscadine featuring 19-11 · Regional muscadine blend with USDA 19-11 lineage

Common questions

Is USDA 19-11 Muscadine a red or white grape variety?
USDA 19-11 Muscadine is a red wine grape variety. Sensium documents its structure, aromas, and confusion signals for blind tasting.
What does USDA 19-11 Muscadine smell and taste like?
Signature aromas of USDA 19-11 Muscadine include dark fruit note, grape note and red fruit. Structural profile: Medium body, Medium acidity, Medium tannin, Medium alcohol.
What is USDA 19-11 Muscadine most often confused with in blind tasting?
USDA 19-11 Muscadine is most commonly confused with Fry Muscadine, James Muscadine and North Carolina 6-15 Muscadine. Sensium's Compare view leads with the decisive cues that resolve each call.
Where is USDA 19-11 Muscadine grown?
Classic regions for USDA 19-11 Muscadine include Southeastern United States, North Carolina and Coastal Plain.

Continue exploring