Hock (wine)


Hock is a British term for German white wine; sometimes it refers to white wine from the Rhine region and sometimes to all German white wine. The word hock is short for the obsolete word hockamore, an alteration of "Hochheimer", derived from the name of the town of Hochheim am Main in Germany.
The term seems to have been in use in the 17th century, initially for white wines from the Rheingau, but in the 18th century it came to be used for any German white wine sold in Britain to convey some of the then very high prestige of Rheingau wine to lesser German wines.
It seems probable that Queen Victoria's visit to Hochheim and its vineyards during harvest time in 1850 contributed to the continued use of the term. By then, these Rheingau wines commanded high prices, on par with—and sometimes higher than—the best wines from Bordeaux and Burgundy, matching and sometimes exceeding them in prestige.
There are many vineyards associated with Hocks, such as Hochheimer, Rüdesheimer, Marcobrunner and Johannisberger.

Modern usage

Today hock is occasionally seen on bottles of white wine sold in the United Kingdom. In Australia, hock is still known as the main ingredient of an old-fashioned summer drink called "hock, lime, and lemon". The Waterbridge Candy Company in England manufactures wine-flavored chewing gums. One of the candies is stamped with the flavour Hock.
H. G. Wells refers to "good hock" in A Modern Utopia, Chapter 6, Section 1. George Orwell writes in Homage to Catalonia Ch. XII in 1938 that "It has four crenellated spires exactly the shape of hock bottles", referring to Sagrada Família.