The Food On Your Plate

I Am Grapes …A Divine Fruit to Drink

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I Am Grapes …A Divine Fruit to Drink

In 2017, a single sentence reverberated through the Internet, skidding across social media and breathless blogs: ‘They did surgery on a grape’.And they had! A video showed a tiny robot making delicate incisions in my thin purple skin before pulling back the translucent layer to reveal my juicy yellow-green flesh below.

The video was meant to demonstrate the surgical tool’s exacting abilities, but the sheer absurdity of the sentence ‘They did surgery on a grape' caught on with millions, and I became a nonsensical Internet meme.

My popularity long predates my online fame, of course. After all—I also become wine! A resident of North America since before the Pilgrims, my native varieties (including the North American fox and scuppernong) were not great bases for wine, but clusters of me growing in Asia and Europe sure were. Early humans there learnt that given the right conditions, I fermented well—just harvest my bunches, crush them to a pulp and let the good times roll. (It wasn’t until later that modern microbiology explained that my skins—if they haven’t been peeled off by a mini robot—naturally carry the yeast necessary for fermentation.) The Romans then spread winemaking to just about every land they conquered.Perhaps Julius Caesar should have said veni, vidi, vini.

Alas, this entire wine world was almost lost in the 1800s. The first warning signs started with a guy named Thomas Jefferson. After working in Europe on a diplomatic mission, Jefferson took a keen interest in French wines and decided to see if he couldn’t make good vin stateside at his Monticello estate. He planted European grapevines in his fields,then watched as they withered and died. Though he didn’t know it, pests native to American soil had wreaked havoc on that European rootstock.

More disastrously , curious Euro peans had shipped American grapevines to their shores t...

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