Commandaria

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Commandaria (or Commanderia) is an amber-colored dessert wine made from the indigenous Mavro and Xynistery varieties of grapes in the Commandaria region of Cyprus on the foothills of the Troodos mountains. The 14 villages that compose the Commandaria wine-producing area include Ayios Yeorgios, Ayios Constantinos, Ayios Mamas, Ayios Pavlos, Apsiou, Yerasa, Doros, Zoopiyi, Kalo Chorio, Kapilio, Lania, Louvaras, Monagri and Sylikou. It is an origin-controlled unfortified sweet wine with a natural alcohol content of 15%. It is usually aged in oak casks for several years, but does not need or benefit from additional aging once bottled.

The wine has a rich history, said to date back to the time of the ancient Greeks, where it was a popular drink at festivals celebrating the goddess Aphrodite. A dried grape wine from Cyprus was first known to be described in 800 BC by the Greek poet Hesiod. In the 12th century, during the crusades, Richard the Lionheart is said to have enjoyed it greatly at his wedding in Cyprus and to have pronounced it "the wine of kings and the king of wines." Near the end of the century he sold the island to the Knights Templar, who then sold it to Guy de Lusignan, but kept a large estate—the Gran Commanderie—to themselves. This area under the control of the Knights Templar (and subsequently the Knights Hospitaller) became known as Commandaria. When the knights began producing large quantities of the wine in this region for export to Europe's royal courts, the wine became known by the same name. Thus it has the distinction of being the world's oldest named wine still in production.

In February 2006, the Wine Products Association of Cyprus, selected an “official” Commandaria wine glass, manufactured by Riedel, an Austrian wine glass company. [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Cyprus Mail Article, March 26, 2006 [1]

Oxford Companion to Wine, Ed. Robinson, Jancis, Oxford University Press, 2nd ed., 1999.