Two Colors in Wine Red & White
There are only two colors in wine-red and white.
Any wine containing the slightest tinge of red is a red wine.
White wines range from the very palest straw-color to deep, dark brown.
There is no wine that is absolutely colorless.
Red wines are generally dry. (Exceptions are Port and Port-type wines, some Italian and one or two Hungarian table wines, and, of course, kosher wines.)
White wines vary in sweetness, from the extreme dryness of a Manzanilla to the rich sweet lusciousness of a Tokay Eszencia.
The word “dry” is used in the wine trade to describe the opposite of sweet. Literally, it means lacking in sugar.
Four Main Classifications of Wines
Light Beverage (Natural still wines) - Red and white Bordeaux, Burgundy, Italian, Rhine, Moselle, Alsatian, Tokay, Hungarian table wines, American, California, etc. Alcoholic content 14% or less.
Sparkling - Champagne, sparkling Burgundy, Asti Spumante, sparkling Moselle, etc. Alcoholic content 14% or less.
Fortified - Sherry, Port, Madeira, Marsala, Malaga, etc. Alcoholic content 16% to 23%.
Aromatized - Vermouth, both Italian and French, quinined wines, etc. Alcoholic content 15% to 20%.
Wines with less than 14% alcohol will improve after bottling. Fortified and aromatized wines will improve very little or not at all, with the exception of Vintage Ports.
Basically, it is the acidity that makes a wine taste dry. Wine contains a number of acids including citric (the same as lemons) and malic (green apples). Unripe grapes or grapes from young vines will be contain higher acidity than ripe fruit from mature vines.
A wine with the fragrance and delight of apple blossom.
This is a refreshing wine, deep gold in color.
Tasty and strong. Each ingredient in this amber-colored wine enhances the other.
This recipe includes
This is dark amber in color and more mellow than the preceding recipe. It is a champagne-type wine.
Whilst many recipes will make good wine without the flowers, the addition of the flower petals, with careful management, will give a delightful fragrant bouquet which is so desirable in a sparkling wine, and make it distinctive from the ordinary still wines.