Brännvin
Template:Short description Template:Expand Swedish Script error: No such module "Multiple image". Brännvin (Swedish spelling; see Template:Sectionlink) is an old Nordic term for distilled liquor, generally from potatoes, grain, or (formerly) wood cellulose etc, and is today primarily used as a name for "Nordic-style" spirits, and then mainly divided into unspiced and spiced brännvin. Beverages labelled brännvin are usually plain and have an alcohol content between 30% and 38%.
It can be plain and colourless, or flavoured with herbs and spices, such as Akvavit. The common style of brännvin in Iceland, spiced with caraway – brennivín, although, not unique to the country, is considered to be Iceland's signature distilled beverage.
Etymology
The term brännvin is analogous between the Nordic languages, only differing slightly from language to language: Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx, Template:Langx. In Finnish, the name was originally also analogous, as Script error: No such module "Lang". or paloviina, but has since been shortened to just viina.
The word means "burn[t] (distilled) wine", stemming from Template:Langx (Old Swedish: brænnevin). It also exists in Template:Langx and Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "Lang"., ultimately cognate to brandy(wine), also Template:Langx.[1]
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A small glass of brännvin is traditionally called a snaps (Template:Langx; compare German: Schnaps), although not on Iceland. In Sweden, and among Swedish-speaking Finns, such is commonly accompanied by a drinking song, called snapsvisa.[2][3][4]
Brännvin was central to the semi-mythical world in the songs of Swedish composer Carl Michael Bellman. For example, in Fredman's Epistle no. 1, the first verse begins:[5]
| Swedish[5] | Translation |
|---|---|
| Gutår, båd’ natt och dag! Ny vällust, nytt behag! Fukta din aska! Fram, brännvinsflaska! Lydom Bacchi lag! |
Cheers, both night and day! New pleasure, new delight! Moisten your ash(-dry throat)! Forth, brännvin-bottle! Let us obey Bacchus's law! |
Swedish history
Brännvin has been produced in Sweden since the late 15th century, although the total production was still small in the 17th century.[6] From the early 18th century, production expanded, although production was prohibited several times, during grain shortages. Although initially a grain product, potatoes started to be used in production in the late 18th century and became dominant from the early 19th century.[7] From the early 1870s, distillery equipment was improved.
Progressively from the 1960s, unflavoured Swedish brännvin also came to be called vodka. The first Swedish product to use this term was Explorer Vodka, which was created in 1958 and initially was intended for the American export market. Although it ultimately failed in that market, it remains one of the most popular vodka brands in Sweden today.[8][9] In 1979, Absolut Vodka was launched, reusing the name of the old Absolut Rent Brännvin ("absolutely pure brännvin") created in 1879.[10]
In the US, a Chicago producer makes a bitter brännvin (beskbrännvin), called Jeppson's Malört.[11] "Malört" (Script error: No such module "IPA".) is the Swedish word for the plant Artemisia absinthium, wormwood, often used as an ingredient in absinthe.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
See also
References
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- ↑ Brännvinslagstiftning Template:Webarchive in Nordisk familjebok, volume 4 (1905)
- ↑ Brännvinsbränning Template:Webarchive in Nordisk familjebok, volume 4 (1905)
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Retrieved 12 December 2019.
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External links
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". - Short introduction to 'Script error: No such module "Lang".'. The Historical Museum of Wines and Spirits (English).