Description
Muscadine grapes and are native to the Southeastern United States and found growing wild, and in the back yards of many southern homes.
The muscadines are different in several ways. First, the most notable difference is the thick skin of the grape. This thick skin (which accounts for 40% of the weight of the grape) gives muscadine grapes a natural resistance to fungi, disease, and insects, and is where much of the antioxidant power of the muscadine grape is stored.