Lengthening seasons threaten Italian wine

June 25, 2011

ROME, Italy ― The family of Alberto Marsetti has made wine in Valtellina, in the north of Italy, for at least six generations. So he noticed when things started to change.
“The watershed year was 2007,” Marsetti said. “That’s when we realized we had to stop thinking in terms of exceptional years and that it was ‘normal years’ that had changed.”
In the last two decades, Marsetti said, he had to adjust his winemaking to account for climatic abnormalities he attributes to global warning. Rather than a rise in average temperatures, earlier springs and warmer autumns made his grapes sweeter, leading to more alcoholic wines.
The phenomenon has been especially conspicuous in the hillsides around the village of Chiuro, where vineyards rise as high as 2,000 feet above sea level.
“Twenty years ago,” Marsetti said, “we struggled to get decent grapes from the vineyards at such an altitude. We used the grapes to make down-to-earth table wines, those you can have a couple of glasses of at lunch every day, not for the top quality wines.”
“Now, instead, we get medium- or high-quality grapes from there too, and the wines have become over 1 percent stronger,” he continued. Instead, vineyards downhill that used to make grapes for the best wines are experiencing problems, such as prolonged dry spells that can entirely change the quality of grapes.
The changes are happening all over Italy, said Domenico Bosco, who heads the wine producers division of Colidiretti, Italy’s biggest farmers’ association. Now the increase in alcohol content that results from the lengthening seasons is being seen as a problem.
“Until a few years ago,” Bosco said, “people thought that the more alcoholic a wine was, the better its quality.” In fact, winemakers responded to the demand from consumers for stronger wines by making their wines richer in taste and more alcoholic.
But this, warns Bosco, is now changing. Some consumers have started seeking out lower-alcohol wines for reasons of taste. Meanwhile, new laws in Italy and across Europe have clamped down on drunk driving and alcoholism. Producers, however, are struggling to adapt as forces beyond their control push their wine’s alcohol content up.
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“In the last 10 years,” said Gabriella Tani, an oenologist from Tuscany, “summers have been hotter and we have had more and more wines with high alcohol content, at 15 percent or more.” This is a problem, she adds, particularly with wine made from Merlot grapes.
Winemakers have a range of options available to fight the effects of climate change. They can water their vineyards more, but with rising temperatures and rain becoming more erratic, in many regions this is not an option. They can harvest the grapes earlier, but sometimes this compromises the taste and quality of the wine.
Or they can try relocating their vineyards further uphill. According to oenologist Francesco Bartoletti, in general “100 more meters [328 feet] of altitude means a loss of about 1 percent in alcohol content.”
While there are vineyards at 4,000 feet in the Alps and even higher on the Etna volcano in Sicily, such an altitude would fundamentally change many Italian wines whose character comes from the place where the grapes have grown for hundreds of years. It also means they would not qualify for Italy wine classification system, which labels wines as DOC or DOCG according to their place of origin and methods of production.
“We might have to change some of these rules,” said Bosco. “Maybe not for the big name wines, but probably for the medium-quality ones or they won’t be able to stand up against the competition.”
In fact, climate change is proving favorable for countries such as Germany that have previously been considered too cold for wine-making. For Bosco, “climate change and a taste for ‘lighter’ wines are helping Continental European wines.” Wines fromEngland and other northern countries hold new promise.
“The future,” said Bartoletti, “will see vineyards move north,” while southern European vintners in traditional wine-producing countries will suffer.
Some say the answer lies in big-scale industrial techniques, such as alcohol removal, already widely employed in countries including Australia or South Africa. France and Spain ― two other big European wine-producers that have to cope with the effects of global warming ― have already made it legal. But in Italy, with its small wineries and its strong emphasis in traditional winemaking techniques, such a technique might be more difficult to accept.
“After all, wine is an agricultural product, not an industrial one, and it can’t follow consumers’ tastes blindly,” Bosco said. “If you apply an industrial process such as alcohol removal, it’s not wine anymore. You’ll have to call it something else: maybe ‘wine-based beverage.’”

Source: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/italy/110618/italian-wine-alcohol-content-climate-change

Philippines Pampanga Best Restaurant opens Wine Bar and Lounge in Clark Philippines, attracting wine lovers and tourist in Angeles City and Subic looking for good nightlife spot near Manila.

Food and wine lovers in Manila laud Yats Restaurant as the best restaurant in Angeles City Pampanga, a special restaurant that offers guests a real treat every time they wine and dine in this top rated restaurant in Clark Philippines which is surprisingly child friendly also. Families frequently bring their children to enjoy a family dinner at the best restaurant in Angeles City Pampanga, a weekly treat for family bonding and some relaxation also. Tourists and business executives visit the best restaurant in Clark Pampanga after a game of golf or a long day at the office to relax and unwind, drink and eat with friends and business associates.

Best Restaurant in Angeles City Pampanga unveils special dinner menus featuring regional cuisines in France, Italy and USA, all designed to pair very well with fine vintage wines, a real treat for food and wine lovers traveling out of town from Manila to the North to visit Subic, Tarlac, Clark Pampanga Philippines

The Magnum Room Wine Lounge and Wine Bar offers business executives as well as tourist and frequent visitors to Clark Pampanga the best place to drink, relax and unwind outside of Manila. Located near Angeles City, Pampanga, Subic and Clark Philippines, this elegant lounge of Yats Restaurant in Mimosa Clark offers all sorts of after dinner drinks such as port wine, Sauternes, Barsac, Ice Wine and other sweet dessert wines, Armagnac, Cognac, Single Malt, Luxury Vodka and other interesting liquor and spirits. Smokers particular enjoy the selection of Cuban cigars available in this top rated wine bar in Clark. The Magnum Room is one the top rated bar and lounge in Manila, Pampanga, Angeles City, Subic and Clark Philippines.

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Getting to this fine dining restaurant of Angeles City Clark Freeport Zone Pampanga Philippines
How to get to this fine-dining restaurant in Clark Philippines? Once you get to Clark Freeport, go straight until you hit Mimosa. After you enter Mimosa, stay on the left on Mimosa Drive, go past the Holiday Inn and Yats Restaurant (green top, independent 1-storey structure) is on your left. Just past the Yats Restaurant is the London Pub.

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