Grappa: a popular beverage
Grappa was not a spirit reserved for the wealthier classes, who reserved wine or perhaps the distillate obtained from it for themselves, leaving to the population what remained: namely, the skins, seeds, and stems of fermented grapes. Certainly, Grappa of that time was very different from the distillate we know today. It must have been much drier, saturated with sometimes unpleasant and pungent substances: Grappa passed through the ages with these characteristics of a simple, strong, and burning beverage.
The evolution of production
The Grappa of the past was produced with pot stills or direct fire stills, using a discontinuous cycle artisanal method. Continuous distillation plants were not yet in use, having arrived in Italy only in the mid-twentieth century. Grappas from the distillation of a single grape variety were not yet widespread, although Grappas from Moscato, Prosecco, or Malvasia were already being produced in the early twentieth century, true examples of single grape variety Grappas before the term was coined. The classic Grappa Bianca, the result of distillation of pomace from mixed grape varieties, mainly existed.