Erguotou

Erguotou
二锅头
Bottles of the two most famous brands of erguotou, Red Star and Niulanshan (at far right)
TypeBaijiu, Qingxiang
ManufacturerBeijing Hongxing, Niulanshan, Beijing Erguoutou, Huadu, Xinhuamen, and others.
Country of origin China
Region of originBeijing
IntroducedQing Dynasty
Alcohol by volume 42–65%
ColourClear
IngredientsSorghum
Erguotou
Simplified Chinese二锅头
Traditional Chinese二鍋頭
Literal meaning"second pot head" (second distillation)
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinèrguōtóu
IPA[âɚ.kwó.tʰǒʊ]
Bottles of Red Star erguotou at 53% abv.

Erguotou (Chinese: 二锅头; pinyin: èrguōtóu; lit. 'second pot head', 'i.e. second distillation') is a style of qingxiang baijiu originating in Beijing and primarily made in the region surrounding.[1][2]

The process of erguotou production is what sets it apart from other qingxiang baijiu's like Fenjiu. Three ingredients, sorghum, fuqu (麸曲; a wheat bran based ), and water make up the ingredient base. The sorghum is crushed, cooked, cooled, and mixed with the qū before being added, in a liquid state, to a stone or steel fermentation vessel where it will be left to ferment for a relatively short period of about four to eight days. After the qū has converted the starches and sugars in the sorghum into ethanol, the grain is transferred to a still that will extract the ethanol from the mixture. The distilled output is then rested in ceramic jars for a relatively short six to twelve months before being blended, proofed, bottled, and sold.[1][2][3]

The relatively short fermentation time, and the stone or steel fermentation vessel result in less production of esters overall. For that reason, erguoutou is a milder spirit than other baijius in terms of aroma.

  1. ^ a b Sandhaus, Derek (31 May 2014). Baijiu: The Essential Guide to Chinese Spirits. Penguin Group. pp. 53–54, 118–119. ISBN 9780143800132.
  2. ^ a b Sandhaus, Derek (11 December 2018). "Better Know a Baijiu: Light Aroma". drinkbaijiu.com. Drink Baijiu: The World of Chinese Spirits.
  3. ^ Xiaowei, Zheng; Beizhong, Han (March 2016). "Baijiu (白酒), Chinese liquor: History, classification and manufacture". Journal of Ethnic Foods. 3 (1): 19–25.

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