Wine is an
alcoholic drink made from the fermented juice of fruit, specifically the fruit
of the grape vine Vitis vinifera.
Most non-Moslem countries and cultures have evolved social rituals for
the consumption of alcohol, using it to celebrate feast days and special
occasions such as weddings. In many societies, alcohol is consumed in the form
of distilled spirits, drunk in small shots and often accompanied by toasts. In
Russia, for example, vodka is widely drunk; in China and Japan it is baijiu or
sake. This drinking of distilled spirits, consumed in small shots, is typically
limited to groups of males and can often result in public inebriation.
The European
tradition of wine consumption is different, in that the wine is sipped slowly,
usually accompanied by food, and in social or family groups that include women.
Wine drinking is thus regarded as a healthier and more civilized way of
consuming alcohol. In modern societies, where women are playing an increasingly
independent and important role in business and public life, wine drinking is
thus becoming more and more widespread.
Whether for
reasons of health, economics, or social change, the consumption of distilled
spirits and beer has seen a steady decline in the twenty-first century while
the consumption of wine has increased dramatically. Cocktail parties have long
been being replaced by wine-and-cheese parties, and prime rib dinners are
increasingly washed down with Burgundy rather than bourbon. For the world’s two
largest markets, wine consumption in the US and China is forecast to increase
by 25 percent between 2014 and 2018.
In 2010, the US
became the world’s largest consumer of wine, surpassing even France. But while
wine drinking in France, as in most of Mediterranean Europe, is part of the
traditional culture, in America wine drinking is something new. For a variety
of reasons which will be examined later, North America has evolved a long
tradition of whisky and cocktail drinking, while wine drinking was regarded
with a certain amount of suspicion as being “European” with all the ambivalent
connotations that the word implies.
From an early
age, most Southern Europeans have been drinking wine with every meal; they
drink wine to quench their thirst and to help them digest their food. In
France, wine drinking crosses all class divisions; rich and poor, young and old
regard wine as the natural accompaniment to every meal. Of the Italians, it has
been said that they do not drink wine, they eat it; meaning that, like salt and
pepper, wine is regarded as an everyday accompaniment to food. Of course rich
Europeans can afford more expensive wine than poor Europeans, but it is
believed that no man is so poor he cannot afford a glass of red to aid his
digestion.
Many young
European children begin drinking wine (mixed with water) at mealtimes. In
contrast, Americans prohibit alcohol until the age of twenty-one, often leading
to binge drinking at college. Therefore, if only for legal reasons, those
Americans who do enjoy wine usually did not start drinking it until they were
in their twenties, and then only for special occasions. Consequently, although
attitudes are changing, compared to Europeans, Americans are often
self-conscious or apprehensive about drinking wine and still regard it as
something “mysterious.”
My book has
been written to dispel those fears and to remove the mystery from wine. Based
closely on the very popular six week Wine Appreciation program offered
regularly at Books & Books in Coral Gables, Florida, the book covers all the
basics, from the history of wine to how best to drink and, most importantly,
how to discover and appreciate its many pleasures.
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