Dictionary Definition
retsina n : Greek wine flavored with resin
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Extensive Definition
Retsina (Ρετσίνα in Greek) is
a Greek resinated white (or rosé) wine that has been made for at
least 2000 years. Its unique flavor is said to have originated from
the practice of sealing wine vessels, particularly amphorae, with Aleppo Pine
resin in ancient times. Before the invention of impermeable glass
bottles, oxygen caused many wines to spoil
within the year. Pine resin helped keep air out, while at the same
time infusing the wine with resin aroma. The Romans began
to use barrels
in the 3rd century AD, removing any enological
necessity for resin, but the flavor itself was so popular that the
style is still widespread today.
History
The earliest recorded mentioning of using resin with wine amphorae was in the writings of Columella who detailed in his work De Re Rustica (13.20-14) the different type of resin that could be used to seal a container or be mixed into the wine. He recommended that for the very best wines, though, they should not be mixed with resin because many people do not like the taste. His contemporary, Pliny the Elder does recommend the use of adding resin to the fermenting wine must in his work Naturalis Historia (14.124) with the resin from mountainous areas having a better aroma than those that come from lower lands (16.60).The Roman settlements in Illyria, Cisalpine
Gaul and Gallia
Narbonensis did not use resin coated amphorae due to the lack
of suitable local pine trees and began to develop solid, less leak
prone wooden barrels in the 1st century AD. By the 3rd century,
barrel making was prevalent throughout the Roman
Empire. The exception was the eastern empire regions of
Byzantium
which had developed a taste for the strong, pungent wine and
continued to produce resinated wine long after the western Roman
empire stopped. The difference in taste between the two empires
took center stage in the work of the historian Liutprand
of Cremona work Relatio de Legatione Constantinopolitana. In
968, Liutprand was sent to Constantinople
to arrange a marriage between the daughter of the late Emperor
Romanos
II and the future Holy Roman Emperor
Otto II. According to Liutprand, he was treated very rudely and
undignified by the court of Nikephoros
II being served goat stuffed
with onion and served in
fish
sauce and "undrinkable" wine mixed with resin, pitch and
gypsum-very offensive to
his western tastes.
Wine regions
In Greece, local Retsina (retsina iszalso) is produced throughout the country. Major production centers around Attica, Boeotia and Euboea. The European Union treats the name "Retsina" as a protected designation of origin and traditional appellation for Greece and parts of the southern regions of Cyprus. An Australian wine style made in South Australia can be called "resinated wine" but not "Retsina".Grapes and winemaking
Today the traditional grape for Retsina is Savatiano with potentially Assyrtiko and Rhoditis blended in. Local grape varieties are used for retsina iszalso throughout Greece. On the island of Rhodes, Athiri is the main grape. Modern Retsina is made following the same winemaking techniques of white wine or rosé with the exception of small pieces of Aleppo Pine resin added to the must during fermentation. The pieces stay mixed with the must till racking when the wine is clarified and the solids are removed from the finished wine.retsina in Czech: Retsina
retsina in German: Retsina
retsina in Modern Greek (1453-): Ρετσίνα
retsina in French: Retsina
retsina in Lithuanian: Retsina
retsina in Dutch: Retsina
retsina in Norwegian: Retsina
retsina in Polish: Retsina
retsina in Russian: Рецина
retsina in Swedish: Retsina