A History of Grain and Potato Vodka
Posted: Sunday, September 03, 2006
by MiddleAgedCrazy
www.blog.middleagedmale.com
A few weeks ago I wrote an article about my first experience with potato vodka and it turned out to be one of the most popular and most often accessed articles on my blog. With all of this interest in the subject I decided to do a little more research and flesh out my knowledge of how vodka is made.
Until the end of the eighteenth century, vodka was manufactured in
Johann Joachim Becher developed a method of producing spirits from potatoes in 1669, but it was not until 1798 that the first instructions for "a practical new way of distilling vodka from potatoes" was published. The history of potato cultivation in
A century ago, a writer of comedy,
In the distillery, potatoes; in the world, men.
One course of life, one kind of end.
Into four stages their being's arrayed:
During the first it is pulped, cooked and weighed,
In the second fermented, in the third abates,
Until in the fourth, as if rent asunder,
The spirit goes up, and the mash goes under.
Vodka was also made from rutabagas, but the old recipe books warned that "rutabaga vodka must always be purged of its characteristic odor and flavor with birchwood charcoal added to the drawn-off vodka."
While the base ingredients used for making vodka are limited, the list of ingredients used to convey taste and aroma to vodka are almost limitless.
For more info on Potato vodka, go to http://blog.middleagedmale.com/2006/08/11/potato-vodka.aspx
Posted by Middle Aged Crazy at Middle Aged Male.com - The Website for Middle Aged Men
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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)I enoyed the review. many bartenders can't explain which vodka has certain ingredients and not all labela tell. I can' have grains though I am unsurewhether there is gluten in any distilled vodka. but I love vodka so long live the potato. chopin and luksowa are easier to find. which russian ones are potato? thank you for the history
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