A horse with coloring similar to that of a Palomino Horse.
your pal/ fair (in any sense)/ good as gold/ attractive blond(e)
White-wine grape, mostly used for Sherry-type fortified wines, widely grown in Spain and South Africa. Identical to the Listan variety found in France. Also found in Australia and California where it is also used mainly to produce fortified wines. The grape was once thought to be the Golden Chasselas, a table grape, where grown in California. The wine-must has tendency to oxidize quickly, a characteristic that can be ignored when used for sherry production.
Various shades of gold. A palomino horse has a white mane and tail.
A horse with a golden or tan coat and a white or cream-colored mane and tail, thought to have been developed from Arabian stock. Pinto A horse with patchy markings of white and another color. Also called paint.
The main grape used for making sherry.
a dilute chestnut, cremello is a double dilute chestnut so they also breed true, but add the cream gene
a golden or cream-colored horse with a white tail
a heterozygous cream, having only one cream gene
a pale horse (originally it was a pale dove instead), and to appal means to turn pale
Not a horse, but a white grape variety used in sherry.
a horse the color of a "new gold coin" with white points. White legs are not necissary, but usually wanted. Palominos are a color, not a breed. Palominos can only be born by breeding two palominos, and even then, only 1/2 of the foals will turn out palominos. Many breeds do not allow palominos to be registered, such as arabians and thoroughbreds, and are therefore classified as chestnuts.
a horse with a golden yellow coat color and a white mane and tail
Coat color in which the body can be varying shades of gold, with a silver or white mane and tail.
(Food & Wine) The main grape used in making sherry.
A coat color of tan body and white mane and tail
Palomino is a white grape widely grown in Spain and South Africa, and best known for its use in the manufacture of sherry.