SKYY VODKA BASIC INFORMATION REVIEWS AND TEST

SKYY VODKA



SKYY Vodka is the number-one domestic premium vodka in the US and the fifth biggest premium vodka worldwide. SKYY’s state-of-the-art process of quadruple distillation and triple filtration yields a vodka of proven exceptional quality and smoothness.

Starting with SKYY Vodka’s distinctive cobalt blue bottle and award-winning marketing communications, SKYY is synonymous with quality, sophistication, and style.

SKYY Vodka is distributed internationally, its main markets are:

USA
Brazil
Canada
Italy

SKYY was born with the belief that everything can be made better with a little fresh thinking. It's how we create our vodka and the way we see the world. 




ABOUT SKYY VODKA

Founder:Maurice Kanbar
Year Founded:1992
Distillery Location:Midwest, USA
Types of Spirits Made:Vodka

SKYY VODKA ESSENTIAL FACTS
In 2000, Skyy sold one million cases of vodka. Four years later, the brand’s sales had more than doubled.

Skyy spent $25 million to build a new distillery to produce its ultra-premium vodka Skyy90.

HOW YOU SHOULD DRINK SKYY VODKA
Straight
In cocktails (Cielo Rosso, Ginger Sour, Holiday Glögg, Midori Peppermint Kiss, New Year’s Sparkler)


WINE FLAVOUR AND ROMA BASIC INFORMATION AND TUTORIALS

Wine Flavour and Aroma



Wine drinking, like many activities, can be as simple or as involved as the individual wishes to make it. It can be as uncomplicated as enjoying a glass with a meal or a friend. It can be as rigorous and technical as a wine show, where the decisions of professional judges often lead to great acclaim for winemakers, wine companies or countries.

What does the average consumer need to know to enjoy their wine? The short answer is probably not much beyond what they like the smell and taste of.

The best way to assess a wine is to look at it first, smell it and then taste it.We should select a glass that tapers towards the top, as a glass of this tulip shape retains more of the wine’s aroma. Fill it to about a third, and then look at the colour.

Colour varies according to the grape variety and wine type but it is also influenced by a wine’s acidity and its age. Generally, the younger and more acidic the wine is the brighter its colour will be. Acidic white wines appear slightly green, whereas red wines have an intense purple hue.Wines lose colour and flavour as they age excessively and can eventually become brown and smell or taste unpleasant.

Our sense of smell is just as important in enjoying wine as is our sense of taste. Swirl
the wine in the glass, hold it up to the light and look at the colour and the way the wine
drains down the surface of the glass. Next, put your nose well into the glass and take a
long deep breath.You can repeat this a couple of times before tasting.

Our sense of taste depends very much on where the wine strikes our tastebuds and how much air is mixed with it. Swirling the wine in the glass and then sucking it into your mouth so that it mixes with air releases the volatiles and heightens the flavours and aromas.

You will experience more of these sensations as you breathe out through your nose and mouth. Bitter flavours are tasted on the back of the tongue, sweet flavours on the front and sour or acid flavours on the sides.

Having experienced the aromas and flavours of the wines, the following section on wine terminology will give you the tools to help share your discoveries with others and to benefit from their experiences as well.

As you come to enjoy the variety and subtleties of wines you will wish to know more. Wine appreciation courses are a good place to start. The Australian wine industry offers many instructive and enjoyable options to allow people to explore their individual preferences for specific varieties, blends, flavours and styles.

MEDICINAL WINE BASIC INFORMATION

Winemaking has been around far longer than those specialty home brewing supply shops that sell all kinds of paraphernalia, from fermentation locks to expensive and delicate yeasts, cadmium tablets, and even glass bottles and corks!



Being a tightwad at heart, I wondered just how folks used to make wine without all that fancy equipment. Could I replicate the process in my own home?

I headed over to my local library to research an old English and Celtic form of wine called mead. What I found out was that not only were wines once made from a greater variety of fruits, but herbs were added as well to give unique flavors, scents, and healing properties. I have been hooked on winemaking ever since.

Making wine relies on the slow process of fermentation for preservation. Fermentation happens naturally as plants are left exposed to air and rot. While they do so, airborne yeasts and bacteria break down sugar and starch. Alcohol is excreted in the process.

The yeast and bacteria keep producing alcohol, until eventually the environment becomes toxic to them and they die. This is what forms the sediment in your bottles of homemade wine and vinegar. The trick is to control this process to yield a desirable product.

It usually takes about 2 months to make a batch of wine from start to finish, but I actually put in only about 2 to 3 hours’ effort in all. Fermentation can be smelled by every wild animal living in your county—they also consider wine a delicacy—so find a critter-safe area for your fermenting brew.

When starting out, you will probably want to produce several small experimental batches. Once you have your recipe down, you’ll find it more economical to make larger batches. With experience, you’re also likely to want to give the finished wine more time to age and mellow. Following are the proportions for both large and small batches. Note that the proportions are slightly different for the larger batch.