Les Vins Pirouettes Ultra Violet de David 2020
Les Vins Pirouettes Ultra Violet de David 2020
8 months maceration. Rich with bright acidity and ripe stone fruit notes.
COUNTRY Alsace, France
APPELLATION Vin de France
VARIETY Auxerrois, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Noir, Muscat, Pinot Gris, Riesling, Gewurztraminer
STYLE Bright & Bold
ABV 12.5%
WINEMAKER Les Vins Pirouettes
ABOUT THE REGION
Located in northeastern France along the border with Germany, Alsace has a winemaking tradition dating back over a thousand years, and is famed for its aromatic white wines and picturesque vineyard landscapes. This region, nestled between the Vosges Mountains to the west and the Rhine River to the east, benefits from a unique microclimate that fosters the cultivation of grapes such as Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Gris, and Muscat. Alsace wines are known for their purity, intensity of flavours, and distinctive bottle shapes known as "flûte d'Alsace."
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Organic, Biodynamic and Natural wine. What’s the difference?
To understand this concept and its various ramifications, it is necessary to keep something clear in mind: before the 20th century and the spreading of affordable synthetic fertilisers, all farming was organic. When the shift to the use of synthetics and pesticides happened, it became necessary to diversify traditional organic farming from the new modern farming.
ORGANIC WINE
Simply put, organic farming forbids the use of synthetic fertilisers, synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or genetically modified organisms. The basic requirements are generally specific and engage the farmers not to use any chemical fertilisers and other synthetic products in the vineyard. It does not prevent the vintner from using the conventional winemaking process after harvesting.
BIODYNAMIC WINE
Let’s take organic farming one step further: Biodynamic. The creator of this agricultural system is the Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, who developed the principles of biodynamics in a series of lectures given in 1924 in Germany. Here lies the foundation of true organic wines, with a strict limit in the use of additives, stringent requirements and at the end obtaining a biodynamic certification.
NATURAL WINE
The previous definitions are usually, and rightfully, associated with it, because most natural wine is also organic and/or biodynamic. But not vice versa!
Natural wine is wine in its purest form, simply described as nothing added, nothing taken away, just grapes fermented. No manipulation whatsoever, minimal intervention both in the vineyards and in the winery. Healthy grapes, natural yeast and natural fermentation, with no filtration nor fining. Sounds easy, right? However, making natural wine is unforgiving and it requires a bigger amount of work than conventional wine. To this day, natural wine has no certification yet.