(Reuters) - The
popularity of farm-to-table restaurants and organic produce is seeping
into the wine industry as more producers adopt green practices.
But their motives for making
organic, sustainable and biodynamic wine may be more personal than
business, although the practices also improve the quality of the wines.
"Most
of the wineries are family-owned businesses and they saw this as a
better way to farm. They wanted to pass on healthier farms and
businesses to the next generation," said Gladys Horiuchi, a spokeswoman
for the California Wine Institute.
She added that more than two-thirds of California's acreage and production is certified as sustainable.
Chris
Millard, winemaker for Napa's Newton Vineyards, famed for its
unfiltered Chardonnays, said it is very expensive to be organic.
"We
are not organic. We are not biodynamic. We're not green. We're
sustainable," he said. "And by that I mean that we encompass the whole
business of making wine. Being sustainable in the vineyard and taking
care of the land."
For Millard
sustainable means taking care of the land, and the people who grow the
grapes and make the wine, and earning enough to stay in business.
Organic
vines are grown without pesticides, fungicides and herbicides. Each
country has different criteria for certification and some wineries are
organic, but red tape and additional costs, inhibit them from filing for
certification.
Biodynamic wines
follow the principles of biodynamic agriculture, which stem from the
ideas of early 20th century Austrian philosopher and architect Rudolf
Steiner, who argued for understanding the ecological and spiritual in
nature.
Biodynamic producers care for their vines, pruning and picking them according to the phases of the moon.
Gina
Gallo, winemaker for the world's largest winery, E&J Gallo, said,
her grandfather Julio was one of the biggest organic farmers in
California.
"My grandfather just
believed that if he's going to have it on the table, it was like the
food on the table coming from the garden," she explained. "And today, we
still use a lot of similar approaches."
Mike Benziger of Sonoma's Benziger Family Winery, combines all three practices in his wine production.
"It
does take more of an effort to farm, in the beginning, using
biodynamics or organic practices. You have to invest in the knowledge,
learning how to do it," he said, adding his family produces certified
sustainable, organic, and biodynamic wines.
"For
us, we found that certification is important because the consumer wants
it," said Benziger, who with his family produces about 150,000 cases of
wine a year.'
Article available on Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment