Fruit wine

Pomegranate wine from Azerbaijan

Fruit wines are fermented alcoholic beverages made from a variety of base ingredients (other than grapes); they may also have additional flavors taken from fruits, flowers, and herbs. This definition is sometimes broadened to include any fermented alcoholic beverage except beer. For historical reasons, mead, cider, and perry are also excluded from the definition of fruit wine.[1][2]

Fruit wines have traditionally been popular with home winemakers and in areas with cool climates such as North America and Scandinavia; in Africa, India, and the Philippines, wine is made from bananas.

Labeling

Fruit wines are usually referred to by their main ingredient (e.g., plum wine or elderberry wine) because the usual definition of wine states that it is made from fermented grape juice.

In the European Union, wine is legally defined as the fermented juice of grapes.[3]

In the United Kingdom, fruit wine is commonly called country wine; the term should not be conflated with the French term vin de pays, which is grape wine. In British legislation, the term made-wine is used.[4]

Production

Elderberries, a common fruit wine ingredient.

Fruit wine can be made from virtually any plant matter that can be fermented.[3] Most fruits and berries have the potential to produce wine. There are a number of methods of extracting flavour and juice from the fruits or plants being used, pressing the juice, stewing and fermenting the pulp of the fruits are common.[5] Few foods other than grapes have the balanced quantities of sugar, acid, tannin, nutritive salts for yeast feeding and water to naturally produce a stable, drinkable wine, so most country wines are adjusted in one or more respects at fermentation. However, some of these products do require the addition of sugar or honey to make them palatable and to increase the alcoholic content (sugar is converted to alcohol in the fermentation). Two commonly produced varieties are elderberry wine and dandelion wine. Tainted elderberry wine is the beverage used to commit murders in Joseph Kesselring's play and Frank Capra's film adaptation Arsenic and Old Lace. A wine made from elderberry flowers is called elder blow wine.

The amount of fermentable sugars is often low and needs to be supplemented by a process called chaptalization in order to have sufficient alcohol levels in the finished wine. Sucrose is often added so that there is sufficient sugar to ferment to completion while keeping the level of acidity acceptable. If the specific gravity of the initial solution is too high, indicating an excess of sugar, water or acidulated water may be added to adjust the specific gravity down to the winemaker's target range.

Many kinds of fruit have a natural acid content which would be too high to produce a savory and pleasant fruit wine in undiluted form; this can be particularly true, among others, for strawberries, cherries, pineapples, and raspberries. Therefore, much as to regulate sugar content, the fruit mash is generally topped up with water prior to fermentation to reduce the acidity to pleasant levels. This also dilutes and reduces overall fruit flavor; a loss of flavor can be compensated for by adding sugar again after fermentation which then acts as a flavor enhancer (known as a back-sweetener), while too much acid in the finished wine will always give it undesired harshness and poignancy.

Many fruit wines suffer from a lack of natural yeast nutrients needed to promote or maintain fermentation. Winemakers can counter this with the addition of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium available commercially as yeast nutrient. In the opinion of one wine writer fruit wines often do not improve with bottle age and are usually meant to be consumed within a year of bottling.[6]

Plum wine

A bottle of maesil-ju (plum wine)

Plum liquor, also known as "plum wine", is popular in both Japan and Korea, and is also produced in China. In China, plum wine is called meijiu (梅酒). Plum wine is normally made with distilled liquor and soaked with plum. The alcohol level is higher than typical fruit wine, which is fermented with just fruits.

Umeshu (梅酒) is a Japanese alcoholic drink made by steeping green plums in shōchū (燒酎; clear liquor). It is sweet and smooth. A similar liquor in Korea, called maesil-ju (매실주), is marketed under various brand names, including Mae hwa soo, Matchsoon, and Seoljungmae. Both the Japanese and Korean varieties of plum liquor are available with whole Prunus mume fruits contained in the bottle.

