On Mon, Apr 07, 2008 at 03:49:08PM -0700, Ruth Gregory wrote:
Hi
this week the wine group has reservations at Sapor.
The theme is spicy Spanish from lesser known regions
of Spain. Keep in mind that Sapor charges the five
dollars a head corkage, you can R.S.V.P. to me. I
believe most everyone knows where it is so I won't be
posting the address, let me know if you need
directions though I'd be happy to oblige.
Ruth
---
>
>
> FYI/FYE
>
http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-wine9apr09,1,6865251.story
From the Los Angeles Times
WINE RULES
A wine label overhaul: Meet the man who'd change your AVA
If the TTB's John Manfreda has his way, the name on your bottle might mean something
totally different, and the label will pack nutritional info, allergen warnings and a list
of ingredients. Grapes? We hope.
By Corie Brown
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 9, 2008
COLLEGE PARK, MD. — IN a small, windowless laboratory -- far removed from romantic
vineyard vistas -- scientists at the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB)
are attempting what most wine lovers would say is impossible. They are developing a test
for terroir, the seemingly indescribable site-specific character attributed to fine wines
(and named for the French word for soil).
The effort to find physical evidence of wine's geographic origin, spearheaded by John
Manfreda, TTB administrator and the nation's chief wine regulator, is decades from
completion. But whether or not Manfreda succeeds in quantifying terroir, that concept of
"place" is a focal point in a battle brewing between his agency and the U.S.
wine industry.
Should a winery using grapes from Carneros be permitted to name itself Calistoga? What if
the winery was there before the AVA (American viticultural area)? Should wines from an AVA
that's within the boundaries of a larger AVA (for instance, Rutherford within Napa
Valley) continue to be allowed to identify itself with both? Or does the smaller AVA trump
the larger?
If Manfreda has his way, more of the wines you buy will have brand names that also are AVA
designations, even though they may not contain grapes from that AVA, and wine labels,
along with those on all alcoholic beverages, will be jammed with other new information,
including nutrient serving facts and a list of potential allergens as well as a list of
ingredients.
The wine industry is reeling from Manfreda's grand plan, potentially the most
sweeping overhaul of industry rules since the 1978 creation of the AVA system, the
American version of certified wine-growing areas. The AVA proposals, in particular, are an
unwelcome surprise that will do nothing but confuse consumers, according to industry
insiders who asked not to be quoted for fear of offending Manfreda.
For his part, Manfreda says he is addressing issues that have been festering for years. He
is frustrated by the industry's desire to force his office to act as an arbitrator in
internecine conflicts, a role he says is inappropriate for government.
Outside the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, there is no governmental or
commercial support for the new AVA rules, says U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson (D.-St. Helena),
who represents Napa Valley and is co-chairman of the 200-member Congressional Wine Caucus.
"The TTB seems to have taken this on its own initiative," he says. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson, who oversees the TTB, appears intent on allowing Manfreda to
proceed, Thompson says, a conclusion he reached after meeting with Paulson.
"The juice to do this? It's all us," Manfreda says. The patchwork of wine
rules that has evolved since the repeal of Prohibition in 1933 serves no one well, he
says. The 62-year-old government attorney doesn't expect to fix all of the problems
before he retires, but citing a mandate "to collect taxes, to protect consumers and
to make certain that the industry trades on a level playing field," he says it is his
job to start the cleanup. After all, during his 38 years at the agency, he had a hand in
creating the mess.
Nutrition info too
BY the end of this year, Manfreda hopes to finalize any AVA rule changes along with a rule
mandating nutrient serving facts (calories, carbohydrates, fats, proteins and alcohol
content) on labels. Other label requirements would follow, with all of the changes to be
reflected on labels for wines offered for sale as early as three years from now.
The wine industry is fighting Manfreda on all fronts, with the AVA rule changes generating
the fiercest opposition. "There is consensus within our group that the rules in place
have served us well. No new rules are needed," says Robert Koch, president and CEO of
the Wine Institute, which represents the California wine industry.
The Napa Valley Vintners Assn., representing Napa's winery owners, considers
Manfreda's initiatives a threat to decades of work establishing Napa Valley as
America's premiere AVA. If Manfreda is really the power at play here, says Pat
Stotesbery, association president and Ladera Vineyard owner, "I'm amazed what
one bureaucrat sitting alone in his office in Washington can do."
The immediate issue: Manfreda would allow Calistoga Cellars to continue to use its brand
name after the establishment of a Calistoga AVA regardless of whether it adheres to AVA
requirements that 85% of the grapes in its wines come from Calistoga. To Stotesbery, that
opens the floodgates to new brand names that are also AVA names. "Consumers should
not be deceived when they see a recognizable name on a label," he says.
"I know, I know," Manfreda says when asked about the wine industry's
vociferous opposition. "I'm not making fans in the industry." He plans to
address the industry's concerns in the final rules, and may even withdraw certain
provisions. But, he says, it would take an executive order from President Bush to
accomplish the full stop that the industry desires.
That can perhaps be arranged. Manfreda tried to institute one aspect of his sweeping
alcohol beverage label proposal -- the list of ingredients -- in the late 1970s. When
President Reagan entered office in 1981, he ended the effort with the stroke of a pen.
Geographic designations
GEOGRAPHY is a tricky topic for the U.S. wine industry. European wine regulators can
rationalize their appellations on centuries of tradition and grape-growing experience, but
American geographic indicators are created in a relative void. Brand names are real
property, whereas regional identities are collective initiatives that don't
necessarily translate to the bottom line. As a result, the U.S. wine industry has never
taken a stand that "place names" are essential to consumers. The industry
wanted, and got, an AVA system that did not confer any quality designations or controls.
