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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blossa is a trademark for glögg owned by Anora Group[1] (and previously by Altia[2] and before that Vin & Sprit) which is the most sold glögg in Sweden.[3] There are 11 kinds of glögg in the selection, and also an annual seasonal glögg since 2003.[4] In the early 1950s Vin & Spirit produced 750 thousand litres of glögg per year and in 2009 the company sold 4.1 million litres per year.[3]
Johan Daniel Grönstedt founded the wine retail company J.D. Grönstedt & Co in Stockholm in the middle 19th century until viticulture was made public in the early 20th century. The company's wine glöggs included many different wines flavoured with syrup, raisins, sweet almonds, cinnamon, cardamomum, dianthus and occasionally vanilla. The wines were made into glögg in the company's warehouse in the Gamla Stan. When the Vin- & Spritcentralen came about in 1917 a new wine warehouse was opened on Sankt Eriksgatan. Grönstedts worked here as a daughter company of Vin- & Spritcentralen in the 1920s.
At Christmas time in 1994 the trademark became known for the TV advertisement "Glöggen heter Blossa" starring a group of Christmas elves. Similar advertisements were shown at Christmas time in 2007 and 2016.[5]
Blossa is produced by an original recipe from Grönstedts Vinhandel from the late 19th century. Until 2008 Blossa was produced by Vin- & Spritcentralen in Sundsvall. The spices are stored and prepared in a factory in Åhus where spiced glögg is produced by soaking the spices in alcohol over a month's time. The resulting mix is then sent to the factory in Sundsvall where the glögg is produced, by mixing the wine, syrup and spiced alcohol together. After the glögg has been cleared and filtered it is ready for bottling.
On 18 June 2008 the Swedish Vin- & Spritcentralen stopped producing the glögg as its new owner Pernod Ricard closed down the factory in Sundsvall. After this, production moved to Svendborg in Denmark.[2] In 2010 Blossa and many other Vin- & Spritcentralen trademarks were sold to the Finnish company Altia which in 2021 merged with Arcus to form Anora Group.[1]
Since 2003[7] Blossa has been producing annual seasonal glöggs. Since 2016 the selection has also included an alcohol-free version called Blossa Hantverksglögg.[8]
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