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8:43 PM

2008 - Wine Source

Today's Wine Source Article

Medieval Wine Trivia


The cycle of the vineyards and man's enjoyment of wine has continued throughout the ages
with some of these intriguing differences...

ONCE UPON A TIME

Roman civilization was well versed in viticulture and wine making, but then the Barbarians
destroyed their vineyards and turned them into pastureland and cornfields. Luckily,
Benedictine and other monks kept the art of viticulture alive at their monasteries. By the
12th century, viticulture was fully revived.

THEY WEREN'T SO FUSSY

One of the major differences between today's wine connoisseurs and medieval man was that
back then they weren't so concerned with which exact vineyard a wine came from, but rather
the general area. The body of the wine was more important than it's subtle flavors and
aroma.

JUST BEING PRACTICAL

Wine was mostly the drink of the upper classes and rich merchants, while the lower classes
generally drank beer, cider or mead.

Also, in medieval times, much of the water was tainted by sewage, so naturally, people
preferred to drink wine.

OTHER USES

Wine also served to relieve minor aches and pains.

In 1166, the vintages were so plentiful and there was such an over production of wine, that in
Franconia (a part of what is now Germany), they mixed wine with lime for use in building
construction.

DRINK UP BEFORE IT GOES BAD

In medieval times, the aging of wine wasn't important. This was partly due to the fact that
much of the wine was too unstable to age well anyway, and if air hit it, it might turn to
vinegar. One way to combat this problem was to use a thin film covering of olive oil. Other
methods included adding burnt salt, mixing in cloves, or plunging lighted torches dipped in
pitch into the wine.

Vintners and wine sellers often just mixed good wine in with bad, at least until the practice
was later forbidden. Others put cloves in wine to keep it from spoiling.

A major advance of medieval wine making was the discovery of sulphur by the alchemists.
This was now used to preserve the wine.

A PINCH OF THIS AND A PINCH OF THAT

Spices were added to wine for the same reason they were added to food: for variety and to
disguise it's lackluster or bad flavor. Spiced wines were called Piments.

When bad weather resulted in poor ripening of the grapes, flavors and herbs were often added
to the wine. The resulting beverage would then take on the taste and character of these
added ingredients. If the poor crop yielded grapes low in sugar, medieval man sometimes
added cooked grape juice or honey to bring up the sugar levels so the final alcohol content
would increase.

To clarify the wine, they used eggs, pine kernels, peach stones or river pebbles. Honey was
sometimes added to maintain the proper color.

Because their was so much unstable wine, many medieval vintners diligently tried to keep
their barrels and wine vessels as clean as possible. Various methods to clean them were
used, including scouring with cold water, old wine or salt water. Sometimes they would then
fumigate them with rosemary or cedar wood.

MEANWHILE, OUT IN THE GRAPE FIELDS

Medieval viticulture's drawbacks were partly due to slow technical progress in general during
that time, and the cultivation of the vineyards was not as advanced as it had been in Roman
times.

One new development for the time was the use of the "low vineyard". Vines started to be tied
to upright stakes and weren't allowed to be grown over 4 feet high.

FROM MALMSEY TO MERLOT

The most famous of medieval wines was Malmsey. This was a sweet wine made from grapes
grown primarily in Crete or Cyprus. We still have a form of Malmsey today which is basically a
sweet type of Madeira wine. But today's wine drinkers generally prefer drier, more complex
wines than their medieval ancestors had access to.

Laura Eggers Underhill lived in Sonoma County for several years, soaking up the beauty
and essence of wine country whenever she could. Now based iin Southern California, she has
explored many California wine regions. Visit her website at href="http://www.experience-wine-country.com">http://www.experience-wine-country.com



A synopsis on Wine Source.

Medieval Wine Trivia


The cycle of the vineyards and man's enjoyment of wine has continued throughout the ages
with some of these intriguing differences...ONCE UPON A TIM...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Wine Source Items For Viewing

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Price: 65.99 USD



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11:44 AM

2008 - Wine Commercials

The Best Articles on Wine Commercials

Restaurant Wine List Review - Wine Taste, Why Keep It a Secret?


We?re your customers. That?s right, we pay your bills ? so listen up. Why can?t we understand your wine list? We know what we like, but your wine list doesn?t give us a clue. Ok, so we?re not wine knowledgeable, don?t hate us because we?d still like some wine that we?ll enjoy. We really like wine, especially with a good meal. But we don?t want to study the stuff so we can understand your wine list and know how a wine will taste.

Count these up: 1) County of Origin, 2) Producer, 3) Vintage date, 4) Appellation, 5) Variety of Grape, 6) Vineyard, and 7) season the grapes were picked (Ice Wine, Late Harvest, etc.). That?s right, seven items of information must be catalogued and understood to give us a chance at knowing what a wine tastes like when reading your traditional wine list. Keep six of these, change the seventh, and all bets are off on how the wine will taste. We get as confused as a blind dog in a meat house.

