Maynard Amerine
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Maynard Andrew Amerine (1911–1998) was a pioneering researcher in the cultivation, fermentation, and sensory evaluation of
wine Wine is an alcoholic drink typically made from fermented grapes. Yeast consumes the sugar in the grapes and converts it to ethanol and carbon dioxide, releasing heat in the process. Different varieties of grapes and strains of yeasts are m ...
. His academic work at the
University of California at Davis The University of California, Davis (UC Davis, UCD, or Davis) is a public land-grant research university near Davis, California. Named a Public Ivy, it is the northernmost of the ten campuses of the University of California system. The institut ...
is recognized internationally. His 16 books and some 400 articles contributed significantly to the development of the modern (post-Prohibition) wine industry in California; to the improvement of wine cultures in Europe, South America, and Australia; and to the professional standards for judging and tasting wine. In the early 1940s, he and his colleague Albert J. Winkler developed the
Winkler scale The Winkler Index, sometimes known as the Winkler Scale or Winkler Regions, is a technique for classifying the climate of wine growing regions based on heat summation or growing degree-days. In the system, geographical areas are divided into five c ...
, a technique for classifying wine growing regions based on temperatures, that continues to be used in the United States and elsewhere. His research, organizational, and advisory efforts in wine tasting helped bring about a more objective vocabulary to that field, based on flavors and scents rather than allusive references.Lawrence Osborne, ''The Accidental Connoisseur: An Irreverent Journey Through the Wine World'' (2004), pp. 130–131.


Biography

Amerine was born in 1911 in
San Jose, California San Jose, officially San José (; ; ), is a major city in the U.S. state of California that is the cultural, financial, and political center of Silicon Valley and largest city in Northern California by both population and area. With a 2020 popu ...
, the child of Roy Reagan Amerine and Tennessee Davis Amerine. He grew up on their farm in Modesto, California. In 1935, while still completing his PhD in plant physiology at the
University of California at Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant uni ...
, he became the first faculty member hired into the new Viticulture and Enology Department at the University of California at Davis. He became full professor in 1952, was deemed All-University Lecturer in 1962, and continued his research and teaching at Davis until his retirement in 1974. He remained Professor Emeritus, served as an advisor at the Wine Institute in San Francisco, and continued to write, travel, and advise on wine production and evaluation nearly until his death in 1998. Amerine was featured on an episode of "To Tell the Truth" on the CBS television network in the 1960s accompanied by two impostors. Host Bud Collyer read a description of Amerine's work at UC Davis noting that his tasting class was "closed to undergraduates." Amerine sat in the middle seat (No. 2). The panel for the show: Tom Poston, Kitty Carlisle, Don Ameche, Polly Bergen. (Bergen asked No. 3: "Where is the University of California, besides being in California?" No. 3 answered that the branch where he taught was in Davis, CA; Bergen seemed extremely dubious about this answer .e., not familiar with the fact that UC has a Davis campus, perhaps expecting "Berkeley" or "Los Angeles") None of the panelists chose the real Amerine; three votes went to No. 1 and one to No. 3. The first named professorship at the University of California was endowed in Amerine's honor, as the Maynard Amerine Chair, by Ernest Gallo (an early classmate of Amerine's). In 1991, the Maynard A. Amerine Room and Wine Collection in Shields Library was named in his honor and to house his extensive collection of books, a product of his years as a wine bibliographer and collector. His wine of choice was California zinfandel, according to his New York Times obituary (see link below).


Selected publications

* 1965. ''Wine, An Introduction.'' Revised edition 1975 with Vernon L. Singleton. * 1976. ''Wines: Their Sensory Evaluation,'' with Edward B. Roessler (W.H. Freeman & Company). Revised and enlarged, 1983. * ''Table Wines and Dessert and Appetizer Wines,'' with Maynard A. Joslyn. * ''Technology of Winemaking,'' with William V. Cruess, Harold W. Berg; revised with Ralph E. Kunkee, Cornelius S. Ough, Vernon L. Singleton, and A. Dinsmore Webb.


References


"Maynard A. Amerine, Viticulture and Enology: Davis," in ''University of California: In Memoriam, 1998, editid by David Krogh (Oakland, CA: Academic Senate, University of California, 1998).



External links


Maynard Amerine Papers
a
Archives and Special Collections at Shields Library
University of California, Davis
Video of class taught by Amerine: Viticulture and Enology 125: Sensory Analysis of Wine
from the UCD Library Special Collections
Biography of Amerine
from the UCD Library {{DEFAULTSORT:Amerine, Maynard 1911 births 1998 deaths People from San Jose, California Oenologists University of California, Davis faculty UC Berkeley College of Natural Resources alumni Scientists from California 20th-century American scientists People from Modesto, California