In Taiwan, a popular post-World War II innovation based on Japanese-style plum liquor is wumeijiu (烏梅酒; smoked plum liquor), which is made by mixing Prunus mume liquor (梅酒 méijǐu), Prunus salicina liquor (李酒 lǐjǐu), and oolong tea liquor.

Another similar drink is plum jerkum, made from fermented plums in a manner similar to the use of apples for cider. It was often associated with the north Cotswolds[7] and was once a product of the city of Worcester.[8]

Pineapple wine

Bottle of pineapple wine from Dominican Republic

Pineapple wine is made from the juice of pineapples. Fermentation of the pineapple juice takes place in temperature-controlled vats and is stopped at near-dryness. The result is a soft, dry, fruit wine with a strong pineapple bouquet. Pineapple wine is popular in Thailand and other SE Asian countries, where it is made using traditional practices and is not available commercially.[9] In Mexico, fermented pineapple beverages are very popular and given the name Tepache.

Commercial examples from around the world include Maui's Winery in Hawaii and Jacobs Wines of Nigeria, the first pineapple winery in Africa. It is also made in Dominican Republic by Vinicola Del Norte, its alcohol content is 10%. Several varieties of pineapple wine are made in Okinawa, Japan, from local produce. Its alcohol content is 11.5% ABV.

Dandelion wine

Dandelion wine is a fruit wine of moderate alcohol content that is made from dandelion petals and sugar, usually combined with an acid (such as lemon juice).

While commonly made as a homemade recipe, there are only a handful of wineries that commercially produce Dandelion wine, including Bellview Winery of New Jersey,[10] Breitenbach Winery of Ohio,[11] Hidden Legend Winery of Montana,[12] and Maple River Winery of North Dakota.[13]

Rose hip wine

Rose hip wine is a fruit wine.[14] It can be made from fresh or dried rose hips. To produce this beverage, the rose hips are fermented in syrup with yeast and citric acid, creating an extract. This technique is used with only a few other types of fruit wine, including blackthorn (sloe), hawthorn, and rowan.

The best kind of wine produced from rose hips is strong and sweet, with at least two years of storage.[15]

Redcurrant and whitecurrant wines

Redcurrant and whitecurrant fruit wines are beverages that are usually produced in northerly cool areas, where it is hard to grow high-quality grapes. They are simple to produce. Their natural chemical balances are such that they can be self-clarified without any additional substances. Redcurrants and whitecurrants contain only a small amount of carbohydrates; this necessitates the addition of sugar or honey.[15]

Cherry wine

Cherry wine is a type of fruit wine made with cherries,[16][17][18][19] usually tart cherries that provide sufficient acid.[20] Cherry wines can be used to make fortified wines and liqueurs. Michigan wine makers, located in the leading tart-cherry-producing region of the United States, produce several varieties of cherry wine, including spiced versions and cherry-grape blends.[21] "Cherry Kijafa" is a fortified fruit wine that is produced in Denmark from cherries with added natural flavors, and usually contains 16% ABV.[22] Among cherry liqueurs Maraska, a cherry wine made from Marasca cherry from Croatia, is among the best known.[23] The last couple of years Fredriksdal Cherry Wine (partly invented by distinguished restaurant owner Jan Friis-Mikkelsen) has been produced in Denmark.[24] Cherry wine production is becoming popular in China,[25] where cherry production is high.[26]

Other wine berries

Orange wine

Orange wine, although not commercially widely available, is produced in White River, South Africa, and by home wine makers. The taste is a light bodied wine, pale or golden in color, dry, thin in body, alcoholic. Outcome is reliant on the yeast used. Recipes are few and far between.[27] Typically a home wine maker is receiving the bounty of their own orange tree or from a neighbors tree. The wine can be difficult to make because the fruit is very acidic, and the pH must be adjusted up. Further complications are encountered by a type of Penicillin bacteria that can stop the fermentation and spoil the wine. Great care must be taken to clean and sanitize the fruit. The remainder of the process is straightforward. The US government TTB has a standard for Orange Wine.[28]

