Loire wine producers barred from using Vouvray name

Loire wine producers barred from using Vouvray name

Leading Loire winemakers François Chidaine and Jacky Blot have been banned from vinifying their Vouvray wines in the neighbouring commune of Montlouis. Vouvray’s appellation rules were changed in October 2009 to ensure that all wines bearing the name, whether still or sparkling, were made within Vouvray. The only exception is Nazelles-Négron, a neighbouring commune just outside the eastern limit of the appellation.

Prosecco DOC Consortium says ‘there will not be a shortage’ of Prosecco this year

The Prosecco DOC Consortium has responded to recent reports of the potential shortage of Prosecco saying “that there will not be a shortage of Prosecco in the coming months.” The Consortium confirms that the 2014 harvest was affected by some hard weather and that yield were less than the maximum yield. However, certified production yield were still up 17.9 per cent more than the previous year’s harvest. They also ruled out any significant price increase during the summer.

Spencer Hill Wines hit spot from start

This year marks the 25th anniversary of Phil and Sheryl Jones’ purchase of land in the Moutere Hills to establish Spencer Hill Wines. The most well-known wine from this producer is the Tasman Bay label, gaining this recognition after the very first chardonnay produced at Spencer Hill in 1994 was named Champion Chardonnay, Champion White Wine and Reserve Wine of Show at the Air New Zealand Wine Awards in 1995.

Alsace winemakers vote to require ‘Dry’ designation for labels

Alsace’s white wines offer incredible diversity—from fresh, vibrant wines that sing across the palate to sweet, floral off-dry whites that make for exquisite food pairings. The problem is that consumers cannot always tell which style is in the bottle they’re looking at in the store. Now a group of local winegrowers is working to clear up the confusion by requiring dry wines to be labeled as such.

New hybrid grapes help grow wine industry in cold US regions

CORINTH, N.Y. (AP) — The Marquette grapevines clinging to a steep, rocky hillside in the southeastern Adirondacks are among a host of new grape varieties that have enabled a boutique wine industry to take root in areas of the Northeast and Midwest that were previously inhospitable. There were about 2,000 wineries in the U.S. in 2000; today, there are more than 8,000, according to the industry publication Wines and Vines. “Across the country we’ve seen a huge expansion in wine and grape production and wine-related tourism.”

Campaign to boost WA vineyards’ international wine exports

A NEW campaign to help WA wine producers satisfy the growing global thirst is planned. The State Government is in talks with the local wine industry to set up a specialist “export development office” in Perth, The Sunday Times can reveal. If given the go-ahead, the ­initiative would aim to get more WA wine on to shop shelves and restaurant tables around the world. The EDO is a proposed partnership between the Australian Grape and Wine Authority, Wines of WA and the Department of Agriculture and Food.

An underground wine cellar in Tasmania is for sale, for $3 million

On the mainland, $3 million can buy you a fair bit – a six-bedroom home in Manly, or even Port Melbourne penthouse. However if neither of those ideas takes your fancy, you could also spend that money on a wine cellar in Tasmania. The clifftop property is a 20-minute drive from Hobart, and includes 8 hectares of land, a 300-square-metre shed, and the most unusual wine cellar in Australia. The wine cellar is housed in a tunnel that is a staggering nine stories deep. Like something out of a Bond film, it took mining experts six-and-a-half months to build.

South African winery recalls overseas batches due to glass scare

Cape Town – The Distell Group has had to recall tens of thousands of bottles of wine after a hiccup at one of their bottling plants left small fragments of glass in some wine bottles. Several different brands of wine were recalled from the UK, Kenya, Ghana, Uganda and Liberia. Distell said the tiny glass fragments had come to light when one of its agents in Japan had carried out quality assurance tests on the South African wine.

Genetic engineering could help wine industry face challenges

We are decades away from seeing commercially planted genetically engineered (GE) grapevines, but the research has already begun. All major grape-growing countries in the world are studying grape genomics and engineering, including Australia, Italy, Germany, USA and South Africa, with research mostly focused on disease resistance. When the pathogenic apocalypse descends on the world’s grapevines, scientists will be ready to fight back.

French wine sector seeks end to alcohol ad ban

France could be about to loosen its strict control over the advertising of alcohol with wine industry chiefs once again complaining they are being shackled as they try to promote the country’s most famous product. Alcohol helped spark an almighty row in France on Monday with the government and its health minister on one side and wine industry chiefs on the other. What caused the rumpus is France’s tight controls over advertising of alcohol, which were brought in back in 1991 as part of a bid to cut a worrying rise in alcohol consumption – especially among young people.

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