Wine List
SPARKLING WHITE Picpoul
de Pinet Château de Petit Roubié Côteaux de
Languedoc (V) £13.50 Organic
Terroir Chardonnay Sonop Wine Farm Paarl South Africa (VG) £14.75 Pinot
Grigio Mont’albano Friuli Grave (VG) £15.50 RED Château
Richard Bergerac Rouge (VG) £13.75 Organic
Terroir Pinotage Sonop Wine Farm Paarl (VG) £15.50 Perseus
Rioja Bodegas Ruiz Jimenez (VG) £15.75 DESSERT All
wines listed are certified as being produced from organically-grown grapes.
Wine is the fermented juice of freshly gathered wine grapes. Organic wines are made from wine grapes grown organically without the use of man-made fungicides, pesticides, herbicides or fertilisers. They look and smell like ‘normal’ wines and contain alcohol like ‘normal’ wines. The long-term effects of ingesting small traces of the 240 man-made compounds that have so far been found in non-organic wines is not known. However there is growing conviction that by avoiding such compounds you get more authentic-tasting wine, risk fewer allergic reactions and may suffer fewer hangovers. Increasing numbers of wine-growers world-wide are adopting organic practices because they agree that respect for the soil is paramount. Good organic practice respects the environment and promotes biodiversity and sustainability. Only vines growing in a living soil full of worms and bacteria can extract from it a maximum of mineral elements, without which vines are unable to mature and remain disease-resistant. Nor are they likely to produce a complex wine. Organic growers improve soil structure and fertility by adding organic compost in winter and sowing cover crops such as peas, barley, flowers and herbs between the rows of vines in spring. Cover crops bring colour to the landscape when they flower and create biodiversity by bringing beneficial insects into the vineyard. These “beneficials” help to control pests like vine spiders and weevils naturally, rather than chemically. This approach - ‘treat the cause, not the symptom‘ - contrasts sharply with conventional viticultural methods that draw the vines into a vicious circle of chemical dependence because their defences have not been built up naturally. Of course organic vineyards are not spray-free. Natural biodegradable sprays are used if problems occur, as are biological controls such as planned releases of ladybirds that eat vine aphids. Other permitted treatments include the use of salts (copper sulphate) and elemental (not man-made) sulphur to control mildew. Is it really organic? The term ‘organic’ is legally defined, so in order to describe or sell a wine as organic, the vineyard must have been inspected by a recognised organic certification body. Furthermore, organic wines must identify the name of the certification body on the bottle label (examples include Ecocert, Nature et Progrès or Terre et Vie from France, or The Soil Association in the UK). This allows those thinking of buying organic to check whether a vineyard claiming to be organic really is certified as such. Consumers can then have confidence that no chemical fertilisers or pesticides have been used on the vines of producers holding certification for their wines. |
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