Guest guest Posted April 26, 2008 Report Share Posted April 26, 2008 Jodi, As you know, the BTVC book says that " very dry wine is permissable " . I don't know wines, but my family doctor just happens to own a wine shop and is quite knowledgeable. When I asked him the same sort of question he said that in general, European wines are dryer than American wines because of differences in our pallets. I wouldn't go just by region though. You need to find a good wine shop with a knowlegable employee and ask them for a " very dry " wine. I've done this and had good luck. I don't know how to address the question of your family wine. I have been unable to find a subjective answer to what 'very dry' means. There is a knowledge base article on the BTVC web site (www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/knowledge_base/kb/wines.htm), but it offers no conclusions, just a scale. Cheers, Stocker eatingSCD.wordpress.com CD since 1983 SCD since 1/2005 > > I am wondering... How can I know for sure what regions in the world > wines are " supposed " to be legal? If I cannot find wine from > California and Italy. Am I taking a gamble if I drink wine from Spain > and France? How can I find out if Israeli wine is legal? > > Wines from Provence, are they usually considered legal? > What about Rose' from Provence? > > Also, in general are all Cali wines like legal? Or just the ones from > Napa, Sonoma and so on? > > What would it say on a bottle to know that the wine is like the real > deal? " Estate grown and bottled " Something like that? So, there > aren't a hundred middle men for the growing and bottling process? How > would that be written for Italian wines? Also, what would be a > synonym for this on a bottle that could be a signal for me? > > I would love to know more about this as my hobby for years has been > wine and the past couple I branched out more into Sake because my > hubby and I got into the whole Japanese kick. > > Also, my grandfather's family made wine before WW2 in Hungary. My > grandfather continues to make wine for the family at home. Although, > these days he isn't up to it. I wonder since the past few years my > father has taken over- he " adjusts " the taste sometimes with sugar and > puts it in the VAT and lets it sit longer. I wonder if that is illegal?? > The type of wine grandpa and father make is wine that we add soda > water to- to make what is called in Hungarian a " Fretch " if that is > how I would spell it in English. > > How can I know if my family wine is legal? > > Thanks, > Jodi > SCD 7 Months > Crohn's/Colitis > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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