To make a white wine, green-skinned grapes are pressed, and the skins are removed. If the skins are left with the clear juice for a period, the wine becomes an “orange” or “amber” wine. To make red ...
Pinot Noir is red, right? Well, yes. And no. Which is to say, it doesn’t have to be. Like almost all red grapes, the flesh of a Pinot Noir grape is pale green, which means that if you crush the grapes ...
An Illinois doctor compared the health benefits of red and white wine, saying the differences are negligible. Red wine does ...
As new U.S. dietary guidelines warn Americans to limit alcohol, health experts weigh in on whether red or white wine offers ...
Sign up to get Matt Kettmann’s Full Belly Files, which serves up multiple courses of food & drink coverage every Friday, going off-menu from our regularly published ...
A barefoot person stomping on purple grapes in a red basin. - Halfpoint/Getty Images You may remember the concept of grape stomping, the practice of crushing grapes with one's bare feet as part of the ...
When we heard that famed Spanish region Ribera del Duero allowed the bottling of a wine made from a white grape, Albillo Mayor, a few years ago, we were highly skeptical. After all, many of the ...