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  2. Grappa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grappa

    Grappa is an alcoholic beverage: a fragrant, grape-based pomace brandy of Italian origin that contains 35 to 60 percent alcohol by volume (70 to 120 US proof). Grappa is a protected name in the European Union. Grappa is made by distilling the skins, pulp, seeds, and stems (i.e., the pomace) left over from winemaking after pressing the grapes ...

  3. Marzadro Distillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marzadro_Distillery

    The Marzadro Distillery is an Italian family run company created at the end of World War II. Its birth and evolution follows closely the economic transformation of Italy and the modernization of its means of production, in particular in the Northern part of the country. The company is located in the historical region for the production of grappa.

  4. Poli Distillerie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poli_Distillerie

    The raw material from which Grappa is made is the grape pomace, the skin of the grape, and what is left after the grape is crushed in order to make wine.The Poli Distillery gathers the grape-pomace from an area that ranges from Bassano del Grappa to the hills surrounding Marostica and Breganze, lands historically famous for the cultivation of grape vines and for the production of Grappa.

  5. Caffè corretto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caffè_corretto

    Caffè corretto (Italian: [kafˈfɛ kkorˈrɛtto]) is an Italian caffeinated alcoholic drink, consisting of a shot of espresso with a small amount of liquor, [1] usually grappa, and sometimes sambuca [2] or brandy. [3] It is also known (outside Italy) as an espresso corretto. It is ordered as un caffè corretto alla grappa, ... alla sambuca, ...

  6. Pomace brandy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomace_brandy

    Grappa, an example of a brandy made from grape pomace. Pomace spirit (or pomace brandy) is a liquor distilled from pomace that is left over from winemaking, after the grapes are pressed. It is called marc in both English and French, but "grappa" in Italian and "bagaço" in Portuguese. [1] In Spanish it is called orujo. [2]

  7. Vin Santo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin_Santo

    Vin Santo (Italian: [vin ˈsanto]; lit. ' Holy Wine ') is a style of Italian dessert wine.Traditional in Tuscany, these wines are often made from white grape varieties such as Trebbiano and Malvasia, although Sangiovese may be used to produce a rosé style known as "Occhio di Pernice" or eye of the partridge.

  8. Moonshine by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonshine_by_country

    On the island of Sardinia, one can still find local varieties of abbardenti (a distillate similar to Spanish aguardiente or Italian grappa) which is dubbed 'fil'e ferru', which means 'iron-thread' in the Sardinian language; this peculiar name comes from the fact that jugs and bottles were buried to hide them from authorities with iron-thread ...

  9. Girolamo Luxardo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girolamo_Luxardo

    Luxardo Amaretto. Girolamo Luxardo S.p.A. is an Italian liqueur factory. Founded in Zara, it moved to Torreglia near Padua after 1945.. The company's current products include a variety of liqueurs and similar products (Maraschino, Sangue Morlacco, Sambuca, Amaretto, Grappa, Passione Nera, Slivovitz, Luxardo Fernet, etc.) as well as other baking related products, such as liqueur concentrates ...