Thursday, June 26, 2025

 


Cider

Cider has a delightfully ancient and globe-trotting history. Its roots stretch back thousands of years, with the earliest known references dating to around 55 BCE, when Julius Caesar encountered the Celts in Britain fermenting crabapples into a cider-like drink.

The word “cider” itself likely comes from the Hebrew shekar, meaning a strong drink, and made its way into English via Old French. While apples were often too bitter to eat raw in ancient times, people discovered that pressing and fermenting the juice created a pleasantly boozy beverage.

Cider gained popularity across Europe, especially in regions like Normandy, Brittany, and the West Country of England, where apple orchards thrived. When European colonists arrived in North America, they brought cider-making traditions with them. Apples grew easily in the New World, and cider quickly became a staple drink—often safer than water and more accessible than beer.






Cider is an alcoholic beverage made mainly from the fermented juice of apples, though pears can also be used; in the UK, pear cider is known as perry. In the US and parts of Canada, the term cider almost exclusively refers to nonalcoholic apple juice (apple cider). The phrase hard cider is used to denote the fermented version. 

Real cider is fermented apple juice, pure and simple. Traditionally, it is made with bittersweet and bitter-sharp apples, which have the tannins and acidity required to make a quality product. While dessert apples, such as Granny Smith or MacIntosh, are used by large commercial cider makers, these common varieties often require the addition of modifiers such as concentrates and synthetic flavourings.

Common varieties include: Golden Delicious, Johngold, Macoun, Gala, Fuji, Braeburn, and Honeycrisp. Ontario McIntosh, Ida Red, Spy, Gala, Paula Red, and Russet are commonly used.

Defining the fruit (from National Association of Cidemakers)

Cider apple varieties are divided into four categories according to the relative proportion of acidity and tannin:

Sweet varieties are the blandest of the four categories, being low in both components. They are useful to blend with ciders from the more strongly flavoured varieties, which, by themselves, would be too extreme in taste and aroma to be palatable. Typical examples of sweet apples are Sweet Coppin, in use to a small extent, and Court Royal which was used extensively at one time but rarely used nowadays.

Bittersweet apples impart the characteristic flavour of English ciders; as the name implies, they are low in acid and high in tannin. The latter is responsible for two sensations on the palate - astringency and bitterness. In the bittersweet apple, there is a whole range of combinations of these two characteristics, varying from little astringency coupled with intense bitterness to very marked astringency coupled with mild bitterness. Typical bittersweets are Dabinett, Yarlington Mill and Tremlett’s Bitter.

Sharp varieties, so called because the predominant characteristic is that of acidity, are encountered less frequently today, possibly because culinary fruit, which has a similar flavour balance, can be substituted for this class. There are, however, recognized full sharp cider varieties, two of which are Crimson King and Brown’s Apple.

Bitter-sharp is the fourth class of cider apple. These are fairly high in acid and tannin, although the latter component does not show the wide range of flavours exhibited by the bittersweet. Stoke Red is a good example.


Cider apples were traditionally grown on ‘Standard’ trees in orchards grazed by livestock. About 40 trees would be planted per acre (100 per hectare).

Cider has a long and fascinating history in the UK. Although it had been assumed that cider was introduced after the Norman Conquest, it is now thought to have been here long before that.

Apple trees were growing in the UK well before the Romans came but it was they who introduced organised cultivation. It is likely that the wandering peoples, who travelled through the countries which we now know as Spain and Northern France, introduced their ‘shekar’ (a word of Hebrew origin for strong drink) to the early Britons. 

However, it is true to say that the Normans had the most positive effect on the history of cider making. Northern France was renowned for the volume and quality of its orchards and vineyards, as indeed was Southern England, but owing to climatic changes these areas became less suitable for the growing of grapes. Gradually cider began to replace wine.

In the UK and France, cider apples tended to be grown towards the western extremities because the climatic and soil conditions were most suitable. Under the influence of the Gulf Stream, the weather was relatively mild and the areas concerned had a fairly heavy annual rainfall. 

These combined factors of climate and history established the cider producing areas of England as we know them today.

After their conquest of England in 1066, the Normans introduced many changes - perhaps the drinking of cider was one of the best! The popularity of cider grew steadily; new varieties of apples were introduced, and cider began to figure in the tax records. 

It became the drink of the people, and production spread rapidly. By 1300, there were references to cider production in the counties now known as Buckinghamshire, Devonshire, Essex, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Kent, Norfolk, Somerset, Suffolk, Surrey and Sussex and in most other counties as far north as Yorkshire. 




