1,介紹一下好喝的洋酒
路易13
2,世界上的洋酒的詳細(xì)資料都有些什么
http://bbs.2u.com.cn/thread-31057-1-1.html
這上面有你需要的
3,各位大蝦請(qǐng)幫忙翻譯一下是一種洋酒的商標(biāo)介紹謝謝了
意思是說(shuō):這是一款金色西班牙起泡酒,漂亮個(gè)氣泡會(huì)在玻璃容器中上升到頂點(diǎn)。伴著成熟果實(shí)暗示出的調(diào)味的芳香,強(qiáng)烈而又持久。一年陳釀絲滑的口感在你的嘴中,給你留下愉快的回憶。在香檳酒發(fā)酵后添加的利口酒使它有獨(dú)特的原始的酒香
百度搜一下翻譯,再看看別人怎么說(shuō)的。
4,XO都有那些意思
XO的基本含義是:
1. 白蘭地中的專(zhuān)業(yè)術(shù)語(yǔ)。
2. 形象劇的英文字母縮寫(xiě)
XO的意思就是“交叉窿”。
xo是指白蘭地中的專(zhuān)用術(shù)語(yǔ)法國(guó) 白蘭地(BRANDY)是一種烈酒,由葡萄酒或水果發(fā)酵后蒸餾而成的,但須放在木桶里經(jīng)過(guò)相當(dāng)時(shí)間的陳年。世界各國(guó)都出產(chǎn)白蘭地,而葡萄酒以法國(guó)產(chǎn)的最好,所以法國(guó)白蘭地也是最好,其中以干邑白蘭地(COGNAC BRANDY)尤為世界馳名。 所有的干邑都是白蘭地,但所有的白蘭地并不都是干邑。干邑是由法國(guó)的 Charente所出的葡萄酒蒸餾的,而且受到法律的限制與保障,其他地方出的葡萄酒蒸餾出白蘭地,在法律上說(shuō),不可稱(chēng)為干邑 。 白蘭地(BRANDY)是一種可飲用的酒,是由葡萄酒或發(fā)酵過(guò)的水果汁蒸餾出來(lái)的,要在木桶里經(jīng)過(guò)陳年才好喝。例如:干邑(COGNAC),雅文邑 (ARMAGNAC),西班牙白蘭地,美國(guó)白蘭地。KIRSCH或?qū)懗蒏IRSCHWASSER(櫻桃白蘭地) CALVADOS或APPLE JACK(蘋(píng)果白蘭地),SLIVOVITZ(李子白蘭地),以及其他水果白蘭地等。 干邑COGNAC 在法國(guó) CHARENTE河邊的干邑—COGNAC古城,是生產(chǎn)干邑美酒中心。此種白蘭地已世界馳名,因此這個(gè)法國(guó)字 COGNAC,差不多全世界的人都認(rèn)識(shí)了。就連中國(guó)或非洲也不例外。 干邑區(qū)又分六個(gè)小區(qū),所產(chǎn)酒的品質(zhì)也有高低,按順序排列如下: 1.GRANDE CHAMPAGNE 大香檳區(qū) 2.PETITE CHAMPAGNE 小香檳區(qū) 3.BORDERIES 邊緣區(qū) 4.FINS BOIS 植林區(qū) 5.BONS BOIS 優(yōu)等植林區(qū) 6.BOIS ORDINAIRES 一般植林區(qū)所有白蘭地酒廠, 都用字母來(lái)分別品質(zhì), 例舉如下: E代表ESPECIAL (特別的) F代表FINE (好) V代表VERY (很好) O代表OLD (老的) S代表SUPERIOR (上好的) P代表PALE (淡色而蒼老) X代表EXTRA (格外的) 干邑的品質(zhì)之所以超過(guò)其他的白蘭地,不僅是因?yàn)樵摰貐^(qū)的特殊蒸餾技巧,也是 因?yàn)樵摰貐^(qū)的土壤好、天氣好等, 因此產(chǎn)的葡萄特別好。 <干邑的級(jí)別>法國(guó)政府有著極為嚴(yán)格的規(guī)則,酒商是不能隨意自稱(chēng)的。總括而言,有下列之類(lèi)別: 3-STAR三星干邑:蘊(yùn)藏期不少于兩年 V.S.O.P干邑:蘊(yùn)藏期不少于四年 NAPOLEON干邑:蘊(yùn)藏期不少于六年 X.O.干邑:蘊(yùn)藏期多在八年以上 11
5,介紹威士忌的英文
我了解LZ想要什么。Whiskies are very special and characteristic, with the eye-catching golden yellow color, the ‘woody ’ or ‘smoky’ hint in it’s aroma, and the fruity sweetness and pleasant bitterness of its taste.(30 words) 耀眼的金黃色,略帶木質(zhì)或煙熏的迷人香氣,以及那果甜味和舒適的苦味使威士忌成為一種很特別有個(gè)性的美酒。
Scotch Whisky Whisky is, in its most basic sense, a spirit that is distilled from grain. Sometimes the grain has been malted, sometimes not. It is aged, often for long periods of time, in wooden barrels (usually oak). This barrel-aging smoothes the rough palate of the raw spirit and adds aromatic and flavoring nuances along and the base amber hue, all of which set whiskies apart from white grain spirits such as Vodka, Gin and Aquavit, which are distilled closer to neutrality in taste, and then generally not aged in wood. The basis of Scotch whisky is the heather-flavored ales made from barley malt that the Picts and their prehistoric ancestors brewed. Archeologists have found evidence of such brewing dating back to at least 2000 B.C. This ale (which is still produced today by at least one Scottish microbrewer) was low in alcohol and not very stable. Starting in the ninth century, Irish monks arrived in Scotland to Christianize their Celtic brethren. Along with the Word of the Lord they brought the first primitive stills, which they had picked up during their proselytizing visits to mainland Europe during the Dark Ages. The local Picts soon found that they could create a stable alcoholic beverage by distilling their heather ale. Simple stills came to be found in most rural homesteads, and homemade whisky became an integral part of Gaelic culture
愛(ài)爾蘭威士忌 irish whiskeythe distillation of irish whiskey has a long history, no one knows for sure when it first began. some sources place it as early as the 6th century when irish monks brought the distillation process back from the middle east . we may never know for sure but can be thankful it was started sometime in the distance past, enabling many hundreds of years of experience and perfection to bring us to the stage we are at today. certainly the distillation process in ireland is many hundreds of years old. in gaelic the drink became knowh as "uisce beatha" which means "water of life." the normans called it "fuisce" and eventually it evolved into "whiskey." what needs to come together? barley, clear waters, and peat for the fires to toast the barley are the key ingredients. they are certainly all found in ireland ! apart from the spelling irish whisk(e)y differs from scotch whisky in that normally irish is distilled three times (but not always) verses two for most scotch. the malting process also differs between irish & scoth, as irish whiskey uses sprouted barley dried in a closed kiln that is then mixed with unmalted barley before being ground into a grist. this accounts for the smoothness of irish whiskey and the "non-peaty" taste compared to scotch.