Estate Living Digital Publication Issue 5 May 2015 | Page 10

Through the Organic Wine Glass The concept of organic wine sounds great in theory, but for some, it is a relatively unfamiliar one and consumers often assume (quite wrongly) that the wine probably doesn’t taste as good. Yet, crushing grapes with the soles of feet and using natural repellents to ward off insects is simply a return to the original wine making processes before the advent of scientific pesticides and mass production. “It is odd how farming with chemicals is known as conventional farming whilst organic is perceived as something different, something other than normal,” comments Josef Lazarus, owner of Lazanou Organic Vineyards, an award-winning boutique wine farm in Wellington. “This concept has always confused me. I have always maintained that conventional farming is a deviation from the norm. The norm was always organic, until the introduction of chemical-based herbicides and pesticides.” A glass of organic wine is not going to cheat you of the real deal both for they look and taste identical to conventional wine, differing only in the way they are made. Whereas conventional wine farmers manage their vineyards through a multitude of herbicides and pesticides, organic farming restores the natural ecosystem into balance. Aside from the processes, organic wines also have lower sulphite content in comparison to conventional wines, which generally helps to deliver deeper, more vibrant colour, explains Klaas Coetzee, winemaker at Stellar