Cider was produced in substantial quantities on farms; every farm would have a few cider apple trees as well as cooking and dessert apple trees in the orchard, and it became customary in the 18th Century to pay part of a farm labourer’s wage in cider. A typical allowance on a farm would be 3 - 4 pints per day. Labourers were rated by the amount they drank; one comment was that a 2 gallon a day man was worth the extra he drank! In the western counties of England in particular, a farm worker could receive perhaps one-fifth of his wage in cider. In the latter part of the 19th Century, a campaign to stop payment in the form of alcoholic beverages brought about the addition of a clause to the Truck Act of 1887 which prohibited the payment of wages in this way.

In Canada the history of cider could be traced back to explores like Captain Cook and the Hudson Bay Company. Cider was used to help prevent Scurvy. It may have been the British that first brought Cider to Canada but production flourished in Quebec.

The honour of planting the first apple tree in the history of Quebec goes to Louis Hébert, apothecary from Paris and New France's first settler. He did so around 1617 on the site where Quebec City was founded in 1608. A good number of the first French settlers to the colony were Normans who brought over the apple cider craft. Sizable orchards developed in the region of New France, particularly on Île d'Orléans.

Thursday, June 19, 2025


 All Canadian Wine Awards

Surprises


Yes, in my mind there were a few surprises at the All Canadian Wine Awards for 2025. The organization added International Blends awards but that was expected. One of the biggest surprises was the number of medals won by New Brunswick and Quebec.

British Columbia walked away with the most medals which is no surprise since they have done that the last few years. BC has the second most wineries to Ontario who collected the second most medals. The big surprise was 4 Double Gold 5 Gold 2 silver and 2 Bronze won by New Brunswick. Perhaps the province outside of the Prairies with the least number of wineries..

Quebec won 1 trophy and 12 Double Gold. They also collected 10 Gold,9 silver and 7 Bronze. Miel Nature inc. (QC) won Best Mead of the Year for their Pomme et Miel. La Cantina won two Gold in the Rosés Dry Category.

Remember, not all wineries enter these award competitions. Of those that did there were some surprising winners. Another surprise was how few awards were won by the older, prestigious wineries.

Happy Knight Wines NB Won double Gold for their Cranberry Rosé a surprise maybe but then their consultant is the highly respected Dominic Rivard. 

Magnetic Hill Winery , Moncton NB, won Double Gold for their Single White Hybrids The OC Osceola by the Sea 2024. A double surprise the won another Double Gold for their Terroir Generator New World Cali Style - Single Red Hybrids. Did I mention their third medal another Double Gold for their Soft Fruit off Dry Bay of Fundy and in the same category a silver for their Evangeline Blanc.

Coming out of Nova Scotia, a small Winery named for the town it is in Bear River Vineyards won Double Gold for White Hybrid Blends.

How about the new Solvero Wines winning Best White Wine of the Year for their 2022 Chardonnay; surprise or not, after all their winemaker is the highly respected Alison Moyes.

How about Keint-he Winery Best Rose Wine of the Year. They also won a silver for their Portage Pinot Noir.

Maan Farms Estate Winery took home the best Fruit Wine Trophy for their Strawberry Dessert Wine.

A winery I have heard very little about Villa Romana Estate Winery Inc in Ontario won a silver for the Cenerentolo 2022 Sparking Wine.

I was not expecting Moraine Estate Winery on the Naramata Bench to take the Double Gold for Shiraz /over $35.

I cannot say I was surprised that Baillie-Grohman won a double Gold for their Gewürztraminer , I would say it was about time they received recognition for their "fine" cellar of wines.

One winery that keeps surprising us is Alderlea Vineyards near Duncan on Vancouver Island. The husband and wife team of Zac Brown and Julie Powell keep producing outstanding wines. Winning a Double Gold for their 2024 Pinot Gris and more additional medals.

The Biggest Surprise Loose Wire Winery a New Brunswick-based winery that’s starting to make waves—especially after winning a Double Gold at the 2025 All Canadian Wine Championships for their 2024 Orange Pet Nat. They also won a Bronze for their Appassimento Style Experssimento. A winery I did not know about to just a few weeks ago and I have zero information about them!!

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

 Looking Back





Looking back I can recall my adventure into the wonderful world of wine began in 1992. My wife and I were married in Lake Tahoe on our honeymoon we traveled to Yosemite National Park. After touring the park our plan was to head back on the same road we arrived on, however that did not happen. But luckily this road led us to the Napa Valley of California. Here is where we spend the remainder of our honeymoon. What an exciting time it was!


