Italian Winemakers See Red Over Lack of Emoji for Rosé’

Novelty stemware glass set includes four cute glasses that each feature one popular yellow smiling emoji.
Novelty stemware glass set includes four cute glasses that each feature one popular yellow smiling emoji.

As the UK summer approaches, the pink blush of rosé will become an increasingly prevalent sight in pubs, pavement cafes and on picnic blankets.

Rosé may have become hugely popular in recent years but in Italy, winemakers say that when it comes to social media, the eminently quaffable drop is woefully under-represented.

Winemakers say that when it comes to social media, rosé is woefully under-represented.

They are lobbying for a new emoji to put to an end the shameful “marginalisation” of rosé, pointing out that currently the symbols available on smartphones to denote wine are limited to a glass of red, two clinking Champagne flutes and a bottle of fizz; not a drop of the pink stuff in sight.

The Consortium for the Protection of Chiaretto di Bardolino, a popular rosé, has presented its case to the Unicode Consortium, the US-based non-profit organisation that oversees the process of choosing and creating emojis.

The Italians argue that the absence of a symbol representing a glass of rosé is discriminatory to their fragrant plonk.

“If you write to a friend about having a glass of wine on Whatsapp, Instagram or Facebook, you get representations of a glass of red, two flutes of Champagne or a bottle of spumante, but a rosé wine symbol is totally missing,” said Franco Cristoforetti, the president of the consortium.

“This is a legacy of the marginalisation that the world of rosé has suffered for decades and which it continues to have to deal with, notwithstanding the phenomenal global growth in sales of recent years.”

In the United States in particular there has been “astronomical” growth, he said, with 10 million bottles sold annually.

Rosé producers have teamed up with a graphic design agency in the northern city of Verona to come up with what they called the “pink wine” emoji – two glasses of rosé being chinked together in a toast.

They also plan to launch a petition in June, gathering signatures in support of the appeal.

Based in California’s Silicon Valley, the Unicode Consortium is the body that decides which new emojis should be adopted.

Individuals and companies can suggest new emojis to the organisation, where a panel of experts considers them.

“Anyone can propose an emoji character, but they have to make a solid case for it,” Mark Davis, the president and co-founder of the Unicode Consortium, told the Los Angeles Times.

“It’s more than just saying, ‘Well, I think there should be a drunken chipmunk emoji.’

“You have to give us some good reasons that would establish why it would be a successful and valuable addition.”

The consortium considers whether a proposal might “flesh out” an existing set of emojis, meaning that the addition of the rosé symbol to the canon of booze-related pictograms may be in with a chance.

Nick Squires 31/05/2021 | The Telegraph

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Wine Bottle Trivia . . .

Bocksbeutel - design is said to be copied from a goat’s scrotum.
Bocksbeutel – design is said to be copied from a goat’s scrotum.

Bocksbeutel – An 18th-century flat flask from Franconia in Germany and Styria in  Austria, still popular in these regions although rarely seen in the export markets. Its design is said to be copied from a goat’s scrotum.

Bouteille – the French word for bottle, of which there are over 50 known shapes and sizes in France alone.

Fassle – a German wine vessel, sometimes made of leather, from which the contents are squirted into the mouth. Now used only at festivals and other celebrations.

Flagon – a wine flagon is usually made of green glass, unlike the better-known brown ones for beer or cider. It is a large, flattish bottle often used in New World countries to hold inexpensive wine.

Fiasco – Italian bottle contained in a straw basket
Fiasco – Italian bottle contained in a straw basket

Fiasco – many wine guides simply describe fiasco as an Italian bottle or flask,
sometimes contained in a straw basket. Here’s how it came by the name . . . When the Etruscans began to develop glass production in the 4th century BC, they discovered that it was possible to blow a bottle in the shape of a round bubble. However, when the buddle cooled and they tried to stand it upright, it fell over – it was a fiasco, a failure. To correct the problem, the asked their women to weave flat straw bases into which the bottle was inserted. The fiasco can still be seen in Chianti and Orvieto.

Fillette – a slim half-bottle which is still widely found in the Loire Valley.

Flute d’Alsace – a tall, slender bottle used for Alsace wine.

Porron – a Spanish flask
Porron – a Spanish flask

Jug – a large bottle with a handle. It measures one US gallon and usually contains pasteurised wine of a basic quality, a favourite purchase of President Clinton when he was governor of Arkansas.

Porron – a Spanish flask with an extended neck or spout, often made of kid leather or wood. It is popular in the Basque region and regularly seen on sporting occasions when it facilitates the swift consumption of wine.

Pot – also known as le pot de Beaujolais, this is a half-litre, gently curved bottle still found in restaurants. Piat, the prominent Beaujolais negociants, have their own 75cl (centilitre) version.

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