Skip to Main Content

Changing students’ views on the wine industry

Since 2005, over 8,000 Purdue students have taken the Wine Appreciation course in the College of Agriculture’s food science department. 

What a lot of students don’t realize when signing up for the class, however, is the amount of STEM learning required, said Christian Butzke, professor of food science and Innovation and Entrepreneurship Fellow. 

“The learning involves traditional production practices of an agricultural product, culture, history, travel, etiquette, politics, you name it,” explained Butzke, who is a visiting professor this summer at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Piacenza, Italy. “It all gets combined under this umbrella of wine. And because of the breadth of the topics, you also have a breadth of majors who take this class.” 

Filling the Class of 1950 Lecture Hall each semester, the course’s popularity continued even when wine tastings couldn’t happen during the majority of the 2020 and 2021 school years. 

“A surprisingly low number of students dropped the class despite not being able to taste the wines in,” Butzke said. “This fall we are hoping to go back to the ways we used to hold the class with wine tastings. It’s kind of an incentive, but it’s a really educational part of the class." 

Christian Butzke

Butzke said he often feels the course is a way to teach responsible alcohol consumption to college students as well, emphasizing the traditions of winemaking and its presence in different cultures along with a deep understanding of how the juice from a grape makes its way into a wine bottle on a store shelf. 

Opening the window into the over 1,000-year-old tradition of winemaking offers students a better understanding of its importance economically around the world, but also in Indiana. 

“Even in Indiana, we have dozens of family wineries that are providing jobs and entertainment to local populations, and this is the same all around the United States,” Butzke said.  

Helping students understand the impacts of global warming on the wine industry is also a major issue he focuses on in the course. 

“Showing the true consequences of global warming to students is critical,” Butzke said. “I spoke at one of the first conferences on wine and global warming in 2005, and at that time the countries that are furthest south, like Spain, were the first to be concerned about this. And the models they had projected for further distant years, like 2050 and 2100, were suddenly becoming true now.” 

Wine is one of the most expensive beverages consumed in the United States, Butzke said, so the climate crisis for the winemaking industry often gets brushed aside as a lavish “want” over a necessity. But Butzke said he hopes what students learn and take away from the course encourages them to find a solution. 

“They are the next generation of scientists and engineers,” he said. “So, I hope this class inspires them.” 

Learn more about Purdue's wine courses:

Featured Stories

FNR Outstanding Students: Alyssa Johnson (Junior); Alex Dudley (Senior); Rebeca Appelmann (Sophomore); Lydia Pultorak (Freshman).
FNR Celebrates Students at Annual Awards, Scholarship Ceremony

Purdue Forestry and Natural Resources recognized the department’s student award and...

Read More
The base of the Grand Canyon at the Colorado River
For the love of the land

2016 was the first time that Jalyn Gearries, a Natural Resources and Environmental Science (NRES)...

Read More
A close-up of hands with blue nail polish planting sage next to the Native American Educational and Cultural Center
Purdue Agriculture’s Sloan Scholars

The Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership (SIGP) is an organization of 11 universities funded by...

Read More
Purdue's bell tower stands tall behind a foreground of purple petunias
Purdue agriculture professors named AAAS Fellows

Purdue College of Agriculture professors Songlin Fei and Tesfaye Mengiste have been named fellows...

Read More
almonds on a table with almond milk
Homemade nut-based dairy analogs raise questions about bacterial risks

Many consumers know the food safety risks of dairy products, eggs and raw meat. But they are less...

Read More
Students working in the Skidmore Lab inside Nelson Hall of Food Science.
CH4 Global partners with Food Entrepreneurship and Manufacturing Institute to combat methane emissions in the cattle industry

The Food Entrepreneurship and Manufacturing Institute (FEMI), housed within Purdue...

Read More
To Top