The classic French pear brandy is the Williams Pear Brandy, which contains -- you guessed it! -- a Williams Pear. The pear isn't put into the bottle; it grows inside it. When the fruit is small, the bottle is affixed to the tree branch, and the pear grows to maturity inside the bottle. Brandy made from Williams Pears is added, and voila! The magic is complete.Having once purchased a bottle out of curiosity (and having enjoyed the brandy immensely), I sought out the answer to this very question. And yes, if you live in a climate that is conducive to growing pears -- and a former neighbor of mine in Lake Arrowhead, CA, is a candidate for doing this, since she grows terricif pears! -- please do try it!
a pear tree is a tree that grows pears.
If you mean the "pear in the bottle" brandy, the bottles are placed on the trees before the pears start to grow and they just grow right into the bottle.
A bottle is attached to the end of a pear tree branch and the pear grows inside the bottle.
The bottle is attached to a branch and the pear grows inside the bottle.
Pears grow on a tree that is part of the Pyrus genus. These trees produce fruit that is known as pears.
The plural of pear is pears.
No. Pears grows in a moderate temperatures and are sensitive to wet weather. Pear trees are mostly Europian or Asian species.
The pear most likeky originated in the country of Georgia, as there are a variety of wild pears there. But maybe it's Kazakhstan, since apples originated there. The Asian pear looks very similar to an apple. Asian pears could be a hybrid between wild pears from the Caucasus and wild apples of Central Asia.
Possibility 1) They hang a bottle in a pear tree with the fruit bud inside the bottle. It grows in there - not common anymore. Possibility 2) The Glass Bottle consists of a threaded bottom part. The pear is put into the bottle, then the bottom is "screwed" onto the rest of the bottle which will eventually seal the two parts together as well.
Bottles are suspended over the pear buds (upside down) before they get too big (the buds not the bottle), and the pear grows in the bottle. I have been very successful in doing that for the last ten years or so.
Pear