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- Mar 23, 2022
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I've gotten interested in ancient winemaking techniques. Particularly the quality of the resulting wines.
In ancient times, there was a thriving trade in wines. Some regions and vintages were especially prized, so it must have been reasonably "good", even though ancient tastes were quite different that today's tastes. For example, the Romans liked to sweeten their wines with lead and/or honey.
I've just found a research paper from Sicily written be a researcher who has been attempting to recreate the Roman wines. Dr Mario Indelicato of the University of Catania. He began this research in 2013. In 2020, he published a paper titled "Columella's Wine: A Roman Enology Experiment" that describes one result.
He found that the resulting wine he produced was relatively palatable, but that it has a strong smokey flavor and aftertaste. This was due to the fact that it was aged in a pitch-lined terracotta pot. Sounds a lot like some of the mescals or tequilas of Mexico!
I've done a lot of international travel and one thing I enjoyed was sampling different "flavors" in food and drink, so I have a broad palate. I'll bet that (except for the lead flavoring) I would have enjoyed Roman times!
Has anyone else on the forum looked into this?
In ancient times, there was a thriving trade in wines. Some regions and vintages were especially prized, so it must have been reasonably "good", even though ancient tastes were quite different that today's tastes. For example, the Romans liked to sweeten their wines with lead and/or honey.
I've just found a research paper from Sicily written be a researcher who has been attempting to recreate the Roman wines. Dr Mario Indelicato of the University of Catania. He began this research in 2013. In 2020, he published a paper titled "Columella's Wine: A Roman Enology Experiment" that describes one result.
He found that the resulting wine he produced was relatively palatable, but that it has a strong smokey flavor and aftertaste. This was due to the fact that it was aged in a pitch-lined terracotta pot. Sounds a lot like some of the mescals or tequilas of Mexico!
I've done a lot of international travel and one thing I enjoyed was sampling different "flavors" in food and drink, so I have a broad palate. I'll bet that (except for the lead flavoring) I would have enjoyed Roman times!
Has anyone else on the forum looked into this?
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