What is the hype around "Clean Wine"?
Learn. Discover. Be Inspired. Drink Clean Crafted Wine.
While "wine" is known to have many health benefits which is one of the reasons we will pour ourselves a glass (or two) and indulge.
Some of the benefits can include:
It contains antioxidants. ...
It boosts the immune system. ...
It increases bone density. ...
It reduces the risk of stroke. ...
It reduces the risk of heart disease. ...
It can lower cholesterol. ...
It reduces the risk of Type 2 Diabetes.
While it’s true that many of these traits are reasons we love wine. Some things also can effect wine's role in our health. All wines are not crated equal and quality is an important factor many people overlook. One example I tell peoople is that you eat organic fruit and veggies, wash your face with clean skin care products why isn't the wine you drink natural, clean crafted or organic?
Below you will find an excerpt from Parsley Healtlh, and their view points on clean crafted wines:
Conventional wines actually have significantly lower levels of the powerful antioxidant resveratrol than natural and organic wines and are often diluted with additives like sugar, yeast, and chemicals. At Parsley Health, we advise all of our members that choose to drink wine to opt for natural, biodynamic, or organic varieties when possible.
In this article, we’ll deep dive into what you need to know about selecting the highest quality wine so that while you’re sipping on your next glass of vino, you’re actually reaping the health benefits of wine.
How your wine grapes are grown and processed matters
Understanding the current state of the commercial wine industry is similar to thinking about the current state of the American food supply. In many ways, commercial, non-organic wine can look a lot like processed food. More than half of the wine in the United States are manufactured by the same three corporations. As a result, most of the wines on the shelves in your standard liquor store are mass-produced and processed in factories with little regulation around their cultivation practices. Even small wineries and vineyards that do not subscribe to define organic or natural practices are likely to use some sort of pesticides or additives in their winemaking. Furthermore, with the lack of content labels on alcohol, what’s been added to the product is a bit of a mystery. Legally, companies can add up to 76 different FDA-approved additives to wines including metals, toxic chemicals, added sugars, fish bladders, and more.
When we talk about the quality of wine, we’re referring to the conditions in which the grapes were cultivated, fermented, and processed. For starters, commercial vineyards use irrigation systems that drip water from tubes tied to the plant to encourage faster growth. As a result, the vines do not have to dig deep into the earth to fight for water. That means they absorb fewer nutrients from the soil, which lessens the nutritional quality of the grapes.
Conventionally grown wine grapes are also one of the most extensively pesticide-treated crops. In fact, Monsanto’s Roundup, which active ingredient is glyphosate, is the most widely used herbicide in U.S. vineyards today. While the use of glyphosate has been controversial, there is evidence to suggest this herbicide is carcinogenic and overexposure can be harmful to human health. Grapes themselves fall sixth on the Environmental Working Group’s dirty dozen list – a yearly list which analyzes Department of Agriculture test data to identify which types of produce are most and least contaminated with pesticide residues. The EWG cites that a single conventional grape may contain up to 15 different types of pesticides. In wine, pesticides are further concentrated during the fermentation process, therefore, making your average commercial wine a little bit of antioxidants with a whopping side of chemicals. This is why opting for organic wines that are created with quality in mind can be one of the most important aspects of selecting the healthiest wine.
The 3 healthiest wine varieties: natural, organic, and biodynamic
The three most popular movements for wine quality are organic, biodynamic, and natural wines. These certifications can often overlap and indicate that cultivation of the grapes and processing of the wine diverge from conventional and mass-market practices to create something of higher quality and nutritional value.
Organic wines
Organic wines are grown using the principles of organic farming, so no artificial or chemical fertilizers are used to grow the grapes and no sulfites are added to the final product. Similar to food products, organic wine is widely regulated in both the United States and Europe.
Biodynamic wines
While biodynamic wines also follow organic farming principles, this type of agriculture refers to farming practices that are in sync with nature and take special care in naturally enriching the soil, rotating the grapes, and promoting sustainability of the land. As a result, the wine produced from these vineyards not only lacks pesticides but often contains more nutrients and offers a higher quality taste profile than other wines, making it one of the healthier wine varieties.
Natural wines
In the purest sense, natural wines are an indication of a wine that’s been unmanipulated and whose naturally occurring nuances in flavor are celebrated. This often means the grapes are hand picked and destemmed without being subjected to any machine pumping or mechanical separation and without the addition of added enzymes, sulfites, or yeasts which might affect the natural fermentation process. Natural wines tend to be cloudier because they’re unfiltered. Often times, natural wines can also be from organic or biodynamic vineyards, but there is no legally regulated standard to define the process.
When wine is cultivated with these principles in mind, the final product is a living product which contains specialized bacteria and a greater concentration of bioactive compounds that can have a positive influence on our microbiome. Unlike conventional wines, natural wines may contain probiotic bacteria that provide similar benefits of fermented foods such as sauerkraut, kimchi, kombucha and yogurt. These probiotic bacteria can help to boost immunity, decrease inflammation and improve bacterial diversity in the gut.
*The above is an excerpt from Parsley Health -
I am a huge fan of the wine from Scout & Cellar, a woman owned purveyor of clean crafted wine. They source Clean-Crafted™ wine from all over the world, creating and bottling wildly delicious wines with an authentic sense of place, working directly with growers and producers who embody our Clean-Crafted Commitment® in their daily practices. They walk through the vineyards, visit the cellars, share meals together. The end result? Delicious wines. Better in the bottle. Better in your glass. Better for the planet.