Wine in the bible is spoken of as a blessing in its unfermented
state and as an intoxicant in its fermented state. Many do not
realize that those living in biblical days were able to keep
their wine from fermenting and in fact did so regularly. How did
they accomplish this in an age without refrigerators? There were
3 primary methods:
First, they boiled their wine down to thick syrup. Boiling grape
juice causes the water to evaporate leaving behind a concentrate
with such a high level of sugar that fermentation was
impossible. Syrup in this state could be preserved for years.
Whenever they wanted to drink this unfermented wine, they would
mix a small amount of this syrup with water much like we do with
our Kool-Aid. Different ratios were used depending on the type
of grape, the age of the syrup, the temperature of the water,
and even the season.
Prov 9:1-5 – “Wisdom has built her house, she has hewn out her
seven pillars; she has prepared her food, she has mixed her
wine; she has also set her table; she has sent out her maidens,
she calls from the tops of the heights of the city: ‘Whoever is
naive, let him turn in here!’ To him who lacks understanding she
says, ‘Come, eat of my food and drink of the wine I have
mixed.’”
The
above verse refers to the mixing of wine as “wisdom” whereas
Prov 20:1 refers to a person intoxicated by wine as not being
wise. The contrast is clear. Boiling grape juice to prevent it
from fermenting and then mixing with water to enjoy as a
beverage is incumbent of wisdom and was a blessing from God.
Aristotle – “The wine of Arcadia was so thick that it was
necessary to scrape it from the skin bottles in which it was
contained and to dissolve the scrapings in water.”
Horace – “There is no wine sweeter to drink than that of Lesbos;
it was like nectar . . . and would not produce intoxication.”
Second, those living in biblical times had developed methods to
filter wine and remove its strength. While pressing out the
grape, they would use a bag called a “sacco” that captured the
fermentable substances, allowed the juice from the pulp to flow
through, and then collected it in a vase below the bag. Several
historians mention this method as in use during biblical times
as well as the fact that one of primary reasons they did this is
because unfermented wine tastes better.
Pliny The Younger – “The most useful wine has all its force or
strength broken by the filter.”
Plutarch – “Wine is rendered feeble in strength when it is
frequently filtered. The strength or spirit thus being excluded,
the wine neither inflames the brain nor infests the mind and
passions, and is much more pleasant to drink.”
This is the testimony of two non-Christian Gentiles confirming
that filtration causes wine to taste better because its strength
is removed. But they are merely confirming what we already know.
Beverages like grape juice begin fermenting when they are going
bad, not when they are getting better. Alcoholic beverages are
an “acquired taste” purely for the effects produced in the body
by the alcohol and not because it tastes good.
Third, they were able to refrigerate and seal wine. Grape juice
kept at 45° or less cannot ferment. If it is kept cool long
enough, the gluten settles at the bottom and the juice can be
skimmed off of the top where it can never ferment even if
warmed. We know from archeology that they stored this kind of
wine in caves, under water, and in the ground where it was
cooler. So even without refrigerators, they still had the means
to keep wine cool. They also kept their containers air tight by
corking the bottle and then sealing it with pitch. The Jews also
poured olive oil on top to seal the juice from the air. In the
1960s, a sunken ship was discovered at the bottom of the
Mediterranean that had containers of wine dating back to the
Roman Empire. The containers were sealed so well that water from
the sea had not penetrated them.
With multiple ways of preventing fermentation, this is further
proof that wine of biblical times was not necessarily alcoholic,
but could easily be preserved and enjoyed as a refreshing
alternative to water and a blessing from God that provided joy
and not intoxication.
Other Articles by Ryan Hasty
The
Destructiveness of Alcohol
Wine in the Bible -- Fermented and Unfermented
The Origin of the Sinners Prayer
Logical
Fallacies