more    the product of  modern  fermentation
technology.
Making Wine
The making  of  a   basic   table   wine    can be
divided into    three   stages. In  the first,  the ripe
grapes  are crushed to  free    their   juice.  In  the
second, the grape   juice   is  fermented   by  sugar-
consuming,  alcohol-producing   yeasts  into    new
wine.   The third   stage   is  the aging   or  maturing
of  the new wine.   This    is  a   period  during  which
the chemical    constituents    of  the grape   and the
products    of  fermentation    react   with    each    other
and with    oxygen  to  form    a   relatively  stable
ensemble    of  flavor  molecules.
Crushing     Grapes  to  Make    the     Must
Crushing     extracts    from    the     grape   the     liquid
that     will    become  wine.   This    step    therefore
determines  to  a   large   extent  the final   wine’s
composition and potential   qualities.
