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Wine Buff's Stuff: 2

October 12th 2010 04:27
Un bar aux Folies Bergère, Manet
Un bar aux Folies Bergère, the last major work of Édouard Manet.


Understanding wine is a diplomatic passport to life. A demonstration of wine knowledge and discernment, as long as it is done with modesty, will always be appreciated.


Our lists of Wine Buff's Stuff offer a variety of facts and occasional figures about wine and the people who make it. They will never be dull. They will be at times dense but interesting, at others light but fun. They will enhance any conversation.

They will be like wine itself.

1.
Cool stuff
The ideal temperature to store wine is 10-13 degrees centigrade (50-55F). A little cooler is not going to hurt the wine, but it slows the maturing process. And don't worry if the temperature drops briefly to freezing - wines won't freeze until some way below 0C/32F because the alcohol acts as an antifreeze.

2.
Bottle sizes
We can never remember this. Somebody needs to put it on a fridge magnet so it's handy for reference. Meanwhile, kindly pass the Melchior.

750ml = a bottle
1.5L = a magnum
3L = a Jeroboam
4.5L = a Rehoboam
6L = a Methuselah
9L = a Salmanazar

12L = a Balthazar
15L = a Nebuchadnezzar
18L = a Melchior
20L = a Solomon
30L = a Melchizedek

3.
The seal deal
Using cork to seal wine bottles did not became common until the 17th century and was hardly an innovation. Beer, medicine, cosmetics and food were all commonly stored in cork-sealed containers before wine ever was.

4.
Timber of distinction
A French oak tree harvested for use in wine barrels is, on average, 170 years old.
french oak barrels


5.
Into thin air
In commercial wineries, 10 per cent and more of wine in a vat can be lost to evaporation.

6.
Growing up in the city
London is famous for Big Ben, Buckingham Palace and vineyards. Well, okay, one vineyard, and it may not be famous yet, but give it a chance — it was only planted in 2009. London's first commercial vineyard since medieval times is a project by Capel Manor Horticultural College. Students and community volunteers planted 1,500 Bacchus vines on land at the Forty Hall Organic Farm. The vineyard manager, Sarah Vaughan-Roberts, hopes the free-draining, gravelly soil of Forty Hall will become a terroir of British wine. All profits from Forty Hall will be returned to a Capel Manor college charity which promotes education about sustainable urban agriculture.

7.
Stain pain
Dentists say the best way to prevent staining caused by wine, as well as other beverages, is to use a tooth paste containing a whitening agent. One dentist who suggested an alternative - don't drink wine - has since apologised and is now completing 500 hours of voluntary vine-pruning work.

8.
Wine whine
Wine appellation status in the United States is overseen by the US Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. The bureau, we think, badly needs a new name featuring the word wine.

9.
Headache cure
The mythology of Persia says wine was discovered by a woman. No name is given but the story goes that she drank the fermented juice of grapes stored in a jar. She then went to sleep and woke up cured of a headache. It seems things have been turned around since ancient Persian times.

10.
Grape of the day - lambrusco
If the Gods came to Earth for a visit, perhaps to check on human progress in issues of universal importance such as wisdom, tolerance and wine technology, what wine would you serve them? The answer, of course, depends on where they are and what they are doing. Why waste a grand cru if the decide to eat at Macca's? But if, by chance, they land in Lombardy, and especially if it's a baking Italian summer afternoon, then you could show the Gods a little bit of Heaven on Earth by seating them at a rough trestle table shaded by a vine-covered pergola and serving them Lambrusco, the wine made from the grape of the same name. There is evidence the Etruscans cultivated lambrusco grapes in Roman times. The grapes and the wine originate from five zones in Emilia-Romagna and Lombardy. Lambrusco should be drunk young. It pours frothy and tastes frizzante, a word probably donated to the Italian language by the Gods on an earlier visit. It means slightly sparkling.
lambrusco, sparkling red
Lambrusco - pure frizzante



Wikipedia, beekmanwine.com, rackwine.com, 800wine.com, www.thewinedoctor.com; French oak vat image: www.weimax.com



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Wine Buff's Stuff: 1

October 11th 2010 11:19
wine buff's stuff
Mural by Linda Paul

Understanding wine is a diplomatic passport to life. A demonstration of wine knowledge and discernment, as long as it is done with modesty, will always be appreciated.

Our lists of Wine Buff's Stuff offer a variety of facts and occasional figures about wine and the people who make it. They will never be dull. They will be at times dense but interesting, at others light but fun. They will enhance any conversation.

They will be like wine itself.


1.
So many varieties, so little time
There are about 10,000 wine grape varieties on Earth. We have it on the highest authority that there are many more in Heaven.

2.
Heady invention
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that the Chinese may have been fermenting alcoholic beverages and wine as early as 6000 BC. The conclusion is based on evidence of tartaric acid found on shards of Chinese pottery. There is therefore ample evidence that the Chinese invented the hangover.

3.
It all starts with oak
Good wine is stored in oak vats, or barrels. There are about 400 varieties of oak tree, of which only 20 are suitable for making wine vats, and wine makers need to choose the right one as various oaks affect, in various ways, the colour, flavour, tannin profile and texture of wine.
oak wine barrels


4.
The age of the cork
Cork was not used to seal bottles until the 17th century. Before that wine was stored in terracotta amphoras and, later, in wooden barrels, and drunk before it spoiled.

5.
Clusters and stuff
1 grape cluster = 1 glass
75 grapes = 1 cluster
4 clusters = 1 bottle
40 clusters = 1 vine
1 vine = 10 bottles
1200 clusters = 1 barrel
1 barrel = 25 cases
400 vines = 1 acre
1 acre = 332 cases

6.
First prise
The corkscrew has a misty history. Who invented it is not known, but it is known that the idea was inspired by a tool called the bulletscrew or gun worm, a device that extracted stuck bullets from rifles.
corkscrews


7.
White wine can stain teeth
A 2009 study at the College of Dentistry, New York University, showed white wine is capable of creating conditions that enable chemicals in other beverages, such as coffee and tea, to taint teeth. How they worked it out is interesting: they soaked cows’ teeth in white wine, red wine, or water for an hour and then immersed them in tea. The result was that teeth soaked in white wine stained significantly darker after the tea dunking than the teeth immersed in water. The white wine teeth were still much lighter than the red wine teeth, but this still came as a shock given that white wine is traditionally seen as clean.

8.
Info central
The State Library of South Australia has the largest collection of wine literature in the southern hemisphere and one of the biggest in the world. The collection ranges from an 11th century manuscript leaf to books and magazines in many languages, wine labels, wine lists and diaries of winemakers.

9.
Old Fart wine
Boutinot Wine Estates Inc, of France's Languedoc region, produces Old Fart wine. Boutinot claims it's a perfectly serious brand. We will believe it when they send us a sample case.

10.
Grape of the day - Syrah
Syrah (or shiraz, as it is usually called in Australia, South Africa and Canada), was estimated in 2004 to be the world's seventh-most grown grape. DNA profiling in 1999 found syrah to be the offspring of two obscure grapes from south-eastern France, dureza and mondeuse blanche. This was a surprise finding because, although syrah has long been identified with the great vineyards of the Rhône region of south-eastern France, it was generally believed to have originated either in Syria or the Iranian city of shiraz. Rhône region winemakers are still grinning at the DNA result, now knowing they truly own the grape they have made great. Syrah is one of the true grape blue bloods, producing huge wines with strong tannins and complex combinations of flavours.
wine buff's stuff, cotes du rhone


Wikipedia, beekmanwine.com, rackwine.com, 800wine.com
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