Vancouver Magazine

The Skeptic’s Guide to Natural Wine

Natural wine nerd Kieran Fanning is here to rock your (drinking) world.

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Whether he likes it or not, sommelier Kieran Fanning (Farmer’s Apprentice, Grapes and Soda) is the de facto poster child for natural wines in this town. For starters, he’s young, he’s cool and, while he has astellar resumé (apprentici­ng under sommelier Jason Yamasaki at Chambar before taking over as head sommelier), he has little time for many of the outdated convention­s of the wine world. As a somm who’s converting drinkers one glass at a time, we gured he’d be well positioned to explain wine’s biggest trend.

Q: Once and for all, what the hell is “natural wine”?

A: Please don’t ask me that. I could easily anger one of the 11 di erent groups of wine people who have their own denitions of the term.

Q: Dang. Okay, how about “What do most people mean when they say that a wine is natural?”

A: Much safer. Most people who call a wine natural are talking about a wine with two ingredient­s: naturally fermented organic or biodynamic grape juice, and maybe a bit of added sulphites.

Q: We’re not children— isn’t all wine fermented grape juice?

A: Yes, technicall­y all wine is fermented grape juice—however, during the

20th century, awhooole bunch of things were allowed into wine without having to be listed on the label. Things like soy our, citric acid, gelatin and granular cork. Organic wines can still have many of these additives, as they need only be made from organicall­y grown grapes.

Q: Wait, sulphites are those horrible things that give me aheadache, right?

A: Oh, man. Facts: about one percent of people suer from sulphite sensitivit­y, dried fruit usually contains from 200 to 5,000 parts per million (ppm) of sulphites, and your average wine contains around 150. Also, sulphites are a natural by-product of fermentati­on. Sulphur has been adocumente­d part of winemaking since 1487 and is helpful in preserving the wine during transporta­tion. Wines classi‡ed as natural do generally contain fewer sulphites, though (fewer than 70 ppm for whites and 50 ppm for reds).

Q: I’ve heard the word “biodynamic” thrown around a lot. How does it dier from organics?

A: I like to call biodynamic­s “organics plus witchcraft.” Biodynamic­s are based on lectures by some Austrian dude named Rudolf (an odd cat to be sure) in the 1920s on how to make your farm or vineyard a self-contained and biodiverse ecosystem. There’s also some stu about the celestial bodies and burying horns full of manure on the solstices, but I won’t get into that here. (But it is odd.)

Q: So are natural wines better than regular wines?

A: Here’s where the debate gets heated. Many of the previous (not to say old . . . ) generation of winemakers, sommeliers and wine writers will write o most natural wines as worse than convention­al wines for being “faulty.” This stems from the fact that wines are often exposed to “faults”—traditiona­l winemakers manage them with chemical adjustment, additional sulphur use or other manipulati­ons. Natural winemakers have to learn how to avoid them altogether, so knowing which wineries to buy from is paramount. These days, a lot of natural wines are made by young ‡rstgenerat­ion winemakers who have started by trying to make wine in the most unforgivin­g way. Rejecting additives and adjustment­s requires doing everything perfectly just to avoid making vinegar or something that smells like a horse with fresh nail polish. Wine needs to smell and taste like the grape or grapes from which it’s made (called “showing typicity”) and the place in which it’s grown to be considered a “great” wine. When a wine can do this naturally, I would argue that the wine is more honest and that the earth is better for it.

Q: Then how do I know what to buy if it’s such agamble?

A: See below, friend.

 ??  ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S BY Amanda Skuse
PHOTOGRAPH­S BY Amanda Skuse
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