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Posted: under Argentina - Holidays and Travel.
Tags: Spanish Course, Wine Production, Wine Table

Argentina Travel
Enrique Helmbrecht asked:


Argentina is internationally recognized for its high quality wines and alcoholic drinks. Travellers come to study Spanish in Argentina and enjoy its drinking culture. Overseas markets have made of Argentina a premier distributor of these goods in the short run.

Since the 16 C, and thanks to the Spanish influence, Argentina started a non stop period of massive grape harvests and wine production. Today it is the fourth major wine manufacture in the globe, especially attractive to those who want to study Spanish and discover a new culture. Mendoza is the region where most of the Argentinean vineyards are found. Study Spanish and encounter a huge chain of wineries and traditional home made production, where wines are still made by crushing grapes with the feet. Visitors coming to study Spanish are taken to vineyards to take part of the harvest activity by collecting grapes. Renowned brands in Mendoza include guided tours and visits to their assets. These tours are held in different languages for those who don’t speak Spanish or have come to study Spanish in Argentina and are taking a Spanish course.

In Argentina, winery production includes red, white and rose wine, table wine, sparkling wine and sweet wine. All of them vary according to the region where they are produced and the harvest quality. Each type of wine also varies in itself. Visitors that study Spanish in Argentina are taught how from white wine for example, evolves the Chardonnay and the Sauvignon Blanc.

Argentina’s main production is of red wine, taking the 39% the existing vineyards, being the Malbec the most important red wine produced. Wine is an incredible attraction for visitors; if you study Spanish in Argentina, then you can find Spanish courses that include wine tours and special wine events while you study Spanish.

Mate is a very different drink but as distinctive as wine when speaking about the Argentinean culture. Those who study Spanish in Argentina will find that mate is an emblematic national drink that involves a cultural ritual. It is tea brewed from a green plant called yerba. Mate is obtained when you add hot water to the yerba leaves held in a seasoned guard. You drink it through a metal straw. You can’t drink mate alone, it is a social ritual part of the Argentinean way of life; you share mate with friends, while you study Spanish or whenever you want.

Depending on the region of Argentina, mate is prepared and consumed in different ways. Northern provinces usually drink mate sweeten with sugar, while in central Argentina it is generally consumed bitter. Other option is to drink ice-cold mate; tradition carried out during summer. Cold mate in Argentina is called Terere. Wherever you decide to study Spanish, you will be introduced to the enigmatic mate culture during Spanish courses.

Mate tradition is millenary; it was started by natives who lived in Argentina centuries before the Spanish conquerors arrived. If you come to study Spanish in Argentina you will be taught how during ancient times this national drink was believed be magic, have healing powers and a natural mental stimulator. Nowadays it has been proved successful for appetite control and fatigue reduction, useful for those who study Spanish in Argentina.

Mate in Argentina is drunk at any time, early in the morning, during the evening or after lunch; you drink mate when you study Spanish, watching TV or just to sweeten a chat. Mate is carried around in thermos flasks to squares, the river or the countryside. Mate is the first drink introduced to students that have decided to study Spanish in Argentina.

Mate and wine are distinguishing features of Argentina always introduced to those who study Spanish.



Kelly

Comments (0) Nov 22 2008

Posted: under Argentina - History and Culture.
Tags: Fertile Crescent, History Of Wine, Wine Production

Argentina History and Culture
Robert asked:


According to the ledgend, the woman lost to the King and wished to end her life by eating rotten table grapes stored in a jar. The suicide attempt did not go as she planned; instead she got drunk and eventually passed out. When she awoke, she felt as if all her troubles had disappeared and this event encouraged her to continue taking the fermented grapes. So going by this pleasant story, one can say that wine is not an invention of man but was, rather found by luck.

The history of wine is as old as civilization, the agriculture and the man himself. Historians suggest that wine was discovered accidentally during 6000 and 5000 BC. in the Fertile Crescent area, an area in between the Nile and the Persian Gulf. Archeological evidence has uncovered the earliest European wine production from crushed grapevines in Macedonia 6500 years ago.

From the time of discovery of wine to this present date, wine has played a very crucial role in many rituals and customs of modern society . In the ancient Egyptian period, wine became an integral part of ceremonial life, mainly funerary ceremonies. Only the richest Egyptians like the Pharaohs were able to drink wine. Wine was also common place in ancient Greece and Rome and in many other European countries.

The Egyptian Phase

Though scientists have identified a wine jar from Hajji Firuz Tepe in the Northern Zagros Mountains of Iran, the widespread knowledge of wine making is believed to have come from Egypt. The wine making process was represented on tomb walls dating back to 2600 BC. Maria Rosa, a master in Egyptology says that wine in ancient Egypt was of great importance and only the upper class people and kings had access to wine. Rosa further points out that the ancient Egyptians labeled the wine jars with product, year, growning area and the vine grower’s name, but there is no mention about the color of the wines. A recent discovery has shown that the wines in ancient Egypt were usually red.

The Ancient Greeks

Arrival of wine making process in ancient Greece is not well noted; many believe that wine manufacturing tradition was introduced to Crete by the Phoenician traders. Strong evidence of wine production have also been collected from Minoan Mycenaean cultures.

Wine was a very important trading article in Greece commerce. The Greeks were able to set up their colonies throughout the Mediterranean and this in turn improved the export of Greek wines in the region. The Greeks learned how to prevent wines from spoilage by adding different herbs and spices. Wine in ancient Greece was stirred in a glass before drinking.

Apart from trading, the Greeks used wine in the field of medical sciences. One of the well known medicine practitioners, Hippocrates, also known as the Father of Medicine studied wine extensively for its use in medical sciences, specially to reduce fever, convalescence and as an antiseptic. It must be mentioned here that the Greeks were equally aware about the negative health effects produced by consuming too much wine.

The Ancient Romans

The Romans discovered the viticulture (cultivation and study of grape growing) and oenology (the science of wine and winemaking). In the Roman Empire, wine formed a large part of their daily meals as water could not always be trusted to be safe and clean. During this period, wine making technology became more established with a significant impact on the Roman business. The Romans developed wooden barrels to store and ship wine, while bottles were used for the first time in the history of the wine world. The ancient Romans are also known to have dissolved pearls in wine for their better health.

With the expansion of Roman Empire, wine production expanded to all of its provinces. During the Dark Ages when Roman Empire collapsed and when Europe passed through social and political fracture, wine production was kept alive by the efforts of religious monks. Churches are known to have developed some of the finest vineyards in Europe.

Ancient China and Wine

Although wine was not much of a favorite of the ancient Chinese people, its production and drinking was popular in three different periods, mainly the Han Dynasty, Tang Dynasty and the Yuan Dynasty. In China rice wine was not as popular as the grape wine.

Wine in the Middle Ages and Today

Wine became popular in the Middle Ages, it was considered as a social drink for all occasions. In the northern regions of the Europe where no grapes were grown, beer and ale were predominant and in the Eastern part white vodka was the preferred drink.

America, Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand that manufacture wide varieties of wines are considered as the New World Wine Producers. The products of these countries were not well known to the wine consumers until late in the 20th Century.

The industrial revolution in the 20th century has provided wine makers with new technology and innovation that has made making much more efficient. Considerable R&D advances in viticulture and oenology have helped the present day manufacturers to produce more varieties of wines of much lower cost.



Chandler

Comments (0) Jul 06 2008

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