Medieval Wine Trivia

The cycle of the vineyards and man’s enjoyment of wine has prolonged throughout the ages

with some of these captivating differences…

Once Upon A Time

Wine

Roman civilization was well versed in viticulture and wine making, but then the Barbarians

destroyed their vineyards and turned them into pastureland and cornfields. Luckily,

Benedictine and other monks kept the art of viticulture alive at their monasteries. By the

12th century, viticulture was fully revived.

They Weren’T So Fussy

One of the major differences in the middle of today’s wine connoisseurs and medieval man was that

back then they weren’t so implicated with which exact vineyard a wine came from, but rather

the general area. The body of the wine was more leading than it’s subtle flavors and

aroma.

Just Being Practical

Wine was mostly the drink of the upper classes and rich merchants, while the lower classes

generally drank beer, cider or mead.

Also, in medieval times, much of the water was tainted by sewage, so naturally, citizen

preferred to drink wine.

Other Uses

Wine also served to relieve minor aches and pains.

In 1166, the vintages were so plentiful and there was such an over yield of wine, that in

Franconia (a part of what is now Germany), they mixed wine with lime for use in building

construction.

Drink Up Before It Goes Bad

In medieval times, the aging of wine wasn’t important. This was partly due to the fact that

much of the wine was too unstable to age well anyway, and if air hit it, it might turn to

vinegar. One way to combat this problem was to use a thin film surface of olive oil. Other

methods included adding burnt salt, mixing in cloves, or plunging lighted torches dipped in

pitch into the wine.

Vintners and wine sellers often just mixed good wine in with bad, at least until the practice

was later forbidden. Others put cloves in wine to keep it from spoiling.

A major advance of medieval wine development was the discovery of sulphur by the alchemists.

This was now used to reserve the wine.

A Pinch Of This And A Pinch Of That

Spices were added to wine for the same hypothesize they were added to food: for range and to

disguise it’s lackluster or bad flavor. Spiced wines were called Piments.

When bad weather resulted in poor ripening of the grapes, flavors and herbs were often added

to the wine. The resulting beverage would then take on the taste and character of these

added ingredients. If the poor crop yielded grapes low in sugar, medieval man sometimes

added cooked grape juice or honey to bring up the sugar levels so the final alcohol article

would increase.

To by comparison the wine, they used eggs, pine kernels, peach stones or river pebbles. Honey was

sometimes added to declare the proper color.

Because their was so much unstable wine, many medieval vintners diligently tried to keep

their barrels and wine vessels as clean as possible. various methods to clean them were

used, including scouring with cold water, old wine or salt water. Sometimes they would then

fumigate them with rosemary or cedar wood.

Meanwhile, Out In The Grape Fields

Medieval viticulture’s drawbacks were partly due to slow technical advance in general during

that time, and the cultivation of the vineyards was not as developed as it had been in Roman

times.

One new improvement for the time was the use of the “low vineyard”. Vines started to be tied

to upright stakes and weren’t allowed to be grown over 4 feet high.

From Malmsey To Merlot

The most famed of medieval wines was Malmsey. This was a sweet wine made from grapes

grown primarily in Crete or Cyprus. We still have a form of Malmsey today which is basically a

sweet type of Madeira wine. But today’s wine drinkers commonly prefer drier, more involved

wines than their medieval ancestors had entrance to.

Medieval Wine Trivia

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