See also

References

  1. J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pg 768 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0-19-860990-6
  2. George, Rosemary (1991). The Simon & Schuster Pocket Wine Label Decoder. Fireside. ISBN 978-0-671-72897-7.
  3. 1 2 G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" pg 5-9, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 ISBN 0-307-34635-8
  4. "Alcoholic Liquor Duties Act 1979". Acts of the United Kingdom Parliament. 1979 (4). 1979-02-22. pp. 1(5). Retrieved 2008-11-04.
  5. "Home Brew Answers - Country Wine Making".
  6. J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition pg 291 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0-19-860990-6
  7. Greensted, M. The arts and crafts movement in the Cotswolds, Sutton, 1996, p.97
  8. Edwards, T. Worcestershire, Paul Elek, 1949, p.12
  9. Chanprasartsuk, On-ong, et al. "Autochthonous yeasts associated with mature pineapple fruits, freshly crushed juice and their ferments; and the chemical changes during natural fermentation." Bioresource technology 101.19 (2010): 7500-7509.
  10. "Bellview Winery - Dandelion Wine". Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  11. "Breitenbach Winery - Dandelion Wine". Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  12. "Hidden Legend Winery - Dandelion Wine". Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  13. "Maple River Winery - Dandelion Wine". Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  14. "Home winemakers Internet survey (pl)". Old.wino.org.pl. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  15. 1 2 Jan Cieślak (1985). Domowy wyrób win (pl). Wydawnictwo Warta.
  16. Ann Leighton Early American Gardens: For Meate Or Medicine 1970- Page 95 0870235303 - "Cherry wine is made after the same fashion. But it is a little more troublesome to break the Cherrystones. Roger Williams does not say he made wine himself, but Josselyn said, "It was not long before I left the Countrey that I made Cherry wine, ...
  17. Len Hopkins, Margaret Crowther Making Wine with Fruits, Roots & Flowers 1440320349 - 2012 "A good Cherry Wine is smooth and medium-sweet, light but with full Cherry avors. The color depends on the type of Cherries used. A blend of fruits can be used, or just one type, and you will need to use more Cherries if all are sweet.
  18. Scott C. Martin The SAGE Encyclopedia of Alcohol 2014 1483374386 "As much as grapes can differ from one another, the difference is minute compared to that between grapes and cherries, and so the task of evaluating a cherry wine is tricky. This is where the use of the word wine for fruit-based beverages has ..."
  19. Dominic Rivard The Ultimate Fruit Winemaker's Guide: The Complete Reference Manual 1441450920 2009 "Cherry wine is a light red to rose, medium bodied wine with strong cherry aromas. It is smooth and full on the taste. They have a persistent rich berry finish. Frozen New York state cherries are used by Nashoba Valley Wineries."
  20. "Wines from Cherries and Soft Fruits*" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  21. "Wineries, Meaderies, and Hard Cider Producers in Michigan". Retrieved 2017-01-15.
  22. "CocktailDB: The Internet Cocktail Database — Cherry Kijafa". Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  23. Amy Stewart The Drunken Botanist 2013-1616201045 Page 274 "Cherry wine is a wine made from cherries rather than grapes. Maraska cherry wine from Croatia is the best known, and perhaps most authentic, version. Guignolet is a French cherry liqueur usually made from the large..."
  24. http://dcbf.dk/news/342-china-buys-cherry-wine-for-millions
  25. Maria Kosseva; et al., eds. (2016), Science and Technology of Fruit Wine Production
  26. Melissa Hansen (2011), Cherry production in China
  27. Anderson, Stan (1970). The Art of Making Wine (1st ed.). Hawthorn Books. p. 72.
  28. "27 CFR §4.21 - Subpart C - Standards of Identity for Wine -(d) Class 4; Citrus Wine". TTB. TTB. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
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