How History Teaches Us How to Make Homemade Wine

Author: Admin  //  Category: Wine
How History Teaches Us How to Make Homemade Wine

The pleasure people get from wine is an ageless joy that has been enjoyed for centuries. Whether you have enjoyed with your meals, alone with that special someone, in social situations, a great wine is remembered by the drinkers even after the bottle is gone. The romance that we have with wine has been apart of our existence since the dawn of time. Our history of winemaking shows that wine has been around from at least 8000 years and archeologists have found evidence that man has been making mead (a honey based wine) around 10,000 years ago. When you are learning How to Make Homemade Wine you need to know that throughout history wine has been an important part of life for many peoples.

The truest form of wine is those made from the fruit called grapes, its juice is fermented and bottled with great care. In the world there are many types of grapes, however by far the highest quality wines are made from the European wine grape Vitis Vinifera. It has the delicate balance of flavors, sugar, aromas and other great qualities needed for a good wine are available in this type of grape. The grape is thought to have been found in the Caucasus region of Europe. The area is surrounded by the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea, and the Caucasus Mountains and is located in the modern nations of Georgia and the southern part of Russia. Vitis Vinifera has been cross bred with many hundreds of grape varieties, each suited to the geography of it location and produced to have its own distinct types of wine.

The art of viticulture (growing grapes) and the art of viniculture (growing grapes for wine) are many thousands of years old. In Mesopotamia, now modern day Iraq, which sits between the Tigris River and the Euphrates River were the very first civilizations in history to cultivate grapes and where viniculture was fist practiced, some thousands of years ago, In the Code of Hammurabi, is the earth’s first written law that contains the laws governing how wine should be made and sold over 4000 years ago.

We may never find out how the men learned how to make wine from grapes. The ancient Greeks have stories that tell us that Dionysus, the Greek God of wine and vegetation taught the ancient Greeks how to grow grapes and what process was needed to make wine. The Greeks became the first people in recorded history to plant vineyards for commercial use and to market those grapes to people of other countries over 3500 years ago.

Wine was a very popular drink for the ancient civilizations and was also held to be sacred as well. Wine was a part of many religious rituals and celebrations. The Greeks with their love of sea travel spread the news about growing grapes throughout the Mediterranean basin. They taught many other peoples the art of making wine, and how to grow grapes which is evident in the planted vineyards that showed up in lands from the Black Sea in the East to the East side of Spain in the west.

Wine drinkers of today would have been disappointed in the Greek wine of yesterday. The wine was stored in such a way that the flavor tasted more like turpentine than the wine of today, this is due in part to the fact that the storage vessel were lined with a resin substance that mixed into the wine to give it this awful taste. In addition to that, they flavor the wine with many different spices, herbs, flowers and even some perfumes; they also cut the wine with water before drinking it.

Then the Romans came along and borrowed some of the Greek culture for growing grapes when they conquered this civilization. Viticulture moved from the Greek to the Romans. When the Roman Empire expanded, viticulture expanded as well, vineyards were planted in many different areas all over Europe, in places that would later become France, Germany, Italy and England. The many vineyards under the Roman rule are still producing grapes for wine today.

Around 476 AD, the Romans fell at the feet of the German invaders. Europe settles a setback in political and scientific areas, with the institutions of learning stopping for a while. Viticulture survived the ravages of this problem because the Christian Religion picked up the making of wine, these early monks helped to preserve the method of wine making and even took over the vineyard that were necessary to practice them. The monks taught each other how to make homemade wine for sacraments and other religious reasons.

The renaissance in Europe along with the many travels of Columbus brought a revival of trade, science and as well as many other areas. The Europeans expanded to the New World, they took along wine making and by the 1500’s viticulture was introduced to the South Americans in Chile and in the 1800’s Spanish missionaries were growing grapes in California.

In North America, Leif Eriksson, stumbled upon the abundance of grape vines growing, on his voyage in 1000 AD, he called the area he found Vineland. Even though there were many grapes, they were not suitable for wine making. The species of grapes was called Vitis Lambusca, which thrives in New England all the way to Indiana and all the way down to Georgia. Good wine from these native grapes was almost impossible to make. The European wine would not grow on the soil and in the climate of North America, The viticulturalists from France went to Delaware to try and turn the Vitis Lambusca wine into good wine, they were unsuccessful.

A gentleman named John James Dufour was the one to have the first success in viticulture with these grapes in the 1800s. From the work that Dufour did, others took up his work and started the process of crossbreeding, nourishing and cultivating until they had the very first good grapes. From these efforts many different types of grapes emerged, places like Concord, Niagara, and Delaware were getting the American East their start in the wine industry. Ohio, New York and New Jersey developed even more important wine producing regions. About this time wines from California appeared, it was discovered that the European grapes could grow in these areas, because of the climate and the type of soil found there.

Then the bottom fell out of the European wine industry, with the introduction of the eastern American root louse, phylloxera, to the vineyards of Europe. The insect destroyed most of the European varieties in Europe, Australia and even in California. Almost all of the worlds stock of the Vitis vinifera was destroyed. However there were some American varieties that were unaffected by the parasite, and the European grape was saved by grafting the European variety of grapes with the American rootstocks. The European vineyards recovered from the disaster and were on the comeback all in the middle of the 19th century. 

