Yes, the Romans pressed grapes to make wine.
The Romans ate peas and apples. They did not make cakes or pies with them. They ate grapes or made wine with them.
Both produced from grapes.
You can make white wine out of red grapes but you can't make red wine out of white grapes
Not only white grapes. Remember, you can make white wine from red grapes, but not red wine from white grapes.
The Romans called Dionysus, the god of wine, Bacchus.
Grapes were important in ancient Greece because they made wine which was a main and important beverage, they were also a source of food and they were the symbol of Dionysus (the God of wine and theatre).
The pigments in the grapes that make wine.
The pineapple is indigenous to South America and was introduced in Europe after the discovery of America. Therefore, the Romans did not have pineapples. Grapes originate from the Near East and were one of the most common fruit in the Mediterranean already in Antiquity. The Romans ate plenty of grapes and used them to make wine.
Grapes
they grow grapes beacuse they want to make wine
You would use fairly tart grapes to make your dry wine.
yes, but it was a very different product to what we know today, it would have been a very oxidized style.