Kangina(en.wikipedia.org)
en.wikipedia.org
Kangina
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kangina
11 comments
Can we please use titles? e.g:
>Kangina: desert method for grape storage
As an amateur chemist/nerd, this definitely is an interesting article (fits HN theme, just needs a better descriptor).
>Kangina: desert method for grape storage
As an amateur chemist/nerd, this definitely is an interesting article (fits HN theme, just needs a better descriptor).
It's crazy that this is such a delicate process, and yet someone discovered that it works. Amazing.
Well, I'm not sure what I was expecting, but it wasn't that.
> The containers are, however, heavy, unwieldy, and prone to absorbing moisture.
Sounds like they'd only really make sense for surviving in dry environments. But still quite neat!
Sounds like they'd only really make sense for surviving in dry environments. But still quite neat!
[deleted]
Has anyone found them in Europe? I'd like to try how they taste
An awful lot like grapes, I'd imagine.
Both of the "cute" responses to this post suggest a lack of culinary imagination. You are correct to ask this: no preservation method is taste-neutral, and moreover, this process requires a varietal that is likely quite different in flavour and texture to supermarket grapes, or even wine grapes.
I wonder if there are earthy notes picked up by the process? Similar to pu-er tea for example? Do the grapes become sweeter, or even partially fermented?
Fascinating. I love this stuff
I wonder if there are earthy notes picked up by the process? Similar to pu-er tea for example? Do the grapes become sweeter, or even partially fermented?
Fascinating. I love this stuff
I think you'd find the clay a bit dry for a refined palate.
Pretty incredible that this works. I wonder how much trial and error went into perfecting the process nearly a millennium ago.