Today wine is produced everywhere and is drunk by millions of people In North America the grapes are hybridized by crossing them with European and American varieties have completely changed how wine tastes and is produce throughout Eastern United States. This study of the history of wine is great for learning what made the wine that you drink or make tastes so good.

Watch the video related to wine

Iron and Wine Music Video … Iron and Wine Boy With Coin Music Video

Help answer the question about wine

What is the best wine to give for a wedding gift?
My wife and I do not drink wine. We are going to a wedding for some people who love wine. We were wondering what is the best type of wine to give for the wedding gift. We are hoping for a limit of $60 (what can I say, times are tough for us all). Thanks!

About Author

If you are interested in reading more free wine making articles and sign-up for a free e-course visit the author’s websites www.howtomakehomemadewine.infohttp://www.howtomakehomemadewine.info and www.winemakingequipment.bizhttp://www.winemakingequipment.biz
By: Randy T. Slabey
Copyright 2008 RTS Leasing LLC
How to Make Homemade Wine

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18 Responses to “How History Teaches Us How to Make Homemade Wine”

  1. Alice H Says:
  2. WyattLanz Says:

    that was the best music video ive seen for a long time.

  3. bubblesxpopxelectric Says:

    Totally agree with you.

  4. Joe Says:

    Yeah . . . .

    So you’re just into pissing money away and you have none left to hire true winemakers and grape growers, so you turned to Yahoo Answers to get your 3 paragraph crash course?? In that case, I just cloned a dinosaur in my kitchen . . . . Woo Hoo!

    What happened to your Cambridge acceptance to get a law degree and your other promising future as a doctor???

    I call B.S. on this one!

  5. Robby S Says:

    First you must find a type of red wine you enjoy drinking. There are so many varietials out there. What kinds of foods do you enjoy?

    For Steak, you may want a merlot or cabernet
    For Lamb, you may want a cebernet or zinfandel
    For BBQ, you may want a zinfandel
    For grilled chicken and/or pork perhaps a pinot

    There's no right or wrong choice, wine is about preference.

    There are a couple great wines out in the market place which are under $40 and have had great reviews and are good to drink now or celler for while. 2003 Whitehall Lane Cabernet has had several great reviews. But there are also sooo many others. Hartford Court also has some wonderful Zinfandels and Pinot's.

    Wine tasting a big thing now… you may want to check out a site called localwineevents.com to see if there is a wine tasting event in your area to gather the information you need to make an informed selection.

  6. Katie B Says:

    If drinking wine you plan 1 bottle for 4 and 1/2 servings – however a tasting is far less about 1 oz per taster (about 30ml) which is approximately 25 tastings per bottle (750ml). I do recommend purchasing a few extra bottles to sell (just double your purchase price) or making a deal with a local wine seller to give you a commission for referring people to them for additional bottles. Have a card handy with the sellers name, address and a list of the wines they are tasting as well as a 1-5 score for the taster to keep so they remember the wines they preferred. Don't forget to have a selection of cheeses and crackers as well as some grapes and lots of water for cleansing the pallet (i recommend having a large vessel with cucumber slices in it for a full cleanse of the wine sugars) – then pour it into smaller pitchers as you go. Hope this helps!

  7. urunanil Says:

    this man is deep ı think, and song is both simple and strong

  8. GothNinja Says:

    To make wine at home, these are my favorite resources:
    http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/
    http://www.homewinemaking.co.uk/

    For virtually any fruit wine, the fruit is crushed in a press to extract the juice. Depending on the style, the pulp and seeds will be left in the must to ferment with the juice. For others, it will be strained out.

    I just finished a batch of pomegranate wine (where the seeds pretty much ARE the juice) where I crushed all the pomegranates myself. It's quite a bit of work without the proper press.

  9. thedoc56 Says:

    greaat now im gonna think about mexicans wenever i hear this songg

  10. rondaira Says:

    No es danza mexicana, es baile español (flamenco) spanish

  11. Apurlec Says:

    Boy, Mexicans has nothing to do here. Only the choreography is Spanish Flamenco style; is not Flamenco dance, though. Man, those girls are pretty!

  12. MissEmilie Says:

    Pick up a nice cheap sauvignon blanc. It's crisp and light. Unlike chardonnay which is too oaky and buttery for me now. Not unless you want your chicken dish to taste like you dipped it in a vat of butter! Hee. Other good light choices are pinot gris or pinot grigio.

  13. treklemmer Says:

    ” 800,008 views ” x)

  14. t29485 Says:
  15. ♂ Mike ♂ ♥s Baby Isaac too! Says:

    Special wine with a very high alcohol content, supposedly…so it kills the germs of the person who drank before you…eeew.

    Until it is consecrated that is, then it becomes the blood of Christ and is no longer wine.

  16. JB Says:

    yes, the cooking wine next to vinegar is ok

  17. blondeqt94 Says:

    pretty dancing

  18. thedoc56 Says:

    flamenco can suck my guapo balllsack

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