Some years ago, after my first visit to
wineries in Chile ,
a friend said she would not buy Chilean wines because the wineries used too
many herbicides and pesticides.
I have no idea where she got a notion that
defies common sense. Chilean wine growers are blessed with ideal growing
conditions. It would be a colossal waste of money to spray against pests and
diseases that do not exist.
That was clearly obvious to me after
spending 10 days visiting vineyards in 1989 and again in 2003. Even so, I was
taken by surprise by Chilean wine industry’s presentations during the most
recent Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival. Whether we speak of organic/biodynamic
viticulture or integrated pest management, or carbon neutral winery operations,
Chile ’s
wineries are leaders in responsible winemaking. If my friend wants to drink
healthy wine, she should, in fact, stock up on Chilean vintages.
“Chile
is a real viticultural paradise,” says Eduardo Chadwick, the president of Viña Errázuriz. “We are taking
advantage of that.”
Grape growing was brought to Chile
in the 16th Century by the missionaries and expanded in the 19th
Century when landowners imported classic vine varieties, primarily from France . The
first large-scale vineyards were developed with vines that had not yet been
infected with phyloxera. That was the American root louse that was brought to Europe around 1860 on the roots of American vines. The
European varieties lack the ability to withstand the damage caused by the
louse. By the time the Europeans figured out how to work around the pest in the
late 1800s (grafting French vines onto American roots), the European wine
industry was in dire straits.
But Chile had not
imported any vines infected with the root louse – unlike Argentine on the other
side of the Andes . To this day, Chile remains
phyloxera-free. Healthy vines that grow on their own roots live much longer
and, arguably, make better wine.
Chilean consumers also had begun to turn to beer and soft drinks,
forcing the industry to find new markets. Around 1990, Chilean wineries began
to take on the world, initially with value-priced wines. The value wines are
still being produced (and the quality steadily gets better); but the wineries
also have begun to icon wines matching the best in the world.
I remember scoffing during a Vancouver
tasting in the 1990s that consumers would never pay $25 for a Chilean Cabernet.
Well, there were at least seven Chilean reds at the Wine Festival priced at $70
and up. The top: Rothschild’s Alma Viva at $133 a bottle. And there were plenty
of $25-$45 wines.
“The future of Chile
is quality,” Chadwick predicted.
He is right, but the future also will be defined by the responsible
winemaking. I believe that the world’s consumers will reward Chile not just
for making good wines but for its green and ethical vineyard practices.
For example, the industry there has a new accreditation, Certified
Sustainable Wine of Chile, that has been won so far by about 20 wineries or 10%
of those that applied.
One of these is Viña Ventisquero, a
winery established in 1998 by a businessman already successful in a range of
other agricultural products. Felipe Tosso, the senior winemaker, rattled off
the impressive range of green practices here – buying carbon offsets for
transport; adopting lighter (“Ecoglass”) bottles; adopting integrated pest
management practices, including natural weed control; using renewable energy at
one of its estates; adopting strict water conservation practices.
Organic viticulture is now widespread and there is a big move among
wineries toward the ultimate: using biodynamic practices. “The ultimate respect
to your terroir is biodynamic agriculture,” Chadwick asserts. “If you use chemicals,
you suppress terroir.”
The biodynamic methods range from elaborate composting practices. Emiliana
Vineyards has its own herd of beef on its property so that the manure used for
compost is produced on the same land that it fertilizes. In other words, a
closed loop on the terroir. “We try to be partners with nature,” winemaker
Alvaro Espinoza says.
Emiliana began growing biodynamically in 2000. Today, the winery has
1,000 hectares, all under biodynamic practices. “I am convinced they make
better wines,” Espinoza says.
Photo: Miguel Torres
Another praiseworthy initiative is the “fair trade” wine growing
practised by Miguel Torres M. at his family’s winery in Chile . All of the Torres vineyards
are certified organic. All the growers are paid fairly and all the workers are
treated with dignity.
If you want to reward these wineries for
their good works, here are some wines to buy.
Errazuriz
Sauvignon Blanc 2011 ($14 in the LDB). This is a
zesty refreshing white. At the festival, the winery also showed a sensational
single vineyard Sauvignon Blanc 2011(about $17) from its new coastal vineyard. It is a speculative wine that can now found in private wine stores.
Emiliana
Coyam 2009 ($29.99 in the LDB). This is a big ripe
wine, primarily a blend of Syrah, Carmenère, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot with
a dash of Petit Verdot and Mourvedre. The wine has alluring aromas and flavours
of figs, plums, coffee and chocolate. 91.
Ventisquero
VerTice Syrah Carmenère 2007 ($33; check private wine stores). This is a
wine made jointly by Tosso and Australian John Duval, formerly the maker of
Penfolds’s Grange. This red has all the earthy plum flavours of Syrah with the
lovely spice and red cherry of Carmenère. 90.
Torres
Santa Digna Fair Trade Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 ($18;
check private wine stores). This is a delicious, juicy red with fruit-forward
flavours of black currants and plum. 90.
1 comment:
John..
Please see this earlier comment re pesticide use in Chile .. enlightening .. especially in light of your comments re non-requirement for pesticides in Chile's vineyards. Clearly, opposite sides of a very different coin
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