Political boundaries are as relevant as viticulture criteria.
Manfreda wants to change that. According to the current rules, he says, an AVA simply must
be "distinct from the area outside of it." That vague standard also is applied
to smaller AVAs created within larger AVAs, compounding the lack of meaningful
distinctions in Manfreda's view. "I want to get away from random geographic
designations," he says. "We want more clarity, to be more specific, not
less."
As the rules read today, he says, the correct thing to do would be to cut the smaller AVAs
out of the surrounding AVAs, leaving something that looks like a circle of cookie dough
with holes where the cookies have been removed. In that case, the Napa Valley AVA would be
reduced to the bits and pieces of land that are left when Stags Leap District, Oakville
District and the rest of Napa Valley's 14 sub-AVAs are removed.
The industry, according to Wendell Lee, Wine Institute general counsel, thinks not. The
government has been granting AVAs within AVAs for decades and allowed both AVAs on wine
labels. Changing the rules now would create confusion.
Wine has been made in California since the 1800s. It wasn't until 1978 that the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the precursor agency to the TTB, established the
AVA system, stipulating that at least 75% of the grapes in wines with country, state or
county designations must come from those regions. AVA wines must source 85% of those
grapes from that AVA.
Originally, if a brand name was also an AVA, all it had to do to continue operation
without being subjected to the 85% rule was to add the word "brand" to its name.
In 1987, that rule was changed to allow brand names in existence before the AVA system was
established (such as Stag's Leap Wine Cellars in Stags Leap District) to continue in
operation outside the 85% rule.
The rules, however, did not address future conflicts in new AVAs, such as Calistoga
Cellars’ clash with the pending Calistoga AVA, Manfreda says. He does not want to force
this vintner or any other in a similar situation to conform to the AVA rules when they
built their business long before the AVA was established. "I don't think the
government should make winners and losers out of people with established businesses,"
he says. "I don't think the government should be used as a weapon to eliminate
competition."
Right now, this is the only AVA-brand name conflict before the TTB. But those opposed to
Manfreda's proposal say they expect a rush of opportunists to file geographic brand
names hoping to be allowed one day to operate outside of AVA regulations.
The new wave of wine-label rules looks like a package, but it didn't start out as
one. In 2005, a federal law mandated that all prepared foods include health warnings for
allergens. (For wine, potential allergens include wheat paste, egg whites and fish
extracts.) When it became clear that there would be a change in wine label requirements,
Manfreda says, the opportunity existed to consider other changes without asking vintners
to incur additional costs. He accepted a 2003 request by the not-for-profit watchdog group
Center for Science in the Public Interest to consider requiring all alcohol beverage
labels to indicate serving size with percentages of recommended daily amounts of protein,
carbohydrates, calories and fats. In addition, Manfreda says, he decided to revisit a rule
proposed in the 1970s to list ingredients.
'CSI Napa Valley'?
BACK at the TTB lab, Manfreda's ambitious initiative to develop terroir tests
continues. Using a mass spectrometerand an array of computers, chemists are working on a
system to identify minerals and heavy metals in wines from individual AVAs. The
first-of-its-kind work is theoretical now, with no specific markers identified yet for any
particular AVA.
So far, the project's most concrete accomplishment has been to identify the chemical
markers for certain grape varieties. Like an experienced connoisseur, the lab can test a
glass of wine and determine whether it is Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir or
Zinfandel -- but only if the wine sample is made from 100% of one of those grape
varieties.
If the scientists can identify varieties and their relative quantities when more than one
is blended in a wine, Manfreda says, they'll be able to catch fraudulent vintners. Is
that bottle of California Pinot Noir really 100% Pinot, as the label indicates, or has the
winemaker beefed it up with Syrah? They'll be able to run the same tests on imported
wines.
Does Manfreda believe there's a lot of fraudulent wine in the market? No. The
industry is amazingly free of scandal and maintains high quality standards, he says. He
just wants to keep it that way.
corie.brown(a)latimes.com
http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-wineside9apr09,1,3749568.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Wine and the law: a
brief history of U.S. label regulations
April 9, 2008
1933: As Prohibition is repealed by the 21st Amendment, the first federal wine rules
require that varietal wines (e.g., Chardonnay, Syrah) contain 51% juice from that grape
variety, and that wines indicating country, state or county appellation contain 51% juice
from grapes grown in the specified appellation.
1978: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms amends wine label regulations.
Provisions include standards requiring that (1) varietal wines must include 75% juice from
that grape variety; (2) wines indicating country, state or county appellation must include
75% juice from grapes grown in the specified appellation; (3) wines bearing the name of an
American viticultural area (defined with this regulation) must include 85% juice from
grapes grown in that region; (4) vintage-dated wines must include 95% wine produced in
that vintage year. A provision is made for geographic brand names that were in conflict
with an AVA name to be differentiated by the addition of the word "brand" to the
wine name.
1980: Augusta, Mo., is the first American viticultural area (AVA).
1987: Exceptions are made allowing some wine brand names that are in conflict with AVA
names to be used without the word "brand" and without following the 85% rule.
Separately, a sulfite health warning is added to labels.
1988: The Federal Alcoholic Beverage Labeling Act of 1988 provides health warnings on wine
labels for pregnant women and people who operate cars.
2005: Request for comments on proposed labeling rules concerning potential allergens,
nutrient information and ingredient labeling.
2006: Rule changes reduce the requirements for vintage-dated wines from state or county
appellations to 85% of the wine in the bottle (produced in a vintage year). The 95% rule
set in 1978 is unchanged for AVA designated wines.
2007: Rules are proposed to allow certain brand names that conflict with new AVAs, and to
differentiate AVAs from sub-AVAs.
-- Corie Brown
Source: The Wine Institute
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