Poli Museo della Grappa

Poli Grappa Museum

Poli Distillerie

Poli Distillerie




Fruit of cidre

  • Plant: Service Tree (Sorbus Domestica)
  • Plant part: fruit
  • Plant feauters: astringent, diuretic, anti-inflammatory, refreshing, calmant, detergent

  • Description:
    The fruit of the domestic Service tree has been used as an antidiarrhetic cure-all since antiquity, because of its high content of tannins with their astringent properties.
    Soaked in water, or dried on a little straw, these fruits will assume their sweet and sour taste with a slightly bitter aftertaste, especially when it is the fruit of the Service tree, which thrives in warm regions. This is the reason why you can get from a apparently "hostile" fruit a wide range of products: from the vinegar, prepared by the Romans with boiled wine (in which the fruit of the Service tree was put), to the beer of the Gauls, brewed with Service tree and other wild fruits, as well as the so-called "Curmie", an apple wine made by fermenting the crushed fruits in water. Not to mention the numerous jams and marmalades.  
Service Tree (Sorbus Domestica)
  • Ingredients:
    - 2 handful of ripe fruits
    - 1 liter of Grappa
    - some sugar
  • Preparation:
    A Grappa with the fruits of the Service tree can be obtained as follows: two handful ripe fruits, preferably a little dried, for three months in the sun, in a liter of Grappa with some sugar.
    Filter and then age it for other three months.
    The Grappa, which has a yellowish color and a light pear flavor, should be served with a cooled slice of pear.

    Flavored Grappas

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  • White wormwood (Achillea Clavennae)
  • Brown alga (Alaria Esculenta)
  • Pero corvino (Amelanchier Ovalis)
  • Angelica Sylvestries (Angelica Sylvestris)
  • Strawberry tree (Arbutus Unedo)
  • Absinthe (Artemisia Absinthium)
  • Genepì male or black (Artemisia Genipi)
  • Wild Asparagus (Asparagus Acutifolius)
  • Woodruff or fragrant Bedstraw (Asperula Odorata)
  • Barberry (Berberis Vulgaris)
  • Birch (Betula Alba)
  • Pepper e chilli pepper (Capsicum Frutescens)
  • Field Cumin (Carum Carvi)
  • Common Chicory (Cichorium Intybus)
  • Cinchona (Cinchona Succirubra)
  • Ceylon Cinnamon Tree (Cinnamomum Zeylanicum)
  • Seville Orange, Bitter Orange (Citrus Aurantium)
  • Kola Nut (Cola Acuminata)
  • Cornelian cherry, European cornel (Cornus Mas)
  • Azarole, Mediterranean medlar (Crataegus Azarolus)
  • Common Hawthorn, Midland Hawthorn (Crataegus Oxycantha)
  • Globe Artichoke (Cynara Scolymus)
  • Dictamnus (Dictamnus Albus)
  • Date-Plum (Diospyros Lotus)
  • Russian Olive (Elaegnus Angustifolia)
  • Green or True Cardamom) (Elettaria Cardamomun)
  • Loquat, Japanese medlar, Japanese plum  (Eriobotrya Japonica)
  • Tasmanian bluegum, blue gum (Eucalyptus Globulus Labill)
  • Florence fennel or Finocchio (Foeniculum Vulgare)
  • Agarikon, Quinine Conk (Fomes Officinalis)
  • Wild Strawberry (Fragraria Vesca)
  • Manna Ash (Fraxinus Ornus)
  • Great Yellow Gentian (Gentiana Lutea)
  • Wood Avens, Colewort (Geum Urbanum)
  • Liquorice, Licorice (Glycyrrhiza Glabra)
  • Roselle, Carcade (Hibiscus Sabdariffa)
  • Common Sea-Buckthorn (Hippophae Rhamnoides)
  • Common Hop, Hop (Humulus Lupulus)
  • Pperforate St John's-wort (Hypericum Perforatum)
  • Star anise, Chinese star anise, Badiam (Illicium Verum)