www.perutravels.net in English www.perutravels.net in Spanish
PeruTravels.net
by Viajes Delcy
Online Travel Agency and Tour Operator
(011) 511 222-7999 · info@perutravels.net
Home Tours Hotels Flights Pictures Testimonials Contact Us
Peru Tours
 
Top Peru Tours
Peru Cultural Tours
Peru Luxury Tours
Inca Trail to Machu Picchu
Peru Adventure Travel
Archaeological Tours
Mystical & Esoteric
Ecological Tours in Peru
Experiential Activities
Birdwatching Programs
Relax & Beach Tours
Honeymoon Tours
Amazon Cruises Tours
Peru Tours by Destination
Credit Cards Accepted
Visa AmEx
About Peru
 
Peru Travel Guide
Peru Adventure Travel
Nature and Ecology in Peru
Peruvian History
Culture, Arts & Traditions
Peru Facts at a Glance
Useful Travel Tips
Peru Pictures

Pisco - Peru Food and Gastronomy

Peruvian pisco is a grape brandy or aguardiente, distilled from fresh grape must in stills that do not rectify the final product. Thus the pisco obtained from the distilling process features is transparent or slightly yellowish, with an alcohol content that runs at around 42°.

Pisco

Pisscu means seagull in Quechua, the Inca language. It was also the name of a fertile valley often visited by condors and settled by descendants of the ancient Paracas culture. Here the local potters, also called piscos, crafted the large clay jars used to ferment chicha and other alcoholic beverages. When the Spanish Conquerors arrived in the sixteenth century, they found this part of the south coast featured the ideal conditions to plant Mediterranean grape varieties, and were able to plant them here thanks to the skill and knowledge of the ancient Peruvians who invented a system of irrigating the arid coastal desert.

When the Spaniards started distilling, they baptized the grape brandy "pisco", as well as the port from where it was shipped, as can be seen from maps dating back to the late sixteenth century. Pisco exports reached their height between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Pisco varieties are defined by flavor and not their aroma. There are four types, according to the ingredient used for their preparation: pisco puro (made from non-aromatic grapes); pisco aromático (aromatic); pisco acholado (distilled from several different grape varieties); and pisco mosto verde (distilled from grape must that has yet to fully ferment).

Peruvian writings dating back to the nineteenth century state that drinkers who ordered pisco would "tomar las once", in a reference to the 11 letters used to spell the word aguardiente. Peruvian writer Ricardo Palma (1833-1919) writing in his Tradiciones described pisco as "alborotador quitapesares..." (a rousing pick-me-up).


Festivals in Peru

Peruvian Dances

Peruvian Instruments

Folk Art

Peruvian Gastronomy


Contact Us

Do you want to make a reservation or need assistance?

Contact Us

 

Culture, Arts & Traditions
 
Peruvian Music
Festivals in Peru
Folk Art
Peruvian Gastronomy
Peru Travel Services

Top Peru Tours
Best Tours in Peru

Hotels in Peru by Destination

Peru Flights - Flights to Other Destinations in Peru

Supported by
Amadeus Peru

Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2005-2010 by Viajes Delcy EIRL - All Rights Reserved
Av Jorge Basadre 381, San Isidro, Lima Peru
Tel: (011) 511 222-7999