If you hear a lot of us saying, ?Just give me a glass of your house white,? you have a wine list problem. Hey, we?re not too cheap to buy a bottle of wine; we just don?t want to make a sizeable investment in a bottle we may not like. So why keep us in the dark, trying to decipher your wine list code? Why not tell us how the wine tastes, and we?ll pop for a bottle or two.

Expensive restaurants once solved this problem with a sommelier whose job it was to discern our taste preference, analyze the menu we?ve ordered, and recommend a wine we would enjoy with our meal. There are precious few qualified sommeliers around these days, especially in affordable restaurants. When your wait staff recommends, it?s usually wines they like.

The only thing worse than a traditional wine list is one with ?winese? puffery descriptions.
Example: ?This wine has hints of dark tree fruit, root vegetable, autumn leaves, pears, berries and vanilla, with a strong finish of cigar box.? Amazing! Do you have something that tastes like wine?

In January of 1980, Grey Moss Inn in Grey Forrest, Texas, implemented the ?Customer Friendly Wine List.? Customers could order wines by the way they taste for the first time ever. The wine list was divided into categories:

1) Slightly Sweet, 2) Light, Soft, 3) Light, Crisp, Fruity, 3) Fuller, Rounded, Dry,
4) Elegance, Finesse, 5) Robust, Complex, Full Flavored 6) After Dinner Sweet

Red, white and rose wines all appeared in most categories. Some wines like Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon appeared under as many as three categories. As customers, we knew that by staying within a category we could be experimental ordering wine and still enjoy our selection.

Jill Goolden published the book, The Taste of Wine, around 1990 , and about a decade later Fiona Beckett published Wines by Style. The thesis of these books is to classify wine by how it tastes, rather than the seven criteria above. These books led to a rash of wine lists offering up their contents by taste profile ? but these glimmering lights seem to be flickering out.

If you lack the confidence to develop a wine list for your restaurant that lets us order wines by the way they taste, hire a qualified wine consultant, or work closely with your vendors to achieve your goal. Then watch your wines sales grow from glasses to bottles, as we feel comfortable ordering from your list.

Bill Stephens writes the syndicated column http://www.heyrestaurantguy.com . His 35 year career in food service includes restaurateur, caterer, food and wine columnist for Harte-Hanks, Murdoch and Hearst Newspapers, food and wine magazine journalist, and he consults for restaurants with Bill Stephens Associates http://www.billstephensassociates.com



Short Review on Wine Commercials

Restaurant Wine List Review - Wine Taste, Why Keep It a Secret?


We?re your customers. That?s right, we pay your bills ? so listen up. Why can?t we understand your wine list? We know what we like, but your wine list...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

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The FTD Garden Basket - Standard


This basket holds a sampling of many favorites including a red rose, a yellow lily, white daisies, yellow sunflowers, purple aster, white alstroemeria, and more. B24-3284S


Price: 46.99 USD



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The kitchen is one part of your home that is always as scattered as anything can get. But what about folks like us who fall short on the space at home? Oh, how we wish there could be a compact set that could function as the kitchen zone and still make cooking a cherishing experience that it is! The brainchild of Jonathan Owen Pearson, we finally have a concept kitchen that will be a perfect fit for our compact modern homes. The free standing kitchen unit comes fully equipped with all the nec

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Due to Kentucky state law, we can't open the liquor store until 1pm on Sunday afternoon. This displeases the hopeless alcoholics and serial shoppers. They WAIT OUTSIDE THE DOOR until we open. God, I hate the people who get out of their cars and stand in front of the door. They're never cool people, ever. Decent people are at home nursing hangovers or at bars watching football. Only assholes stand in line to be the first wave in to shuffle aimlessly through the aisles of a liquor store. And sinc

Untitled

Tue, 25 Nov 2008 16:17:20 -0800
Warm weather no bueno By Amy Machnak, Sunset Food Writer Summer is a wonderful time of year...unless you’re a bottle of olive oil. As we discussed earlier, heat and light are bad for oil, so we've had to move our bottles to a cooler spot where they wouldn't be affected by long days of hot sunshine. Lucky for us, we have a wine cellar. A few members of team olive borrowed (read: hijacked) the mail cart and moved the boxes of filled bottles to the new, more temperate, location. Here i

Vinotemp 700 Provincial Oak Wine Cooler Cabinet

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Features: -Approx. bottle capacity: 440 -Two special furniture trim glass doors -Complete with light, locks and factory finishing -High quality White Oak exterior -3 coats finishing in the color of your choice -3 coats semi gloss treatment -Fluorescent light -Brass finish security locks & keys -Redwood / aluminium racking system -Universal 3 3/4″ racking to fit most bottle sizes -Wine Mate self-contained cooling system (1500BTU) -Digital temperature control -Dimensions: 88″ H x 51″ W x 29


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