Quiz: Challenge Yourself!

Quiz: Challenge Yourself!

RCS Experience Quiz Time!

Select a quiz: Challenge Yourself and Test Your Knowledge About Wine and More! Quizzes are a fun way to learn all about wine and everything about wineโ€ฆ

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Wineย is anย alcoholic drinkย typically made fromย fermentedย grapes.ย Yeastย consumes theย sugarย in theย grapesย and converts it toย ethanol,ย carbon dioxideย andย heat. Different varieties of grapes andย strainsย of yeasts are major factors in different styles of wine. These differences result from the complex interactions between the biochemical development of the grape, the reactions involved inย fermentation, the grapeโ€™s growing environment (terroir), and the wine production process. Manyย countriesย enact legalย appellationsย intended to define styles and qualities of wine. These typically restrict the geographical origin and permitted varieties of grapes, as well as other aspects of wine production. Wines not made from grapes involve fermentation of additional crops, includingย rice wineย and otherย fruit winesย such asย plum,ย cherry,ย pomegranate,ย currantย andย elderberry.

Wine has been produced for thousands of years. The earliest evidence of wine is from ancientย Chinaย (c.โ€‰7000ย BC),ย Georgiaย (6000 BC),ย Persiaย (5000 BC), andย Italyย (4000 BC).ย New World wineย has some connection to alcoholic beverages made by theย indigenous peoples of the Americas, but is mainly connected to laterย Vikingย area ofย Vinlandย and Spanish traditions inย New Spain.ย Later, asย Old World wineย further developed viticulture techniques,ย Europeย would encompass three of the largestย wine-producing regions. Today, the five countries with the largest wine-producing regions are inย Italy,ย Spain,ย France,ย the United States, andย China.

Wine has long played an important role in religion.ย Red wineย was associated withย bloodย by theย ancient Egyptiansย and was used by both theย Greekย cult of Dionysusย and theย Romansย in theirย Bacchanalia;ย Judaismย also incorporates it in theย Kiddush, andย Christianityย in theย Eucharist.ย Egyptian,ย Greek,ย Roman, andย Israeliย wine cultures are still connected to these ancient roots. Similarly the largest wine regions inย Italy,ย Spain, andย Franceย have heritages in connection toย sacramental wine, likewise, viticulture traditions in theย Southwestern United Statesย started within New Spain asย Catholicย friars and monks first produced wines inย New Mexicoย andย California.

Quiz: Challenge Yourself โ€“ More Information:

Wine is usually made from one or more varieties of the European species Vitis vinifera, such as Pinot noir, Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Gamay and Merlot. When one of these varieties is used as the predominant grape (usually defined by law as minimums of 75% to 85%), the result is a โ€œvarietalโ€ as opposed to a โ€œblendedโ€ wine. Blended wines are not necessarily inferior to varietal wines, rather they are a different style of wine-making.

Wine can also be made from other species of grape or from hybrids, created by the genetic crossing of two species. V. labrusca (of which the Concord grape is a cultivar), V. aestivalis, V. rupestris, V. rotundifolia and V. riparia are native North American grapes usually grown to eat fresh or for grape juice, jam, or jelly, and only occasionally made into wine.

Hybridization is different from grafting. Most of the worldโ€™s vineyards are planted with European Vitis vinifera vines that have been grafted onto North American speciesโ€™ rootstock, a common practice due to their resistance to phylloxera, a root louse that eventually kills the vine. In the late 19th century, most of Europeโ€™s vineyards (excluding some of the driest in the south) were devastated by the infestation, leading to widespread vine deaths and eventual replanting. Grafting is done in every wine-producing region in the world except in Argentina and the Canary Islands โ€” the only places not yet exposed to the insect.

In the context of wine production, terroir is a concept that encompasses the varieties of grapes used, elevation and shape of the vineyard, type and chemistry of soil, climate and seasonal conditions, and the local yeast cultures.[89] The range of possible combinations of these factors can result in great differences among wines, influencing the fermentation, finishing, and aging processes as well.

Many wineries use growing and production methods that preserve or accentuate the aroma and taste influences of their unique terroir.[90] However, flavor differences are less desirable for producers of mass-market table wine or other cheaper wines, where consistency takes precedence. Such producers try to minimize differences in sources of grapes through production techniques such as micro-oxygenation, tannin filtration, cross-flow filtration, thin-film evaporation, and spinning cones.

About 700 grapes go into one bottle of wine, approximately 2.6 pounds.