Wine History - When the Cork Met the Bottle
By James Pendleton
The role of the Church in the
production and marketing of wine declined with the Reformation, particularly
in northern Europe, but this did not convulse the wine world half
as much as the discovery of the usefulness of corks about a century
later. For the first time since the Roman empire, wine could now be
stored and aged in bottles. Throughout the Middle Ages wine had been
kept in casks which had presented a dual handicap: first, too long
kept in wood could rob a wine of all its fruit; second, once the cask
was opened the wine inevitably deteriorated unless drunk within a
few days. The bottle, with its smaller capacity, solved the former
problem by providing a neutral, non-porous material which allowed
wine to age in a different subtler way and removed the latter problem
by providing sealed containers of a manageable size for a single session’s
drinking.
However, the cork and bottle revolution was
not an instant success; bottles were then so bulbous they would only
stand upright which meant the corks eventually dried out and as a
consequence let in air. But, by the mid 18th century, longer, flat-sided
bottles were designed which would lie down, their corks kept moist
by contact with the wine. As a result wine making now took on a new
dimension. It became worthwhile for a winemaker to try and excel,
wines from particular plots of land could be compared for their qualities,
and the most exciting could be classified and separated from the more
mundane plot wines. As a result today’s great names of Bordeaux, Burgundy
and the Rhine first began to be noticed.In
the early 19th century, Europe seemed one massive vineyard. In Italy
80% of people were earning their living from wine and in France there
were vast plantings rolling southwards from Paris. Also the vine had
moved abroad thanks to explorers, colonists and missionaries. It went
to Latin America with the Spaniards, South Africa with French Huguenots,
and to Australia with the British. Could anything stop this tide of
wine expansion?
Well, yes and it came in the form of an aphid
called phylloxera, that fed on and destroyed vine roots. It came from
America in the 1860’s, and by the early 20th century, had destroyed
all Europe’s vineyards and most of the rest of the world’s as well.
The solution was to graft the vulnerable European vine, vitis vinifera,
onto the phylloxera-resistant American rootstock, vitis riparia, naturally
a very expensive effort. The most immediate effect in Europe was that
only the best sites were replanted and the total area under vines
shrank drastically as a result. Elsewhere the havoc wrought was comparable
and vineyard acreage is only now expanding to old original sites destroyed
over a century ago.The 20th century brought
further change as science and technology revolutionised viticulture
and wine making. But despite the chemical formulae and computerised
wineries, the grape retains its magic and allure that attracts wine
enthusiasts from all over the world.
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