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  2. The 12 Best Non-Alcoholic Wines of 2023, Taste-Tested

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/12-best-non-alcoholic...

    Luminara. TOTAL: 97/100 While some non-alcoholic wines seemed more like a concoction of juices poured into a wine bottle, Luminara stands out for its craftsmanship.

  3. Spinning cone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinning_cone

    The aroma compounds are then mixed back into the wine. Some producers such as Joel Peterson of Ravenswood argue that technological "fixes" such as spinning cones remove a sense of terroir from the wine; if the wine has the tannins and other components to balance 15% alcohol, Peterson argues that it should be accepted on its own terms. [2]

  4. Wine preservatives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine_preservatives

    Despite the alcohol in wine, growth of bacteria is possible, even when completely fermented. [2] Wine is made from the fermentation of grape juice, which contains sugar. [4] During the fermentation process, yeast will convert sugar into alcohol. [5] If the fermentation is not complete, the wine will contain residual sugar content.

  5. TheReportOfTheWeek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TheReportOfTheWeek

    John Jurasek (born 1997 or 1998), [2] better known online as TheReportOfTheWeek or Reviewbrah, is an American YouTube personality, food critic and radio host.Jurasek reviews fast food, frozen meals, and energy drinks on his YouTube channel of the same name, and hosts a radio show on shortwave radio, Spotify, TuneIn, and SoundCloud.

  6. Judgment of Paris (wine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_of_Paris_(wine)

    The Paris Wine Tasting of 1976, also known as the Judgment of Paris, was a wine competition, to commemorate the United States Bicentennial, organized in Paris on 24 May 1976 by Steven Spurrier, a British wine merchant, and his American colleague, Patricia Gallagher, in which French oenophiles participated in two blind tasting comparisons: one of top-quality Chardonnays and another of red wines ...

  7. Clarification and stabilization of wine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarification_and...

    Large pectin molecules can affect the amount of juice yielded at pressing, ease of filtration and clarification, and extraction of tannins. Grapes contain natural pectolytic enzymes responsible for softening the grape berries during ripening, but these are not active under wine-making conditions (due to pH level, SO 2, and alcohol.) Therefore ...

  8. Wine chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine_chemistry

    Esters: [2] Ethyl acetate is the most common ester in wine, being the product of the most common volatile organic acid — acetic acid, and the ethyl alcohol generated during the fermentation. Norisoprenoids, such as C13-norisoprenoids found in grape (Vitis vinifera) [8] or wine, [9] can be produced by fungal peroxidases [10] or glycosidases. [11]

  9. Fat Bastard (wine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FAT_bastard_(Wine)

    As of 2016, the brand is no longer sold in the U.K. Wine writers Oz Clarke and James May of the BBC television series Oz and James's Big Wine Adventure said this is "simply because these fun-named wines have gone out of fashion". [2] However, about 420,000 cases (5 million 750 ml bottles) per year continue to be exported to the United States. [2]