Sumoll

The Sumoll is a black grape variety. It is a rustic variety, native from the Penedès region in Catalonia (EU), drought resistant and with uniform development. The grape is long and big. It is used to produce red, white, rosé wines and cava (Catalan form of Champagne, the so-called Traditional Method). Its former presence is also evident in the number of different names in Catalan dialects: sumoi, chimoi, saumoll, somoi, sumoy, ximoll, somoll, ximoy, xemoll, among others.[1]

Sumoll
Grape (Vitis)
Color of berry skinBlack
Also calledRabo de ovella, Sumoi, Sunier, Sumoll negro, Sumoll tinto, Vijariego negra, Verijariego negra, Vijariego Negro
Notable regionsPenedès
VIVC number12072

The name is related to the local slang term sumollar, which means maturing or withering, from the Latin verb submolliare. Young wine from Sumoll grape has a slight roughness that disappears with aging. Its production is low and treatment for achieving quality wines requires high skills in wine production. Before and after phylloxera, the Sumoll was a variety of black grape widely grown throughout Catalonia.[2] The entrance to the European Union in 1986 accelerated discredit of local varieties, which were not considered able to make good & competitive wines.[1] It has been replaced by other varieties and nowadays its culture is rare, with less than one hundred hectares planted (247 acres).[3] This trend begins to change within the last years. Wine growers are starting to recover and appreciate this variety, as they see an opportunity to create original wines that differentiate themselves by creating their own specialties, gaining a distance from the big industrial companies using only the stocks of international ubiquitous fashionable types - Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot or Chardonnay.[4]

The Sumoll is one of the varieties referred by the following DOs (regional certificate of origin authorities), Catalunya, Pla de Bages, Tarragona. In Australia four crossings have been created from Cabernet Sauvignon and Sumoll: Cienna, Vermillion, Rubienne, and Tyrian. The purpose of this crossing is to adapt Sumoll qualities to suit the Australian climate.

Using the synonym Vijariego Negro, to which it has been shown to be genetically identical, it is an authorised variety in a number of the Canary Islands DOPs, and the Spanish mainland Pla de Bages DOP.[5]

Sumoll Blanc is a white variety that is genetically unrelated.[5][6]

Bibliography

References

  1. Josep M. Puiggròs i Jové, «Documentació històrica del sumoll-sumoi» in: La varietat sumoll, 2012, page 27
  2. Josep M. Puiggròs i Jové, «Seguint les petjades de la varietat sumoll» Institut d'Estudis Catalans, 2010
  3. «sumoll», Vinum.cat [last browsed Nov25, 2013]
  4. Malena Fabregat, «Sumoll, autòctona i clandestina», Gourmet's, El Periódico.com s.d.
  5. Driscoll, Killian. "Guide to the wine grape varieties in Spain". www.artobatours.com. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  6. J. Robinson, J. Harding and J. Vouillamoz Wine Grapes - A complete guide to 1,368 vine varieties, including their origins and flavours ISBN 978-1-846-14446-2
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