Prior to our stay in Napa we were not huge wine drinks. In fact we seldom had alcohol in the house. But boy those wines were good. Back home I began to teach myself to create a website. It was just a fun site no special topic. However one day we decided to buy some wine at the local store. Barbara came to me with a pamphlet about BC wineries. She said "Why don't you do a website on Wine".


My wife is a good influence I took her advise and began to build a site on a free hosting service, popular at the time. I called my site Wines of the World. Here, based on a book Wine by Andre Domaine I listed all the wine regions around the world. Canada was not listed in the book. 


Once that was done I started to list all the BC wineries in the Pamphlet. Little did I know it had a number of errors. For example it listed Sandra Oldfield as winemaker at Crowsnest. Sandra began and finished her Winemaking career at Tinhorn Creek. Thankfully the winery notified me of the error.


There were no websites to Google back then. I found two books to help me, one by Tony Adler and the other by John Schreiner. I realized just how little I knew about the Canadian wine Industry. There were more wineries and more wine regions all across Canada, there was work to be done


This meant a change in my website. The Wines of the World was too big a subject to cover and we changed to Wines of Canada. I was amazed to find the domaine name was available. Our tag line Wines of Canada Challenging the World.


There was only one other website covering Canada's wine industry. I was more of a chat room than an information site. It soon disappeared. I was the only website dedicated to our wines and wineries. This last for a few years before other regional sites popped up. In 1994 I was quite excited to get thirty hits a day. Today thats a disappointing number for just one hour. 



In 94 we took our first trip to the Okanagan based mostly upon the wine route in a Pamphlet . Our first stop was Crownest Winery in the Similkameen Valley. We found the lane with a chain across it and the driveway covered in vegetation. It had been closed for sometime. The winery did re-open with new owners and are doing quite well.


Our next stop was St. Laszlo Vineyards Estate Winery our first experience with Fruit wines. Here we were warmly greeted by Joe Ritlop and enjoyed a wonderful tasting experience.


We were now off to Kelowna. Our first winery we visited in Kelowna was Mission Hill. It was perhaps the most talked about winery of the day. Although this was before its rebuild and architecture it is know for today. We took the tour. It was not the greatest experience too many people in a small space with a guide hired for the summer. I do not remember the tasting room experience. 


In 1994 Mission Hill Family Estate put the Okanagan Valley on the map by winning the International Wine & Spirit Competition in London for 'Best Chardonnay in the World' and at the time the Master of Wine Judges were in such disbelief they re-tasted all of the wines and Mission Hill won a second time. 


From Mission hill we went to Quails' Gate Estate Winery in Kelowna, in which had opened in 1989. We were impressed by the winery, the staff and the wines. 


The following day we visited Summerhill Pyramid Winery. The organic winery was opened in 1987. I do not recall if the restaurant was open on that trip. However we never miss having lunch at the winery on all our Okanagan trips.


From there we visited St Hubertus and Oak Bay Vineyards which originally planted in 1928 by J.W. Hughes during a time when good agricultural land was plentiful. Since 1984, the Gebert Family use sustainable farming practices on their 76 acre vineyard. By chance I came across Leo Gebert who gave me a tour of the winery and vineyards. Barbara was in the gift shop.


Finally we spend the evening at the Okanagan Wine Festval event in Kelowna. I remember it been crowed and the room been rather small. Here is where I first met John Schreiner who was there signing his book. It was also here we met the owners of Hainle estate winery. I was very excited about that since they were known for Ice Wine. The winery dates back to 1988 with the real story beginning in 1972, when the winery's original founder, Walter Hainle, produced North America's first icewine. 


They invited us to visit the winery which we did the next day on our way home. We had a most enjoyable time there.


So now we were home with new insights and new information. On that trip no one knew about Winesofcanada.com. But that would change by 2004 we were close to three million hits a year. By 2010 the blogger began to arrive.



We have been blessed to be Canada's number one wine website. It was a hobby perused mostly during the winter months. As we went from a handful of wineries to over 800 (counting Meaderies and Cideries) now its a daily task often without much reward.


Today we are THE website representing Canad's wine industry. We like to take about the wines, the winery and people of the wineries. Since all provinces license cideries and meaderies along with wineries we list them too. It means we have our eyes on over 800 business. It is a huge task.


We are non profit our reward is the kind words received by our many visitors and people in the industry. See More


When our budget allows we vist the wineries. We tell the story of every visit on the website. Please see Robert's Report


We do wine reviews, only on wines we have enjoyed by the glass. Robert's Selections. We do a number of Feature articles too. Please visit our sitemap