Read I'll Drink to That Online

Authors: Rudolph Chelminski

I'll Drink to That (44 page)

and Duboeuf family
founded
fraud accusations
labels
success of
and
vendangeoir
Létra
Leynes
Lichine, Alexis
Liergues
cave coopérative
life-span of wine
lime
livestock
Loire Valley
London, England
Loron
Louis
Lumière brothers
Luxembourg
Lyon
food of
and French Revolution
and
primeur
reactions to Beaujolais
status of
and vignerons
Lyon Mag
 
mâchon
Mâcon
Mâconnais
mail-order wine business
malbec
marc
(white lightning)
marcottage
marionette theaters
marketing
Marsannay
Martray, Pierre
matefaim
Mauss, François
meat
mechanization
advances in
mechanization (
cont.
)
and harvesting grapes
increases in
and tradition in wine making
and World War
medicinal plants
Mediterranean
mères Lyonnaises
merlot
methanol
Meursault wine
Michelin rating system
microbiology of vinification
Midi
mildew
Millardet, Pierre
Millau, Christian
Ministry of Agriculture
modernization
acceptance of
and hailstorms
and horses
limitations of
and
phylloxera
resistance to
and tradition in wine making
and wine production
Molière
Mommessin
monarchy
Mont Genas
monts du Beaujolais
Morgon
AOC label
character of
and mechanization
quality of
Moss, Stirling
motor vehicles and driving
Moulin-à-Vent
Mount Brouilly
Muscadet
museum, wine
 
name recognition of Beaujolais
names of wines
Napoléon
Napoléon
Narbonne
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
négociants
.
See
dealers (
négociants
)
Netherlands
New York Times
New Zealand
Niagara
Noah
North Africa
Northborough, England
nouvelle cuisine
nutmeg
 
Oberlin grape vine
oïdium
(powdery mildew)
Oingt (village)
organic winegrowing
Orizet, Louis
Our Lady of the Grape
Our Lady of the Vine
Our Lady of the Worm
oxygen
Papa Bréchard, Vigneron du Beaujolais
(Richardot)
Papillon (Saint-Laurent-d’Oingt co-op president)
paquets de couenne
paradis
Pariaud, Marcel
bank loans issue
bed and breakfast business
on difficulties
and Duboeuf
education
equipment
family
guarantee of
marriage
as mayor
and
musée du vin
old ways
personality
sounding reveille
use of horses
as vigneron
youth
Paris
as Beaujolais market
Duboeuf in
and
primeur
Paris School of Pharmacy
Parker, Robert
Pasteur, Louis
Patterson, John
Pays ’Oc
Peakirk, England
peasantry
celebrations of
described
exploitation of
and farming
food of
and honor
labors of
land ownership
lifestyle of
revolts
See also
vignerons
pest-control chemicals
Peter Dominic Wine Club
petit verdot
Peyret, Victor
Philibert, Raymond
Philip the Bold
Philip the Good
phylloxera
.
See
aphids (
phylloxera
)
Piat, Charles
Piat ’Or
Pierre Aiguë fortress-castle
Pierres Dorées
pigeons ficelés
pinot noirs
Pivot, Bernard
Poincaré, Raymond
Poitevin, André
Pommard
Ponosse, Augustin
Popular Front
potassium iodide
pot Beaujolais
Pouilly-Fuissé
and Blanc
of Duboeuf
and Lichine
success of
Poussier, Olivier
predators
press
and
Académie Rabelais
censorship of
and Duboeuf
l’Affaire Lyon Mag
and
primeur
regard for
pressing of the grapes
Prial, Frank
price of wines
primeur
banana aroma anomaly
and Beaujolais Nouveau Run
critics of
and
crus
described
distribution of
and Duboeuf
Fête du épart
and mechanization
and nouvelle cuisine
popularity of
and press
release of
white wine
primeurs
See also
Beaujolais Nouveau
production of wine
France’s dominance in
high levels of
increases in
overproduction
and
primeur
and quality issues
Puligny-Montrachet
Pulliat, Victor
pyrale
quality of wines
fake wines
fluctuations in
high quality wines
and INAO
and prices
See also
certification of wines
quenelles de brochet
Quincié-en-Beaujolais
rabbits
Rabelais, François
race.
See
Beaujolais Nouveau Run
Raclet, Benoît
raisins
Rampon brothers
rectilinear planting
red wines
Régnié
religious practices
Renaud, Serge
Renoux, Allain
restaurants
and chefs (
see also specific chefs
)
chefs
Duboeuf’s success with
in Lyon
and Michelin rating system
nouvelle cuisine
relationship of Duboeuf with
Richardot, Jean-Pierre
Ricketts, Anne
Ricketts, David
roads.
See
transportation
Robinson, Jancis
rockets
Romanèche-Thorins
Roman Empire
Rougier, Michel
on change
on consumption of wine
on dealers
on marketing
on status of Beaujolais
on strong wines
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
Rovani, Pierre-Antoine
 
