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Apple and Other Fruit Brandies



Normandy is one  of the few regions in France that does not have a substantial grape wine  industry. Instead it is apple country, with a substantial tradition of  producing hard and sweet cider that in turn can be distilled into an Apple  Brandy known as Calvados. The local cider apples, which tend to be small  and tart, are closer in type to crab apples than to modern table apples.  This spirit has its own appellations, with the best brands coming from  Appellation Controlee Pays dAuge near the Atlantic seaport of  Deauville, and the rest in 10 adjacent regions that are designated  Appellation Reglementee. Most Pays dAuge and some of the better  Appellation Reglementee are produced in pot stills. All varieties of  Calvados are aged in oak casks for a minimum of two years. Cognac-style  quality and age terms such as V.S.O.P. and Hors dAge are frequently  used on labels, but have no legal meaning. In the United States,  Applejack, as Apple Brandy is called locally, is thought by many to be the  first spirit produced in the British colonies. This colonial tradition has  continued on the East Coast with the Lairds Distillery in New Jersey  (established in 1780 and the oldest distillery in America). Apple Brandies  that are more like eau-de-vie are produced in California and  Oregon.

 

The  fruit-growing regions of the upper Rhine River are the prime eau-de-vie  production areas of Europe. The Black Forest region of Bavaria in Germany,  and Alsace in France, are known for their Cherry Brandies (Kir in France,  Kirschwasser in Germany), Raspberry Brandies (Framboise and Himbeergeist),  and Pear Brandies (Poire). Similar eaux-de-vies are now being produced in  the United States in California and Oregon. Some Plum Brandy is also made  in these regions (Mirabelle from France is an example), but the best known  type of Plum Brandy is Slivovitz, which is made from the small blue Sljiva  plum throughout Eastern Europe and the Balkans.