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This article was published in The 30 Second Wine Advisor on Wednesday, Apr. 30, 2008 and can be found at http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor2/tswa20080430.php. Organic favorite
Organic food is becoming a hot item in the grocery store. Organics have grown at a rate of nearly 20 percent per year for the last seven years, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Marketing Resource Center reported in June 2006, adding that industry experts forecast continued growth in the sector. But organic wine doesn't seem to have gained as much traction in the marketplace as, say, organic bananas or broccoli. According to the Organic Trade Association, a trade association of organic food producers and distributors, U.S. sales of wines made with organic grapes comprised only about 1 percent of the domestic wine market in 2005. The market's relative lack of enthusiasm for organic wines may stem at least in part because viticulture - particularly among the kind of small, artisanal producers that most wine enthusiasts treasure - doesn't tend to make heavy use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides anyway. Even so, industry experts expect organic wine sales to increase in parallel with the growing organic food trend. And a fair number of wine producers already label their wines as organic (or the more offbeat "biodynamic"). I can't honestly say that I can detect any flavor or intrinsic quality difference between organic and non-organic wines; but I'm happy to consider buying organic wine, as I do organic food, as an alternative that seems healthy for the environment, and for me. One of my perennial organic wine favorites is Mas de Gourgonnier in Provence. The winery's owners, brothers Luc and Fred Cartier, make all-organic wines ("Produit de l'agriculture biologique") from vineyards that never see chemical fertilizers, weed-killers or artificial insecticides. They make a red, white and rosé as well as somewhat more pricey "reserve" wines. I keep coming back to the basic Mas de Gourgonnier red for good value, year in and year out, and was delighted to run across the 2005 red recently, decked out with a new label and a slightly more streamlined version of its familiar squat bottle. The label may be new, but the wine remains an earthy, rustic, sturdy but well-balanced blend of Grenache, Carignan and Syrah and - for the U.S. export market - a splash of Cabernet Sauvignon. My tasting notes are below.
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