Saint-Amour
Saint-Laurent-d’Oingt
Saint Vincent de Mâcon
Santenay
Saône
sassafras
sauce gribiche
saucisson au gène
sauvignon grapes
Savoy, Guy
Savoye, Louis
Savoye, Nicole Descombes
Schoonmaker, Frank
Scotland Yard
serfdom.
See also
peasantry
Sicily
silver iodide
Siraudin, Pierre
Sluter, Claus
social component of wine
Société des Amis de Guignol
soupe de farine jaune
South Africa
South America
Soviet Union
Spain
status of Beaujolais wines
acceptance of Beaujolais
compared to Burgundies
fluctuations in
name recognition of Beaujolais
and quality issues
Steeves, Edward
St. Martin’s Day
storms
St. Tropez
St. Vincent
substitutes for wine.
See also
fake wines
sugar content of wine
sugar wine
suicides
sulfur
“sulfur plows,”
Sunday morning meetings
Sunday Times
supply and demand for wine
Surrealism
Sweden
sweetness of wine
Switzerland
tablier de sapeur
Tati, Jacques
taxes
terroirs
Tête, Louis
Third Republic
Thoissey
Thomas, Jean-Pierre
Thorins
tolerance for wine
tractors
transportation
Treaty of Rome
Troisgros, Jean
Troisgros, Jean-Baptiste
Troisgros, Pierre
truck drivers
 
United States
and anti-American sentiment
as Beaujolais market
classification of wines
and France
marketing wines in
and
primeur
quality of wines from
Un Jardin en Beaujolais
urine
 
Vandalmonde
variability in wine
varietals
Vaux-en-Beaujolais
Vauxrenard
Vavro, Alain
VDQS (
vins élimités de qualité supérieure
)
veillée
Vergé, Roger
Vermorel, Victor
Verne, Jules
Vietnam
vigneronnage
vignerons
and absentee landowners
acquisition of land
attrition of
bottling wine
and dealers
difficulties experienced by
and Duboeuf
equipment
expectations of
fatalism of
and government bailouts
and harvest celebrations
and INAO
labors of
and
l’Affaire Lyon Mag
lifestyle of
and Mâcon-Beaujolais Showcase
memories of
and old vs. new ways
and
phylloxera
pride of
and
primeur
production levels
and quality issues
and St. Vincent
and suicides
See also
peasantry
Villefranche-sur-Saône
Villepin, Dominique de
Villié-Morgon
vin de repasse
vin ’honneur
vinegar
vinification
vin jaune
(yellow wine)
vinotherapy
vins médecins
vitriol (copper sulfate)
Volnay
Vosne-Romanée
 
water
hot water on grape vines
in peasant villages
quality of
weather
weddings
weed killers (
désherbants
)
Wells, H. G.
Weston, Susan
white lightning (
marc
)
white wines
Williams, Ian
winches
women
wood alcohol
World’s Best Sommelier
World War
 
yeasts
Yellow Tail wines
1
1 hectoliter = 100 liters. Beaujolais represents some 2.2 percent of France’s wine production, or .50 percent of total world production.
2
One hectare = 2.471 acres.
3
A thick glass carafe measuring forty-six centiliters.
4
Literally, “controlled” (or “checked” or “monitored” or “verified”) origins, but I feel that “certified” renders the French meaning better. Others would use the term “designated.” Difficult translation here.
5
In December of 2006 a change in the rules allowed limited irrigation, upon declaration, but to be applied no later than August 15 of each year.
6
As of 2007, INAO officially changed its name to INAQ:
Institut National des Appellations et de la Qualité
, in an apparent effort to underline that the products (wines, cheeses, etc.) given its certification did not only originate in certain
terroirs
, but were also
good.
The nuance was significant, because over the years too many AOC labels had been handed out too easily, debasing the credibility of the certification.

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