From Water to Wine

shutterstock_369670592
shutterstock_369670592

Whenever I travel beyond the Bay Area I’m always surprised by how cheap gas and food are in other parts of the country and am equally floored by the lack of care over water conservation. While visiting family on the East Coast, it was not uncommon for someone to leave the kitchen with water running or to see sprinklers spraying at whim during rainstorms. I chastised, they responded with, “It’s only water.” I know better at this point in my life than to explain the nuances of living in Drought Country USA, lest I set myself up for another one of their diatribes about how Californians are “crazy” and, among other things, too health conscious.

For these reasons I opted not to mention how their coveted vino may soon display the same dastardly nutritional information oft seen on food packages. At the end of the year the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) outlined rules for mandatory labeling of nutrition, allergen and ingredient information for beer, wine and spirits, which is expected to go into play by the end of 2023. The move was sparked by the federal government, which at last responded to a 20-year effort led by public interest groups lobbying for more detailed labeling. The labeling regulations, if enacted, will add to an already lengthy list of compliance issues to which wineries need to adhere. It also raises questions about what is considered an “ingredient” in the wine realm, how will “processing aids” be defined, and how will additives and substances that occur naturally during the winemaking process be treated.

In response, the Wine Institute, which advocates on behalf of the California wine industry, developed a Nutrition Information Calculator to preemptively assist wineries faced with the task of accurately labeling their product. Winemakers will input a description, alcohol percentage, typical sugar range, and other criteria and the tool will spit out values including calories, sodium, protein and more. Also, in response to the notice, the Wine Market Council, a leader in market research on U.S. wine-consumer buying habits, attitudes and trends, conducted a study to measure perceptions around ingredient and nutritional labeling on wine bottles. The study revealed that 38% of respondents felt ingredient lists would be influential in their decision to purchase certain wines, with one third of those surveyed in favor of displaying the information in print or QR code format.

In the European Union, where nutrition and ingredient declarations will be required by December 2023, the industry is pushing for the adoption of nutritional labeling rules specifically for wine. If the efforts fail, wine products will be required to follow the same regulations set forth for food labeling. Currently in the U.S., only wines under 7% alcohol by volume (ABV) are required to display nutrition facts and ingredients, which must follow the same Food & Drug Administration requirements as food. The TTB is expected to gather input from wineries over the next year prior to enacting the change.

One sector not as likely to be concerned with the display of ingredients is composed of wineries and imbibers who have embraced the “natural wine” movement, also known as 0/0 winemaking. This low-intervention approach means unfiltered, fewer additives and no sulfur dioxide. While the category currently only represents 1% of worldwide wine production, it’s the fastest growing premium wine sector with millennials who trend toward healthier choices and organic everything. Since natural winemakers are working toward minimal intervention it means a commitment to organic or biodynamic vineyards, which simplifies the ingredient list to: grapes.

Around town

The Napa Chamber of Commerce appointed Jeri Hansen as its new president and chief executive officer; she will work with the organization to promote the community’s economic vitality through leadership development, advocacy, facilitation and education. Hansen has a decorated career having served as chair of the Workforce Alliance of the North Bay, past state president of California Women for Agriculture, and currently sits as president of the board for the Napa Valley Exposition (25th District Agricultural Association), where she has served as a board member since 2014. Hansen said in a release, “I’m excited to continue to lead the growth of our organization. The Chamber of Commerce is the collective voice for business and focuses on public policy issues, but it is also an organization that creates camaraderie and builds community. I am eager to expand on these roles.”

In February, Yountville held its sixth annual short film festival, which brought 100 films and a boon to the local economy during an otherwise quiet time in the valley. The event featured 20 film blocks held at two popup cinemas at the Yountville Community Center and Bardessono Hotel & Spa. Filmmaker Q&A sessions, VIP parties and themed wine tastings marked the fest with events including the Cuvée and Cabernet Cinema, Bubbles and Brunch and Jessup Cellars’ Gourmet Popcorn & Wine Pairing Screening.

As I close out this column, it follows a month of rising tides, flood warnings and a weeklong rain streak. While I don’t think water will ever become as blasé as it is to my Florida-dwelling family, my hope is the wet season continues along this water-filled path and delivers us out of drought-land territory.

Author

  • Christina Julian

    Christina Julian left Los Angeles and a career in advertising to sip and swirl for a living in Napa Valley, where she vowed to make wine and the discussions around it, more approachable. She’s covered everything from arts and entertainment to travel and leisure but remains true to her own words as a wine and food writer for The Infatuation. NorthBay Biz was one of the first regional publications she wrote for when she landed here more than a decade ago, and she’s never looked back. Learn more at christinajulian.com.

    View all posts

Related Posts

244 thoughts on “From Water to Wine

  1. When I initially commented I clicked the "Notify me when new comments are added" checkbox and now each time a comment is added I get several emails with the same comment. Is there any way you can remove me from that service? Cheers!

  2. What i do not understood is actually how you’re not actually much more well-liked than you may be now. You are so intelligent. You realize therefore significantly relating to this subject, produced me personally consider it from numerous varied angles. Its like women and men aren’t fascinated unless it is one thing to accomplish with Lady gaga! Your own stuffs nice. Always maintain it up!

  3. I want to convey my affection for your kind-heartedness giving support to those people that must have help on in this concern. Your real commitment to passing the message across came to be rather practical and has all the time enabled guys just like me to attain their goals. Your entire warm and friendly facts indicates much a person like me and still more to my fellow workers. Many thanks; from all of us.

  4. Today, I went to the beach with my children. I found a sea shell and gave it to my 4 year old daughter and said "You can hear the ocean if you put this to your ear." She placed the shell to her ear and screamed. There was a hermit crab inside and it pinched her ear. She never wants to go back! LoL I know this is totally off topic but I had to tell someone!

  5. Hey there! This post could not be written any better! Reading this post reminds me of my good old room mate! He always kept chatting about this. I will forward this page to him. Fairly certain he will have a good read. Thanks for sharing!

  6. I do love the way you have framed this specific concern plus it really does offer us a lot of fodder for thought. On the other hand, through what I have witnessed, I really trust as the responses stack on that people remain on point and not embark upon a soap box of some other news of the day. Anyway, thank you for this fantastic point and while I do not necessarily go along with the idea in totality, I value your point of view.

  7. What’s Happening i’m new to this, I stumbled upon this I have found It positively helpful and it has aided me out loads. I hope to contribute & assist other users like its aided me. Great job.

  8. I do enjoy the way you have framed this particular challenge plus it does supply me a lot of fodder for thought. However, from what precisely I have observed, I simply just trust when other responses stack on that folks continue to be on point and in no way get started on a tirade of some other news of the day. Still, thank you for this exceptional point and although I do not really go along with this in totality, I value your perspective.

  9. You actually make it appear so easy along with your presentation but I in finding this matter to be really something that I think I would by no means understand. It kind of feels too complex and extremely extensive for me. I’m looking forward in your subsequent post, I will attempt to get the cling of it!

  10. The core of your writing whilst sounding reasonable at first, did not really work well with me after some time. Someplace throughout the sentences you managed to make me a believer but only for a very short while. I still have got a problem with your leaps in logic and you might do well to fill in all those gaps. In the event that you can accomplish that, I will certainly be amazed.

Leave a Reply

Loading...

Sections