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​National Wine Day A Perfect Excuse To Support Ohio Wineries

Wednesday is National Wine Day. Celebrate with local wine options because Ohio's wine industry is bigger and better than you may think.

CLEVELAND, OH — Maybe you didn't know Ohio even had a wine industry. California is where American wine is grown, right? Well, actually, this is the perfect time to start supporting your local vino because Wednesday, May 25, is National Wine Day.

In 2021, nationally, Americans drank a total of 1.1 billion gallons of wine, of which 879 million gallons were table wine, according to the Wine Institute. The average American drank about 3.18 gallons of wine in 2021.

In a separate study of 2019, the last “normal year” before the pandemic, per capita wine consumption in Ohio was .31 gallons per person, according to an NIH study.

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The Top 10 states for per capita wine consumption were:
1. District of Columbia, 1.01 gallons per capita.
2. New Hampshire, 0.82 gallon per capita.
3. Vermont, 0.75 gallon per capita.
4. Delaware, 0.71 gallon per capita.
5. (Tie) California and Massachusetts, 0.61 gallon per capita.
7. (Tie) Connecticut and Nevada, 0.60 gallon per capita.
9. Hawaii, 0.59 per capita.
10. New Jersey, 0.55 per capita.

Alcohol consumption in general appears to have gone up during the pandemic, according to a preliminary report from the National Institutes of Health, whether because of the increased stress of isolation, the easy availability of alcohol either from at-home liquor cabinets and wine cellars or from delivery services, and boredom.

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The wine industry is responding to changes wrought by the COVID-19, according to the State of the US Wine Industry 2022 report written by Rob McMillan, founder of Silicon Valley Bank’s Wine Division.

Those changes included a shift to remote workplaces and a migration from cities to suburbs, and a resulting shift to where consumers buy their wine.

“The country will more than likely never fully go back to the traditional office or completely recover the amount of business travel, which impacts both restaurant and airline wine sales,” McMillan wrote. “There have also been enduring changes to online sales, with more consumers using online as an option to purchase virtually anything instead of walking into a shop in a metropolitan city.”

If you want to do your part to reverse that trend, the Ohio Wine Producers Association offers guides for the seven Ohio wine trails as well as quick information to help find the best winery by features (including pet friendly!). They take all the thinking out of going to a winery in-person, so you can just enjoy the homegrown drinks while supporting local wineries.

Ohio is known for concord grapes that are used in wines made along the lake.

Unofficially called the "Wine capital of the Midwest," Geneva, OH is a gem for its spectacular wines. The small city has a dense number of wineries that produce many Pinot varietals and a special dessert wine in which the grapes are naturally frozen on the vine and then fermented. Many other wines come from this hidden little wine town with unique varieties, helping to bump Ohio to one of the top 10 wine-producing states in the country, according to Taste Ohio Wines.

Drinking wine in moderation, especially red wine, can produce positive health results, according to medical experts.

In moderation, wine may be heart-healthy. Although the links between red wine and fewer heart attacks isn’t completely understood, the polyphenol antioxidant called resveratrol may help prevent coronary artery disease, the condition that leads to heart attacks, according to Mayo Clinic.

The antioxidants in wine may prevent oral cancer, according to a study from the University of Missouri School of Dentistry.

Another study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology in April 2000, found that women who drank one to three glasses of wine a day had a lower risk of developing osteoporosis, an age-related bone thinning related to calcium loss.

Yet another study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, made a similar conclusion, finding that mineral density was 12 percent to 16 percent among moderate wine and beer drinkers compared with nondrinkers. However, hard liquor seemed to have the opposite effect.

The health benefits of white wine are similar to those of red wine. It contains the same heart-health antioxidants as red wine and is generally lower in calories.

In fact, a glass of wine may help with weight loss, according to scientists at the University of Washington, who found the same antioxidants in grapes and berries that assist with heart health can convert excess white fat into calorie-burning beige fat.

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