The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Moonlight wine and ‘Beautiful Girls’

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By Samuel Petrequin KAYSERSBER­G, FRANCE (AP) >> Training according to the solar and lunar cycles has never helped any Tour de France contender climb a mountain faster, or seize the yellow jersey.

Moon science is more rewarding when it comes to the art of winemaking.

In the Alsace region visited by the peloton this week, growing wine using biodynamic methods has been paying off for the Faller family.

At the helm of the Domaine Weinbach — an ancient property planted with grapes since the ninth century — the Fallers have become leading winemakers in Alasce. They produce about 120,000 bottles a year in the seven main grape varieties of the region and sell their soughtafte­r bottles to connoisseu­rs around the world.

They don’t use chemicals or pesticides, plow their rich soil and let weeds grow in harmony alongside thistles, roses and other wildflower­s covering the 30 hectares of the family-run vineyard.

The family uses the lunar calendar to determine the best times for their operations.

“You have the fruit days, the flower days, root days and leaf days,” winemaker Eddy Leiber-Faller told The Associated Press. “Typically, if you want to work the ground, it’s more interestin­g to do it on a root day, it will have more impact. And we would bottle most of our wines on fruit days to have more fruit expression. You can also bottle certain terroir wines on root days to get more expression.” Sounds like witchcraft? “There is a bit of science in the moon cycle,” said Leiber-Faller, a former banker who rejoined the family business two years ago. “There is a science part, and a bit of a more esoteric part.”

Working with his mother Catherine and brother Theo, Eddy Leiber-Faller feels like he is going back in time, using the same natural processes Capuchin monks applied back in 1612 when they establishe­d the winery on this rich terroir.

“Biodynamic is a way to reuse and rehabilita­te an ancient knowledge passed on from generation to generation,” he said. “My greatgrand­mother had a garden with vegetables. She did not know anything about biodynamic, but she would always look at the moon calendar to see which days or weeks she had to plant her carrots to get better results.”

Leiber-Faller said using natural products and working along with the solar and lunar cycles improves not only the vines’ resilience, but the taste of the final product.

“It brings more depth, because biodynamic forces the vine to grow its roots deeper in the ground,” he said. “So you get more minerality and salinity in the wines, more depth and complexity.”

The Fallers have been involved in the wine business for more than a century. After the monks lost possession of the winery during the French Revolution, two Faller brothers bought it in 1898. Their son and nephew made it a successful business, well before the family switched to biodynamic production in 1998. But the Fallers had already reduced the use of yields to a minimum, so the switch came easily.

Leiber-Faller insists he is not obsessed with biodynamic methods, though.

“It’s just a tool in a box, not the endgame, or a religion,” he said. “The endgame is to make the best possible wine.”

And he is quite good at it. Elevated on well-drained granite soil, the Weinbach Grand Cru Schlossber­g is a must. This mineral Riesling widely praised for his finesse was the first grand cru of Alsace to get classified, in 1972.

BAGUETTE AND BUTTER: Two Tour de France rookies stole the show on the first mountain stage Thursday, with Dylan Teuns of Belgium winning at the Planche des Belles Filles and Giulio Ciccone of Italy taking the overall race lead.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The pack rides during the sixth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 160 kilometers
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The pack rides during the sixth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 160 kilometers

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