Samian Wine and the Household Economy

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The cultivation of the vine has been, for the inhabitants of Samos, for many centuries the main support of the household economy.Even today, the productive and fruitful vine yields many and important products: from its grapes, mustos, wine, ouzo and tsipouro (called in the Samian dialect “summa”) as well as vinegar are successively produced.Muscat grapes are also edible, and in the past, they were also made into a raisin.

Confectioneries are made from musto (mustalevria, mustokoulura, mustokydon, petimezi, etc.).

The vine leaves are filled with rice and herbs (called “japrakia” in the Samian dialect) and eaten at the family table.

Boiled sprouts are an excellent “meze”.

The branches of the Samian vine are fuel, while in the past “charcoals” were also made from them, for the incense of the divine liturgy.

Grapes are a sought-after fodder, but also a raw material for the production of spirits.

Up until the last century, every family was fed by the vine and made the most of everything, in a form of “applied” household economy. It was a common understanding, even in the succession of generations, that the vineyard was the most necessary asset for every “householder”.

The family relied on the wine it produced. The musto agreed with a merchant, before the establishment of the Cooperative, and sold it. The merchants were mainly exporters’ brokers, who also ran a “domestic and colonial” store from which the producer procured the essentials for the maintenance of his household by maintaining an annual credit, which was repaid by production. Often, if the weather conditions were not favorable or “sickness fell” the debt was carried over to the following year. The merchant compounded the debt with interest, and the danger of “the vine coming out to the hammer” was ever present.

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