Furmint's origins are uncertain — it may have arrived in Hungary with settlers from the Italian Friuli region. Tokaj wine was first documented in the 13th century, and the discovery of botrytis-affected winemaking is traditionally attributed to a war delay in the 1630s that forced delayed harvest. The 1700 appellation demarcation — the world's first — was established by Prince Rákóczi II. The communist era (1945–1990) severely damaged quality, which has since been dramatically restored.
Furmint is Hungary's most important wine grape and the foundation of Tokaj, one of the world's oldest and most historically significant wine regions — a tradition dating to at least 1650, when the world's first botrytised wine was officially recorded (though likely much earlier). Tokaj's 'golden wine' (Tokaji Aszú) was the preferred drink of European royalty for centuries — Louis XIV called it 'the wine of kings and the king of wines' — and the Tokaj wine region was the world's first classified wine appellation, established by decree in 1700, 55 years before Bordeaux. Furmint produces two utterly different styles: the volcanic, mineral, high-acid dry wines ('Furmint' varietal wines, a rapidly developing category led by producers like István Szepsy and Erzsébet Pince) and the legendary Tokaji Aszú, in which botrytis-affected grapes ('aszú berries') are added to base wine in traditionally measured 'puttonyos' (hods), creating wines of extraordinary sweetness, acidity, and longevity that can age for 50–100 years.
FOOD PAIRING: Furmint spans the complete culinary spectrum from the Provenance 1000 recipes. Dry Furmint: Grilled Trout with Dill, Hungarian Fisherman's Soup (Halászlé), Szekely Goulash (sauerkraut-pork stew), Hard Cheeses. Tokaji Aszú: Foie Gras Terrine (the classic 5 and 6 puttonyos pairing), Roquefort and Stilton (classic botrytis wine and blue cheese), Hungarian Nut Roll (beigli), Crème Brûlée, Sautéed Langoustines with Coral Butter.
{"Tokaj's unique 'aszú' method — adding individually hand-harvested botrytis berries to base wine in precise proportions — has no exact parallel in the wine world and is protected under EU law","The Tokaj region's volcanic tuff soil and misty Bodrog-Tisza river confluence create ideal conditions for Botrytis Cinerea — the 'noble rot' that concentrates sugars without bitterness","Furmint's exceptionally high natural acidity (one of the highest of any variety) provides the structure that balances Tokaji Aszú's sweetness and enables its extraordinary ageing potential","István Szepsy is considered the greatest living Tokaj producer — his Tokaji Aszú 6 Puttonyos and dry Furmint wines are benchmarks","The Puttonyos system now works with just 5 and 6 puttonyos classifications — 5p (minimum 120g/L residual sugar) and 6p (minimum 150g/L) plus the ultra-rare Eszencia","Dry Furmint is one of wine's most exciting emerging categories — flint, citrus, volcanic mineral, and extraordinary food affinity"}
For an introduction to the range, compare Szepsy's dry Furmint with his Tokaji Aszú 6 Puttonyos — the same grape, same producer, utterly different wines. Tokaji Eszencia (the free-run juice of aszú berries) is perhaps the sweetest wine ever produced (400–900 g/L residual sugar) and can theoretically age indefinitely. Look for older vintages (1999, 2000, 2003, 2007 are great years) for the finest value.
{"Overlooking dry Furmint as a serious wine category — it is emerging as one of Europe's finest dry whites","Serving Tokaji Aszú too cold — it benefits from 12–14°C to reveal its full complexity","Missing the historical context — Tokaj's 1700 appellation demarcation predates Bordeaux's 1855 Classification by 155 years"}