SPANISH WINERIES
MAKE WINE IN ALL COLOURS
G'day folks,
Here's a post for all of you wine lovers.
It all started last year, when Spanish startup Gïk unveiled the world’s first blue wine. They spent two years working with scientists at the University of the Basque Country and food researchers at Azti Tecnecalia trying to use anthocyanin, a natural pigment in the grapes’ skin, in order to manipulate the color of wine. It became a great commercial success, with the company reporting in January that it had sold over 100,000 bottles in under six months. But competition is ramping up, as other Spanish wineries are using similar technology to create all kinds of unusually-colored wines.
Bodega Santa
Margarita, in Caudete, Spain, offers different shades of blue wine, as well as
green, orange and pink wines, as part of its “Passion” line. They are already a
big hit in several European markets, like the Netherlands and the United
Kingdom. They also use anthocyanin for their Passion Blue wines, but it’s
not clear how they make their wines orange and pink. If I had to guess, they
are combination of different wines and the added grape skin pigment. One thing
is for sure, they are completely natural.
“The last
few weeks the wine has been flying out the doors,” Vincent Janssen, a Dutch
wine importer, told Share-a-Bottle. “We also had to get used to the
idea, but that color appears to have a real value to people. It looks different
and the wine is good too.”
Bodegas
y ViƱedos Amaya also mixes tradition and innovation to create what it calls
“tecnovinos”. So far they have a collection of bright red, yellow and green
wines, made from a variety of Spanish grapes.
All
these winemakers are relying on people’s curiosity to reach a whole new
customer base, as well as change the way the world thinks about wine. But,
apparently, lawmakers don’t like change very much.
Earlier
this year, Gïk announced that Spanish authorities had forbidden them to
sell their blue drink as wine, because it’s the wrong color. There is no
category for blue wine, so even though it is 100% wine, Gïk was forced to
relabel the bottles and sell its product as part of the “other alcoholic
drinks” category.
“In
order to continue selling, we have been forced to stop labeling Gik as a wine.
Instead, we had to label it as a bastard category named ‘Other alcoholic
drinks’. The main reason? There’s not a category for a blue wine, as there is
no historic background for anything similar,” Gïk wrote in a statement. We had to change
the composition to 99 per cent wine and 1 per cent grape to adapt the product
to the current legislation.”
Despite
such hurdles, it’s unlikely that the wine color revolution will be stopped. People are drawn to unusual colors like blue and
pink, even if it does make the wines look more like energy drinks, and most of
them don’t really care about technical details like the category the wines are
being sold in.
Clancy's comment: First, it was black and yellow tomatoes. Now, it's wine. What will they dream up next? Maybe wine named after authors, eh? Just sayin' ...
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