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  2. Kyoho (grape) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyoho_(grape)

    Kyoho is a tetraploid grape variety, as its breeding parents, ‘Ishiharawase’ and ‘Centennial’ are tetraploid bud sports of ‘Campbell Early’ (V. labruscana) and ‘Rosaki’ (V. vinifera), respectively. [4] Like the Concord, Kyoho is a slip-skin variety, meaning that the skin is easily separated from the fruit.

  3. The Most Popular Types of Grapes You'll Find at the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/most-popular-types-grapes-youll...

    Different types of grapes prove this fruit comes in a variety of colors and seeds for eating or drinking. ... Kyoho. This Japanese grape has a large size, dark color, and sweet flavor—that makes ...

  4. Pione (grape) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pione_(grape)

    Kyoho is itself a red fruited hybrid developed in Japan in 1937. The Cannon Hall Muscat is a large white table grape connected to seed originally brought from Greece in 1813, by John Spencer Stanhope resident of Cannon Hall near Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England. [2] Noted for large, generally seedless, purple skinned fruit.

  5. Table grape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_grape

    In Japan, Kyoho, Delaware and Pione grapes rank as the first, second and third most popular table grapes in terms of production volume. [7] In July 2015, setting new pricing records for Japanese premium table grapes, a single bunch of Ruby Roman grapes, containing 26 grapes at a weight of about 700 grams, sold for 1 million yen (around US$8400).

  6. List of wine professionals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wine_professionals

    Included are owners of well-known or sizable vineyards. Excluded are managers (CEOs) of public holding companies as owners and persons owning vineyards as a hobby, being notable for other reasons. Many vineyard owners are also winemakers as well. Jean-Charles Boisset Californian winemaker Randall Grahm of Bonny Doon Vineyards

  7. Japanese wine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_wine

    There was a prejudice that Japanese looked at red wine and mistook it for "blood," while Westerners drank "living blood." [4] [5]A report written in 1869 by Adams, Secretary to the British Legation in Yedo, describes "a quantity of vines, trained on horizontal trellis frames, which rested on poles at a height of 7 or 8 feet from the ground" in the region of Koshu, Yamanashi. [6]