Fumarium

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A fumarium was a smoke chamber used in ancient Rome to enhance the flavor of

aging" the wine. Amphorae were placed in the chamber, which was built on top of a heated hearth, in order to impart a smoky flavor in the wine that also seemed to sharpen the acidity. The wine would sometimes come out of the fumarium with a paler color. In his book Vintage: The Story of Wine, Hugh Johnson noted that Pliny the Elder and Columella did not recommend that "first-growth wines" like Falernian, Caecuban, and Alban be smoked.[1]

Process

For preservation, the amphorae were sometimes treated with

Mishna stemmed from the Roman use of sulphur fumes - a uniquely Gentile technique.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Hugh Johnson, Vintage: The Story of Wine pg 72. Simon and Schuster 1989.
  2. ^ John Kitto, The Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature, Fredonia Books 2005.