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Vormid
Vormid

Wine is fine but...wait what? Australia OKs laxative agent as wine additive

15 comments, 224 views, posted 12:59 pm 07/12/2011 in Food & Recipes by Vormid
Vormid has 5965 posts, 505 threads, 0 points
"You can't simultaneously fire teachers and Tomahawk missiles."

And here I thought it was just grapes....ugh.

The Australian government has given the nod to winemakers to begin using a chemical contained in laxatives.

While the chemical, sodium carboxymethyl cellulose, has long been prized by the medical world for its anti-bulking and laxative properties, food scientists have discovered that, in small doses, it can be used to stabilize and thicken beverages and foods.

In the case of wine, the chemical prevents crystallization and cloudiness in white and sparkling varieties.

"I don't think the levels that are approved for use in wine in the EU and Australia will give that laxative effect," said Wendell Lee, general counsel for the Wine Institute, the trade group for California's wine industry.

The Winemakers' Federation of Australia appealed to its government to approve the chemical, arguing that the additive would save energy and money. That’s because traditional methods for preventing crystallization – cooling and filtration – can be highly energy intensive.

The chemical has not been approved for use in wine produced in the United States. However, an international agreement among several nations – including Australia; the European Union, where it is approved; and the U.S. – means that it is legal in imported wines.

But because there are no labeling requirements for food additives in wine, U.S. drinkers will remain in the dark as to its presence.

“There’s nothing you can do,” said Roger Boulton, professor of viticulture and enology at UC Davis. “There’s no way of knowing. If it’s imported and it’s an approved additive elsewhere, the consumer won’t know.”

According to both the EU and Australian government, the chemical does not alter the taste or consistency of wine, and it poses no harm to human health.

The U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, which oversees labeling and food additives in wine, has approved more than 50 wine additives, including soy flour, which helps with fermentation; potassium metabisulfite, which is used to sterilize and preserve wine; and copper sulfate, to remove hydrogen sulfide.

Lee, the Wine Institute's general counsel, said that while labeling information such as allergen content or carbohydrates might be helpful to consumers, "disclosing other substances that don't have a health impact may not be worthwhile."

"Do consumers need to be told about the substances that go into wine production?" Lee asked. "I'm not sure there's a lot of useful information in that."

In its ruling, the Australian government wrote that “use of the additive to stabilise wine and sparkling wine is technologically justified and would be expected to provide benefits to wine producers and consumers as an alternative to current treatments.”

As of Nov. 17, winemakers in Australia are allowed to add the chemical to their products

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Comments

1
1:47 pm 07/12/2011

Viscera

V, just drink red you won't have to worry about it.

0
1:51 pm 07/12/2011

Vormid

I mostly drink red but recently have been drinking a bit of unoaked chard and have found a taste for it. The tannins\acidity has been bothering my girlfriend a little bit. Seriously it never occurred to me that there might be all sorts of additional crap in wine. Duh!

1
1:54 pm 07/12/2011

Vormid

I'm certainly not a serious wine snob, but Big House's unchained Naked Chardonnay (box) is not shabby at all.

2
3:11 pm 07/12/2011

backroom

Quote by Vormid:
Seriously it never occurred to me that there might be all sorts of additional crap in wine. Duh!


Shame on you!

This summer on a weekend trip to the western end of NY my wife wanted to do a self guided tour to some of the local vinyards/ wineries. One of them offered for tasting... proudly if I may add... a merlot that tasted (according to my wife) and smelled like a cow shit.

1
4:41 pm 07/12/2011

zxcvbn

Well, this will not stop my Wino ways

2
6:29 pm 07/12/2011

Viscera

my favorite tasting note from the wine shop I worked at was for a Cotes du Rhone and the owner described it, "Big and bold this beauty is pefect for beef or steak. It has a bloody leather flavor with a hint of underbrush" That really compelled me to try it!

1
6:43 pm 07/12/2011

Vormid

lol....sounds vicious.

Another random not I had a chance to try a Romainan wine called Fetească albă the other night. It was actually quite good. I can't tell you the brand name but it had a metal label with a large 35 on it.

2
6:45 pm 07/12/2011

Flee

The wines name will be: Kolonik

Look for it in stores

3
6:50 pm 07/12/2011

Vormid

High Kolonik?

2
6:52 pm 07/12/2011

Flee

That name is reserved for their champagne

2
9:16 pm 07/12/2011

Quaektem

Quote by Vormid:
In the case of wine, the chemical prevents crystallization and cloudiness in white and sparkling varieties.



They are striving to make wine cloudy? Really?

2
2:10 am 08/12/2011

Flee

This means they can make shitty wine look like good wine.

0
2:37 am 08/12/2011

Quaektem

I guess I've never seen good wine then. I didn't know they were suppose to be cloudy.

3
3:40 am 08/12/2011

backroom

Quote by Quaektem:
They are striving to make wine cloudy? Really?


You got that backwards...
The chemical prevents cloudiness.

Quote by Flee:
This means they can make shitty wine look like good wine.


They are adding a laxative.
They are making their shitty wine shittier.

0
12:07 pm 08/12/2011

Viscera

The only cloud will be in the bathroom after you finish "evacuating" the wine

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