Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




INTERN DAILY
Rising alcohol levels give wine lovers a headache
by Staff Writers
Bordeaux (AFP) May 02, 2013


Do those New World Cabernets and Zinfandels make your head spin? Fed up with having to stop drinking after just one glass?

Plenty of wine lovers around the world will have noticed their favourite tipples are getting stronger, and many of them are unhappy about the hangovers that come with increased alcohol levels.

But it seems they have only themselves to blame as experts say that changing consumer tastes are mainly responsible for driving the trend.

Wine critics and advances in winemaking techniques also shoulder some of the blame for what experts say are unbalanced wines that can cause health risks and safety issues, casting a pall over the pleasure of imbibing.

"The rise in alcohol content of wine is primarily man-made," reported a working paper by the American Association of Wine Economists in 2011.

Over the last two decades, drinkers have developed a passion for fruity, aromatic wines with round, silky tannins, encouraged by high ratings from critics.

Even for growers who favour elegance over "fruit bombs", the quest for ripe tannins has led to grapes with more sugar, which transforms during fermentation into higher alcohol levels.

"I would stress that higher alcohol levels are never our aim, but rather the logical consequence of the way we work in the vineyards today, which has evolved considerably compared to how it was 20 or more years ago," says Christian Seely, managing director of AXA Millesime's wine estates in France and Portugal.

A couple of decades ago, yields were twice what they are today, and very little sorting was done to select the best fruit.

The alcohol levels might have been lower, but the tannins were often unripe, requiring years of cellaring to soften.

Today vintners look for mature tannins in the grape skins and seeds -- phenolic ripeness in the industry jargon -- before the harvest, even if it means higher sugar content.

"It is important to understand that the effect of achieving more regularly greater phenolic ripeness is not just to achieve higher sugar levels and so higher potential alcohol levels, but also, crucially, riper and finer tannins," Seely told AFP.

"We choose the date of picking based on our tasting of the grapes, but also on our analyses of polyphenols and IPTs (total phenolics), which usually indicate the optimum phenolic ripeness a couple of days after the desired sugar levels," he said.

But wine drinkers now say the alcohol levels have gone too far.

"Going from drinking two glasses of wine with 12-percent alcohol to a similar amount of wine that contains 14-percent alcohol could put you from under to over the legal limit for driving," said Michael Apstein, a columnist, gastroenterologist and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School.

"We all enjoy wine, but we enjoy balanced wine. As soon as you get 14, 15 and 15.5 percent, you don't have balanced wines," added Laurent Audeguin, a selection, research and development manager at the French Vine and Wine Institute (IFV).

-- Climate change compounds problem --

At the same time, there is little interest in spoiling the party with the return of thin wines with unripe tannins.

Climate change, while not the only factor, is compounding the problem.

"Global warming is a bigger and bigger concern in the industry, because every year we have higher sugar content," Audeguin said.

"We now face erratic rainfall, and less rainfall during the growing season, mainly in the Mediterranean vineyards, so we have to find varieties well-adapted to those conditions."

One option, says Audeguin, is to introduce grape varieties that deliver lower alcohol in hot, dry growing conditions.

With this in mind, the IFV has scoured southern Europe for likely candidates to import into France.

"We are selecting grape varieties from south Italy, the Greek Peloponnese islands, Spain and Portugal. We don't breed these, we just try to import these varieties and see how they perform in France. The plan is to have some varieties authorised in France within five years," said Audeguin.

Vintners are also experimenting with new strategies in pruning, leaf canopy management and irrigation.

In the meantime, low-alcohol wines are increasingly popular.

Domaines Auriol, based in Languedoc-Roussillon, produces So' Light, a wine with nine-percent alcohol content that appeared on American store shelves last January.

In Britain, according to Chris Wisson, a senior drinks analyst at Mintel, the low-alcohol wine market is worth 23 million pounds ($36 million, 27 million euros) with strong growth pushed by government taxes on alcohol and health concerns.

"The rising price of wine has made people try low-alcohol wines, and there is certainly a health side to it," said Wisson. Demand, he says, is driven primarily by women and young drinkers aged 18 to 24.

For fine-wine stalwarts, there is another option.

"Naturally if one sees a high alcohol level on the label of a bottle you need to adjust the amount you might decide to drink accordingly, but that is just common sense," Seely said.

Common sense? Maybe. Common practice? Maybe not!

.


Related Links
Hospital and Medical News at InternDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERN DAILY
Zinc: The Perfect Material for Bioabsorbable Stents?
Houghton MI (SPX) May 02, 2013
In 2012, more than 3 million people had stents inserted in their coronary arteries. These tiny mesh tubes prop open blood vessels healing from procedures like a balloon angioplasty, which widens arteries blocked by clots or plaque deposits. After about six months, most damaged arteries are healed and stay open on their own. The stent, however, is there for a lifetime. Most of the time, tha ... read more


INTERN DAILY
China children killed with poisoned yoghurt: Xinhua

Electron-beam pasteurization of raw oysters may reduce viral food poisoning

Fertilizers provide mixed benefits to soil in 50-year Kansas study

Study: Traditional ranching helps, not hurts, African ecosystems

INTERN DAILY
Intel names insider Krzanich as new CEO

High performance semiconductor spray paint could be a game changer for organic electronics

New Research Findings Open Door to Zinc-Oxide-based UV Lasers, LED Devices

New Nanowire Structure Has Potential to Increase Semiconductor Applications

INTERN DAILY
Australia unveils its F-35 JSF 'Iron Bird'

China welcomes French president with Airbus deal

Multifunction Advanced Data Link Flight Tested For F-35 Program

Brazil drops plan to build AgustaWestland helicopter

INTERN DAILY
Rear seat design - a priority for children's safety in cars

GM pulls 'offensive' China ad: report

GM joins call for US action on climate change

Honda's annual net profit soars to $3.7 bn

INTERN DAILY
Mercosur seeks more Pacific partners for commodities, goods

France eyes becoming trading hub for China yuan

Bill to collect Internet purchase sales tax looks set for Senate OK

Hong Kong's pursuit of luxury defies Western gloom

INTERN DAILY
Deforestation threatens Mekong region

Smoke signals: How burning plants tell seeds to rise from the ashes

In the Northeast, forests with entirely native flora are not the norm

Study Led by NUS Scientists Reveals Escalating Cost of Forest Conservation

INTERN DAILY
World's major development banks look closer at Earth observation

China Successfully Sends First Gaofen Satellite Into Space

China launches high-definition earth observation satellite

Japan's Mt Fuji to get World Heritage stamp: officials

INTERN DAILY
Nanowires grown on graphene have surprising structure

UNL team's discovery yields supertough, strong nanofibers

Scientists image nanoparticles in action

Scientists see nanoparticles form larger structures in real time




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement