Wine and food pairing Stenden University of applied sciences Leeuwarden Netherlands Submitted in Partial Fulfillment for the Requirements of the degree Programme Bachelor of Business Administration June‚ 2011 Declaration of personal work This work is composed by me / by us. This work has not been accepted in any previous application for a degree or diploma‚ by me / by us or anyone else. The work of which this is a record is done wholly by me / by us. All verbatim extracts
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BORDEAUX 89% of wine produced in Bordeaux is red (called "claret" in Britain)‚ with sweet white wines (most notably Sauternes)‚ dry whites‚ rosé and sparkling wines (Crémant de Bordeaux) collectively making up the remainder. Terminologies • Claret - is a name primarily used in British English for red Bordeaux wine. Claret derives from the French clairet‚ a now uncommon dark rosé‚ which was the most common wine exported from Bordeaux until the 18th • Sauternes - is a French sweet wine from the Sauternais
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Brief: The Wine Industry The wine industry includes red wine and white wine. Vines were first planted in the Middle East before 4‚000 BC. Through vine plantation and wine production‚ wine trade emerged in Greece‚ Crete‚ Phoenicia and Egypt and spread widely in Mediterranean. Wine industry rapidly developed with the help of the Catholic churches in The Middle Ages. In seventeenth century‚ new techniques and innovations were turned up to improve the wine to satisfy the globalization and colonization
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of fruit wine: Fruit wines are fermented alcoholic beverages made from a variety of base ingredients (other than grapes); they may also have additional flavors taken from fruits‚ flowers‚ and herbs. This definition is sometimes broadened to include any fermented alcoholic beverage except beer. For historical reasons‚ mead‚ cider‚ and Perry are also excluded from the definition of fruit wine. Fruit wines are usually referred to by their main ingredient (e.g.‚ plum wine or elderberry wine) because
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Orange Wine Color • Orange wine production is related to extended skin contact and oxidation-reduction phenomena • Orange Wine method originated from old Georgian traditional winemaking method – Qvevri • Some countries use Qvevri vessel for fermentation and storage of white wines Orange Winemaking • Several production methods used to produce orange wines • Methods differ by skin maceration time‚ vessels used for fermentation and storage • Most of orange wines are produced by spontaneous fermentation
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China Red Wine Market Research In China‚ red wine accounts for over 90% of the wine market. So throughout this report‚ the word “wine” we used refers to red wine. 1. Market information 1.1. Chinese red wine market size China’s wine consumption has been continuously increasing since the late 1990’s. The per capita consumption of wines rose from 0.19 liters in 1997 to 0.75 liters in 2009‚ representing a 4 times increase. Nevertheless‚ compared to France (51 liters)‚ Italy (44 liters)‚ USA
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current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/1751-1062.htm IJWBR 19‚2 A qualitative study of Chinese wine consumption and purchasing Implications for Australian wines The University of Western Australia‚ Perth‚ Australia Abstract Purpose ± This research aims to examine Chinese consumers’ wine consumption and purchasing behaviour. Design/methodology/approach ± The study‚ conducted during the Chinese New Year in early 2006‚ used in-depth interviews
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Nonna’s Wine Taralli In a tiny house surrounded by a forest of fig trees in Rende‚ Cosenza‚ Calabria‚ my great great grandmother taught her little granddaughter how to make “Nonna’s Wine Taralli.” That little girl would eventually become my grandmother and she would also teach me the art of wine taralli-making. Two cups of my grandfather’s homemade white wine‚ fourteen ounces of canola oil and sugar‚ two teaspoons of baking powder‚ an envelope of “Lievito Bartolino‚” three and a half pounds of
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Consumer Behaviour: Wine 1. The consumers have higher-order needs and aspirations. Have a common desire for pleasure‚ status and knowledge. Tend to be from the middle-aged‚ educated and high-income market segment. They are high-involvement consumers generally motivated by the pleasure they receive from the product rather than its purely functional utility.Overall needs are more hedonistic and self-gratifying rather than functional and utilitarian. 2. Physiological needs: food‚ water and safety
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Pop singer Alanis Morissette’s song‚ “Ironic‚” focuses on how people can allow their lives to be controlled by irrational fears‚ that ironically‚ turn out to be justified when it is too late to make amends. Similarly‚ Ray Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine‚ written about the summer of 1928 in Green Town‚ Illinois‚ correlates to Morissette’s lyrics. In an episode entitled‚ “The Whole Town is Sleeping.” The chapter is about a woman named Lavinia Nebbs insists that logic and reason can protect her from a killer
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