Thursday, August 17, 2006

What is organic wine?

Organic wine is made from grapes grown without the use of chemical fertilisers, pesticides, fungicides and who knows what other potentially poisonous delights designed by chemists to keep Nature at bay. It is a little realised fact that conventionally grown grapes (including those grown for eating) are amongst the most sprayed crop in the agricultural world. They are sprayed from one end of the year to the next and the residue remains on the grape so that you too can enjoy the benefits when you drink the wine!

Organic vineyards produce a smaller yield, but the quality is much better. The terroir is allowed to come through (the French word terroir refers to a combination of factors important to give character and flavour to grapes: the type of soil, where the vineyard is situated i.e. on a hillside or flat, when it gets the sun and the micro-climate in that particular spot). This is what gives a wine its character and why the same appellation can vary from year to year.
Of course the work in the cellar is also of vital importance, but you'll pardon me if I use a very inapposite comparison and suggest that you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear! If the grapes are of poor quality it is impossible to make good wine. Well, no actually. If you produce conventional grapes of poor quality, you can use genetically modified yeast to speed up the process of fermentation (because the natural yeasts have been destroyed using fungicides), flavour enhancers, wood chips and enough sulphur to light up a town, so that the end product approximates wine. These practices are not carried out with organic wines because the grapes are well-flavoured and retain natural yeasts. Sulphite is added, as it is fairly difficult to preserve wine without it, but in much smaller quantities than conventional wine. Sulphites may be the culprit when people get headaches from drinking wine.

The differences between organic and conventional wines could run into a very long essay. I have just covered some main areas very superficially, simply to introduce the subject. I'll introduce some organic wine producers in my next posting.
This is the blog site for Vendemia Organic Wines. Why a blog site when we already have an official site? Well, basically we want to share with you organic fans out there all sorts of interesting facts about organic wine and its producers that won't fit on the web-site. We can also answer questions which you might have, because there are a lot of misconceptions about organic wine and, indeed, wine in general.