Ginger Wine is a
fortified wine made from a fermented blend of ground
ginger and raisins that was first produced in
England.
The first documented appearance of Ginger Wine occurred with the foundation of 'The Finsbury Distilling Company' based in the City of London in 1740. The Finsbury Distilling Company, like other distillers, had to build a retail network in order to comply with the 1751 law. Joseph Stone, a grocer of High Holborn, was one of the most prominent and important customer of the Finsbury wines division, and as such, had his name given to their Ginger Wine.[1]
The production method has changed little from its first distillation, being distilled as it is today, from fine quality raisins and pure ground ginger, and soon Stone's Ginger Wine quickly became the flagship of The Finsbury Distilling Company's British wines division.
In 1832, sales were boosted by a cholera epidemic and a widely held belief that ginger offered protection against the disease; it has also been hailed as an aid to digestion and as an effective aphrodisiac. Today it is still produced and is widely available through most licensed premises (though its use as an aphrodisiac today is less well-documented).