History Of Seedless Grapes And Raisins Used In Wine Making:
In centuries past, ancient man noticed that grapes hanging on vines lasted
for months, and even though seedy, the fruit was sweet to the taste. These
grapes dried out in the sun and were called raisins. The raisins could be stored
for months to be eaten at a later time, centuries before advanced civilizations
learned how to preserve foods artificially by canning and freezing. Other fruit
items such as palm tree dates, figs, apricot, prune-plum, pear, and peach could
be preserved by sun drying. Today, many additional products can be preserved by
vacuum drying, such as strawberry, blueberry, and a host of tropical fruits,
such as pineapple, guava, and many other fruits and berries. After many people
age, a craving for dried fruit, grapes, and berries intensifies because of the
high sugar content (sweetness), and the concentrated flavor.
Basically, all ancient raisins were grown as two types: the regular sized
grapes were dried, large in size with large seed, and the raisins that came from
Corinth, Greece were called currants (the word is a corruption of the word
Corinth). The currants were very small but grew into huge grape clusters on the
grapevine, and were extremely sweet with an aromatic, intense flavor. Currants
became an international, valuable success, and were sought after, even being
grown to be used in trading matters like currency. The word, currency, derived
from the word currants.
The mystery remains today about which chemicals in grapes, other than sugar,
that are responsible for preserving grapes in the form of raisins or in bottling
the liquid aromatic wine, that improves in flavor after being aged for many
years. There is a special grape from Hungary called Tokay (Tokaji) that is left
on the vine to ripen into raisins. The raisins are pickled and fermented into
the famous Tokay wine, that must be aged for many years as an aromatic wine
known for its unique and intense flavor. The Tokay wine was named as the wine of
Tsars, Kings, and Presidents . Catherine the Great, Tsarina of Russia, stationed
Cossack soldiers to guard her treasured cache of Tokay raisin wine. Queen
Victoria of England received 972 bottles of Tokay wine on her birthday. King
Louis XIV of France pronounced Tokay wine as 'the wine of Kings, the King of
wines.' Gourmets agree that Tokay wine should be assigned to a special named
category, since the extra step of aging came from the aging of the grape to the
raisin, and is bypassed in normal wine producing.
It is difficult to trace the absolute first appearance of raisin culture in
ancient history, but it is known that raisins were written about in the ancient
Scriptures of the Hebrew Bible. Raisins were actually written about in the Bible
as a forbidden fruit, that was prohibited from the diets of a religious cult
called the Nazirites. Members of the cult were Nazirites, such as Aaron, brother
of Moses, and all his priestly descendants; Samson, the Judge; John the Baptist
of the New Testament, and members of another religious cult, the Rechabites.
Numbers 6:14 reads that the Nazirites were forbidden to taste fresh wine, 'grape
juice or raisins.' These Nazirites were not allowed to eat anything from the
grapevine, even forbidding the eating of grape skins and grape seeds, and were
not even permitted to grow grape vines or to own vineyards. Judges 13:13
prohibited the mother of Samson from allowing her son to eat 'raisins or drink
any wine.'
Even though the Scriptures make no direct prohibition to John the Baptist to
abstain from eating raisins, the edict is implicit in acknowledging that John
the Baptist was a Nazirite, which was referred to by Jesus in Matthew 11:18 and
Luke 5:33.
King David was given 'one hundred raisin cakes and 200 fig cakes.' 1 Samuel
25:18, after having nothing to eat or drink for three days and nights. David was
given 'part of a fig cake, two clusters of raisins, and some water' 1 Samuel
30:12. After leaving Jerusalem, King David's donkeys were loaded with one
hundred clusters of raisins, one hundred bunches of grapes, and a small barrel
of wine. At the feast for King David, donkeys brought vast supplies of 'fig
cakes, raisins, wine' etc for the celebration. 1 Chronicles 12:40
Historically, it is recorded that the Greeks were growing grapes (currants)
in Corinth, and the culture of grapes and raisins flourished with the rise of
the Roman Empire followed by the Medieval Age of the Catholic church and the
Crusades that renewed and redistributed the trade of grapes and raisins. Raisins
were used as a reserve food on the ships of Christopher Columbus, the Nina, the
Pinta, and the Santa Maria, in 1492. Spanish Missions later grew grapes and
produced raisins in the New World, most importantly in California, and were the
most important commercial farmers to plant and grow grapevines for raisin
production.
Perhaps the most important improvement in raisin marketing came from the
vineyard of William Thompson, who renamed the grape he imported as the white
'Thompson Seedless' grape, that was, and is, the most significant cultivar in
modern grape marketing, and customer demand for a seedless raisin. Many other
new seedless grapes have been recently hybridized as candidates for seedless
raisin to plant and grow. The pleasure of eating sweet, aromatic raisins is
reduced, if the person is required to spit out hard, bitter tasting seed,
therefore, seedless raisins dominate the market and the fresh grape fruit
market. Recent advances in applications of plant growth hormones assure the
total seedless condition of grapes and raisins, because the seed inside the
embryonic grape are completely aborted by spraying the flowers of the grapes
with gibberillic acid (gibberillin) and the grapes grow into very sweet, big and
juicy, and evolve into excellent raisins.
New grape varieties that are useful for raisins are:
Black Beauty seedless grape, the only black seedless grape with a taste like
concord grapes.
Flame seedless grape, the second most popular seedless grape, compared to
Thompson's seedless, deep red in color, round with a pleasant crunch and a
sweet-tart taste balance.
Tokay seedless grape, also called Tokay flame seedless, sweeter version of
Flame seedless, orange-red with a crisp texture.
Perlette seedless grape, the frosty-white bloom is atop a crisp green skin,
the hardiest seedless grape that ripens earlier than other varieties.
Ruby Seedless grape, deep red skin, juicy and oval shaped.
Thompson's seedless grape, white, crisp, juicy and sweet.
Other seedless grapes are Autumn Royal seedless grape, Canadice Seedless
grape, Concord seedless grape, Crimson seedless grape, Princess seedless grape,
and Summer Royal seedless grape.