Posted on 07/02/2005 5:47:22 PM PDT by quidnunc
They used to uncork their best bottles for festivals on July 14, but French wine growers such as Bernard Farges have little to celebrate next week. Far from evoking the triumphant storming of the Bastille, the date makes him and other bordeaux vignerons queasy.
I feel sick to the heart, said Farges, from Mauriac. The source of his melancholy is a European Union-funded process in which some of the quality red wine he produces will be distilled into undrinkable ethanol for use as factory fuel. The deadline for participating in the scheme is Bastille Day, a cruel irony. Farges has already sent in his forms.
It may seem heinous to any enthusiastic bordeaux drinker, but the EU has pledged £100m under the common agricultural policy to turn 670m bottles of French and Spanish wine into industrial alcohol to help reduce a surplus caused by competition from the New World.
This is not the first year in which plonk has been sold to industrial distillers, but never before have quality wines protected by the appellation dorigine contrôlée (AOC) label been subjected to such indignity. Some 200m bottles that might have graced the dining table are destined to become factory chemicals this year.
The idea is to help to prop up a slumping market for French wine but the EUs crisis financing of the process is being cited as an example of the profligacy of a system that Tony Blair wants to reform but which the French are fighting to keep.
Farges, 40, produces a very drinkable 350,000 litres of quality AOC-labelled bordeaux that is normally sold to restaurants and cafes. This year, however, some 20,000 litres of it about 26,000 bottles will go to the distillers.
-snip-
(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...
Australian reds are excellent, and often lower priced than comparable California wines. (Although when I checked the bottle, it turns out my current glass is from California :-).
Lindemann's is a good winery; we love their Shiraz-Cabernet blend. Yellow Tail and Little Penguin are inexpensive and predictably tasty.
July 14 sounds like a great day to open a bottle of David Bruce Pinor Noir, grill a nice New York Strip, and celebrate the second fall of France.
<------ errr.. Marks off Thursday the 14th as Steak day...
If this isn't an example of bureaucracy gone mad nothing is. Those of you who experience shadenfreude because this is happening to some Frenchman won't be so gleeful when our Washington elite decide to follow the enlightened EU example here.
ML/NJ
And "Black Opal" and "Thirsty Lizard" are good. We shop in the "under $12 for 1.5L" group. There are some really prime Australian wines if you're paying more :-).
Another failure of French and EU socialism. Price fixing and tariff wars lead by the EU have killed the market for French wine. Free markets work and governments don't.
The French are destroying their own wine industry with socialism.
Interestingly, a Dr. Munsen used Texas vines as graftstock for the 500-year old French varietals, saving their sorry asses from phylloxera in 1902.
Here's to you Jacques, many happy returns.
Great pinot. Lousy zin. JMO
zin is for sissies.... lol JMO. ;-)
"The source of his melancholy is a European Union-funded process in which some of the quality red wine he produces will be distilled into undrinkable ethanol for use as factory fuel"
That's the funniest item I've read all week!
"Screw France, they can piss all the wine they want, I hope their Grapes rot on the vines..."
Actually all the grape vines in France are descendents from California vines, shipped to France in the early 20th century after France lost their entire vineyard to a heavy frost. Just a bit of trivia.
I understand, however, that they're keeping the other traditional wines protected from socialist intervention.
Which is somewhat ironic, considering how much they're revered by French socialists....
Keep the boycott going!
Well, can we foreclose on them instead and get them back.
Or even easier, just threaten to bring them back, and france will surrender them, rip them from the ground, deliver them, say thank you to us for taking them back, and then bend over as they usually do.
Well, it's a thought.
geez, from the responses on this thread, you'd think the French did something really horrible to US...
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