BRANDY
One of the best Brandy (Brandy wine) or cognac in the world comes from France and is worldwide know for its excellent quality. The name brandy comes from the Dutch word brandewijn, meaning "burnt wine." The name is apt as most brandies are made by applying heat, originally from open flames, to wine. The heat drives out and concentrates the alcohol naturally present in the wine. Because alcohol has a lower boiling point (172°F, 78°C) than water (212'F, 100°C), it can be boiled off while the water portion of the wine remains in the still. Heating a liquid to separate components with different boiling points is called heat distillation. While brandies are usually made from wine or other fermented fruit juices, it can be distilled from any liquid that contains sugar. All that is required is that the liquid be allowed to ferment and that the resulting mildly-alcoholic product not be heated past the boiling point of water. The low-boiling point liquids distilled from wine include almost all of the alcohol, a small amount of water, and many of the wine's organic chemicals. It is these chemicals that give brandy its taste and aroma.
Almost every people have their own national brandy, many of which are not made from wine: grappa in Italy is made from grape skins, slivivitz in Poland is made from plums, shochu in Japan is made from rice, and bourbon in the United States is made from corn. Beer brandy is better known as Scotch whiskey. It is universally acknowledged that the finest brandies are the French cognacs that are distilled from wine.
Brandies
are easy to manufacture. A fermented liquid is boiled at a
temperature between the boiling point of ethyl alcohol and the
boiling point of water. The resulting vapors are collected and
cooled. The cooled vapors contain most of the alcohol from the
original liquid along with some of its water. To drive out more of
the water, always saving the alcohol, the distillation process can
be repeated several times depending on the alcohol content desired.
This process is used to produce both fine and mass-produced brandy,
though the final products are dramatically
different.

