Good Food

VICTORIA MOORE

Our columnist finds out about the grape growers that bring people and nature together

- @how_to_drink @planetvict­oria

Our drinks expert explores wines with eco credential­s

Christina Rasmussen is a yoga-practising, nature-loving millennial whose Instagram feed is filled with pictures of birds – and wine tanks and vineyards. In 2020, she launched a new venture, Littlewine (littlewine.co).

Part digital magazine and slick informatio­n resource, part wine shop, Littlewine’s focus is on low-interventi­on, organic and biodynamic wine.

For Christina, promoting growers who look after the planet is as much of a creed as drinking good wine. Not all wine businesses have such purity of purpose, but more and more are putting green credential­s high on the agenda. To be fair, wine producers were early adopters; as gardeners of vines, they are acutely aware of climate change and man’s impact on the biosphere. In South Africa and New Zealand, they embarked on nationwide sustainabi­lity certificat­ion programmes two decades ago, and have a participat­ion rate close to 100 per cent. But there has been a notable step change in recent years, with global brands as well as small family producers increasing­ly keen to hone the improvemen­ts made.

Lindeman’s – the Australian super-brand found on every supermarke­t shelf – recently announced that it had achieved its goal to be certified carbon neutral in Europe by the end of 2020, after moving its wines into lightweigh­t bottles, deploying solar power and investing in carbon credits. If you love sauvignon blanc from Marlboroug­h, then you’ll probably have encountere­d Yealands wine in a shop or pub. Yealands unusually opened its doors in 2008 certified carbon-neutral from the off, but recently redesigned its packaging to forge a visual link with its environmen­tal work. Meanwhile, not a week goes by when I don’t receive an email informing me that a wine producer has just been certified organic.

The push to improve is coming at every level – from grand properties in Bordeaux, big Champagne houses, internatio­nal everyday brands and small family estates. So much work is being done on every stage in the winemaking and selling process – it’s almost competitiv­e. Writing in a new book, On Bordeaux, the negociant Mathieu Chadronnie­r says that sustainabi­lity work in the world’s most famous wine region, ‘even paves the way for vineyards in Bordeaux to have a negative carbon footprint.’ Wine producers are installing solar panels, using animals to reduce the amount of machine work in the vineyard, and re-wilding parts of their estates to improve biodiversi­ty. Meanwhile, outfits like The BIB Wine Company are refining every element of their bag-in-box packaging to make it lighter and to use more recycled materials in their manufactur­e. We can do our bit, too, by recycling, not jumping in the car to go out just to buy a single bottle and by supporting those who are putting the most work in to be sustainabl­e. It’s not always easy to see who’s really doing it and who’s more on the green-washing side of things, but one tip is to look for the recommenda­tions in a new digital magazine called Cherry, whose focus is all on making kind choices.

We can do our bit by recycling and by supporting sustainabl­e businesses

Victoria Moore is an award-winning wine columnist and author. Her most recent book is the The Wine Dine Dictionary (£20, Granta).

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia