First, Beulah has no idea where the damn grape is.
She just got her manicure and frankly could care less.
She does find the cocky Cockney cute.
But, so does that glittery Lil and well---
It’s Lil’s Big Show.
Lil has blood on her hands, and rubs in the almond
scented lotion, while she waits for that peeled grape.
Beulah pours a large portion of gin
and recalls the Minstrel shows, Bessie Smith,
chicken dinners in a picnic basket,
and a guy named Roy. He was no prince,
but a king of the bedroom rambles.
Elsewhere, boots are beating the ground, leaving
bloodied feet and untended harvests
as glass breaks across the faces of Polish Jews
and the Spanish Republicans fight black clad insurgents.
More boots, pretty, shiny, well-made boots.
“until the war” says Tom in The Glass Menagerie.
When America sits in a “dark room” and watches
“until the war”. Death’s stench rolls across
the Atlantic, a powerful fog. Meanwhile,
The dapper heroes roam landscapes as fake
as their stage names and the heroines roll
up their stockings or sweat the chorus line
But not
Miss Lil and the disobedient Beulah, both swaying
large hips and rolling brown eyes, generously
Awaiting a man’s tongue sucking
For Gertrude Howard (1892-1934)
Unlike brandy, which is produced by directly fermenting pure grape juice, grappa is made by using pomace: the skins, seeds, leftover pulp, and even the stems after pressing grapes for wine. However, the remaining juice, which is known as moût or must isn't used as is the case with either Ratafia or acquavite d'uva.
[...]
A surprisingly large portion of grappa was illegally home-made throughout most of its history. In some regions, grappa even became known as Filu è Ferru, which means “iron wire”. Moonshiners would wrap the necks of their bottles with iron wire and bury them in the garden.
Although they didn’t leave a trace to the untrained eye, the distiller could recognise where their bottles were buried thanks to a reddish stain in the soil left by the wire.
Eventually, the Italian government responded to illegal production by introducing a law that requires winemakers to only sell pomace to registered distillers.