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1.
Trendy Beverage: Masala Chai
Tea is among the oldest and most widely drunk beverages in the world ...read more
2.
Soju
Soju (not soya!) is the top-selling alcoholic beverage in the world ...read more
3.
Sherry, down under
Without a doubt Penfolds produces some of Australia’s best wines ...read more
4.
Valley High
Trentino is Italy’s northernmost wine-growing region and is the home of Grappa and Spumante ...read more
5.
The Renaissance of Cognac
No way is it “out”. Every second four bottles of cognac are purchased worldwide ...read more
6.
A bite to eat and a quick drink
In northern Spain’s Navarra, fine food and wine is as much an everyday part of life as ...read more
7.
The Renaissance of Grappa
People used to drink grappa to warm themselves up ...read more
8.
Southern Comfort – The Grand Old Drink of the South
The idea is as simple as it is ingenious: Over 135 years ago a barkeeper mixed whiskey ...read more
9.
Chablis
When the question arises about which wine goes well with fish and seafood, many people think of Chablis first ...read more
10.
We don’t want to make more wine, we want to make better wines
Torres, the Spanish family business, was recently placed atop the British “Green List” of environmentally friendly winer ...read more
11.
Noblesse oblige
Within just a few years the Schloss Proschwitz winery has become the hallmark of Saxon wine culture ...read more
12.
Cocoa – the Bittersweet Temptation
No matter whether it’s a bar or cake, biscuits or confectionary, pudding or praline ...read more
13.
Milk
One of humanity’s oldest forms of natural nutrition, milk is the universal ...read more
14.
Silvaner – Goethe’s Favourite Drink
Up to the 1970s Silvaner was the most widely cultivated grape variety in Germany ...read more
15.
Off to Hungary for the wine
Goethe had an appreciation for Tokay, the Hungarian dessert wine, but he was not the only one ...read more
16.
Sparkling Freshness: Crémant d’Alsace
With sparkling wine from France everyone first immediately thinks of Champagne ...read more
17.
Federweißer – New Wine with Lots of Flavour
The wine harvest just coming to a close bestows us not only new wine ...read more
18.
Harvesting Cava in Penedès
Once the grapes are fully ripe at the end of August ...read more
19.
Punches – fruity thirst-quenchers
Along with summer comes thirst – and the time for punches ...read more
20.
Noilly Prat – more than just an aperitif
It is used extensively in making sauces because it goes well with fish ...read more
21.
Beer – a very special juice
Hardly any drink is as versatile and old as beer ...read more
22.
Sake – Diversity of Aromas
"Good sake is like the water of a pure mountain spring,” say the Japanese ...read more
23.
Wines of Madeira
Madera wine, often shortened to "Madeira" ...read more
24.
Eco wine – mystic power plants
In this era of globalization increasing ...read more
25.
Hope at the Cape
In spite of a century-old tradition, many successful periods ...read more
26.
Model pupil from the Languedoc
No wine coming from the family of the Baroness Philippine de Rothschild ...read more
27.
A Lot New in the West
No country in the world has as many separate varieties of grapes as Portugal ...read more
28.
Vineland South Tyrol
For a long time wine from South Tyrol (Trentino Alto Adige) had a bad name ...read more
29.
Portugal’s red wines – moving up to the top
“Every Portuguese has his vineyard”, goes the saying in Portugal ...read more
30.
Franciacorta – effervescent Italy
Franciacorta is to Italy what Champagne is to France ...read more
31.
Prosecco – the sparkling Italian
A summer without Prosecco? Inconceivable ...read more
32.
Sherry – proud and elegant
It is as pale as straw and young, or as dark as toffee ...read more
33.
A place with plenty of time
In Lynchburg, Tennessee, bourbon is being made the same way ...read more
34.
Things are happening in Languedoc-Roussillon
Almost 40 per cent of French wine comes from the Mediterranean region of Languedoc-Roussillon ...read more

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SLAINTE: IN EVERY LANGUAGE!
Eco grapevine
Eco wine – mystic power plants
In this era of globalization increasing numbers of vintners are turning to biodynamic winemaking.


On becoming a father the vintner Gérard Bertrand suddenly saw the world with new eyes. As a former rugby professional who played for Narbonne, Paris and the French national team he of course maintained a healthy diet and made sure he was only treated with homeopathic medicine. But he didn’t make the step towards introducing biodynamic winegrowing onto his estate Cigalus in Corbières in the south of France, which he had acquired in 1994, until he saw the beaming face of the baby his wife Ingrid had just given birth to. Since then he has done without chemical pesticides and fertilizers, instead burying cow horns filled with cow dung into the ground and adapting his viticultural work to lunar constellations. He also intends to progressively convert his other three vineyards to biodynamic methods of cultivation, for it is not only the soil that has become more vital now that it contains more bacteria than traditionally farmed land. The wine too has now got “much more power”, the winemaker confirms.


For Eugène Meyer from Alsace it was a temporary loss of sight cured by homeopathy that gave him cause to stop using chemicals in his vineyard. The young vintner Werner Michlits at the Meinklag winery in the Burgenland region in Austria converted to biodynamics five years ago, out of personal conviction and with success – in 2003 he was awarded the prestigious German Oenologists Prize.

For a long time adherents of Rudolf Steiner and his anthroposophy movement were dismissed as fools and nutters. But in the meantime more and more oenologists have abandoned the well-trodden paths of orthodox winemaking and renounced the use of artificial fertilizers and chemical sprays, preferring instead to revitalize their terroirs with homeopathic, plant-based solutions. Eric Saurel from the Domaine Montirius in the southern Rhône valley has installed copper wire in the walls, floors and roofs of his new concrete vats so as to defuse possible electromagnetic fields that would negatively affect the wine. And to mix the concrete he had “specially informed water” delivered from Paris…

The “Agricultural course” Rudolf Steiner gave between 7 and 16 June 1924 at the farm estate of Graf Carl von Keyserlingk to a select audience of farmers has in the meantime evolved into a formidable cultivation method, and one which is now also pursued by the world’s top vineyards. Besides greening the ground between the rows of vines with special plants and synchronizing work in the vineyard to the astral calendar, above all three preparations are employed: cow dung to enrich the soil, cow horn dung to stimulate the roots and cow horns packed with quartz dust to enhance photosynthesis. Biodynamic winegrowing works with nature, not against it. Growing particular types of vegetation between the rows increases water stress for the vines, which has a positive effect on the wine. Indeed, of the seven wines tested at a blind tasting by the German wine journal “WeinGourmet” the four biodynamic estates earned better ratings than their conventionally operating colleagues.