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Vegan Wine?

By Hilary Henegar, Granville Online editor | Image: iStock / bloodstone | Published: February 06, 2009
vegan wine?

One of the ironies of going green is that as I (giddily) cultivate my new lifestyle, acquiring new knowledge and learning new skills (like gardening), I’m also constantly discovering more things I have to give up. Usually, for a challenge junky like me, sacrifices like H&M-boycotts are no big deal—likely because I’m too self-satisfied in my “cause” to feel the pangs of loss. But recently, as I’ve gone neck deep into sustainable living, the sacrifices have become harder to swallow.

Take wine, for instance. While not a regular drinker, I do get swoony over a glass of the good stuff—red Italians being my particular weakness. Now, I’ve gone as far as limiting my foreign wine consumption to less than once every month or two, but now I find out that most wine is not even vegan… Um, seriously? How can wine not be vegan?


 


What is Sustainable Wine?

Hemispheres Wine Guild's Marcus Ansems gives the skinny on sustainable wine. Turns out it's not so clear cut as organic or non-organic.


It turns out that animal products are common processing agents in wine and beer. These include gelatins, which are made from animal bones; isinglass, a form of collagen made from fish swim bladders (I wonder how Dionysus ever discovered the utility of that); casein, a milk protein harvested from the stomachs of calves; animal albumin, which is essentially a protein made from animal tissue or dried blood powder (gross!); and chitin, a carbohydrate found in the exoskeleton of lobster and crab.

And just how do these animal parts contribute to the pleasure of that velvety Friday night class of vino I can’t wait to sit and savour? Oddly enough, they clean it.
 


Resources: Vegan Wine

There are lots of resources on vegan wine to be found online. Here are a few favourites:

BC Vegan Wines – Epicuvegan blog

Is Your Booze Vegan? – Barnivore blog

Vegan Wine Guide

Why is Wine so Fined? – The Vegetarian Resource Group



After the wine has completed the fermentation stage, it then must be clarified of suspended particles, such as yeast, before bottling to remove cloudiness and any off-taste. Finings are agents that assist in the clarification process, and this is where those animal parts come in. When applied to the unclear wine, they serve in weighing down the unwanted particles so they settle to the bottom. Each also has its own qualities that contribute something different to the wine; for example, egg albumin (or egg whites) are said to reduce harsh tannins in red wine and improve “silkiness”—and are thus used to “finish” the wine. The wine is then filtered two to three weeks later. (Find a more detailed look at the process at the B.C. Amateur Winemakers Association website.)

Vegan wines replace the animal products with compressed paper, clay and other plant-based and alternative fining agents. Bentonite, kaolin, carbon and diatomaceous earth (rock made from pulverized algae) are examples of such vegan fining agents.

Apparently, both organic and non-organic winemakers employ the use of animal products—so drinking meat-free will require more than just label reading. As with any product on the market these days, the best way to determine whether a bottle is worthy is to do my research before hitting the local wine rack. That and getting a good wine guy or gal who knows their stuff.

(Tip: The Broadway International Wine Shop at Broadway and Macdonald, with its expert staff, is a great place to start.)
 



More: Vegan-friendly restaurants in Vancouver

Comments

Annonymous (in response to

Annonymous (in response to the Feb.6 comment): The whole point of vegans avoiding products made with ingredients taken from the bodies of animals has to do with not wanting to kill the animals in the first place. It really doesn't matter that a final product has something filtered out of it. Obviously, animals and fish are killed for the body parts and bodily fluids that are used in fining the wines. Being opposed to the killling of any creature is the fundamental reason behind why most vegans choose to be vegan, so we don't support killing of other sentient creatures (and non-sentient creatures) in any way. Because we know about the horrific truth of what happens to these animals when they are bred, born, raised, and killed for human consumption, we cannot abide by the use of living creatures for our own self-serving means. If you want to look at this from a purely logical point of view, it's an issue of supply and demand. If vegans consume products, like wines, that incorporate animal ingredients in their processing, we are expressing to producers that we are okay with the fact that animals are killed for those ingredients and we help to create a demand that results in more animals being killed. Thus, consuming a bottle of wine that uses even only a small amount of animal ingredients creates a chain of demand that ultimately supports the killing of animals. This logic can be applied to any foodstuff that uses animal ingredients, and the outcome is always the same. So, yes, it matters that even small amounts of any animal ingredients are in a product. As vegans, the integrety of our ethics would be worthless if we made occasional exceptions for bits of egg, blood, milk, fish, etc. in our food if we thought it's sometimes easier to not make an effort to avoid these things. What, then, would be the point of being vegan? Why not just eat egg, blood, milk, fish, or any other part of an animal all the time and not bother with the ethics of veganism? We avoid consuming the bodies of animals in any way possible because we care enough to demonstrate that the lives and experiences of other living creatures are just as important as out own. -- Epicurvegan

I'm so upset....although I

I'm so upset....although I appreciate your research and informative journalism, this is a story that may really affect my life. I'm not a big whino or drinker, well that's not true I guess I am or I wouldn't be upset by this story. I'm hoping maybe the next story will be a review of vegan wines - price points and where to get them locally ;) Yours truly, Ignorance "Was" Bliss

Good idea. I guess I could

Good idea. I guess I could do some taste-testing on vegan wines and report back... if I have to! This will be fun. —Hilary Henegar, Granville Online editor

But if they filter it out

But if they filter it out before you drink it do you really need to avoid it? I cannot tolerate yeast because I suffer from gout - but there's no yeast left in most beer and wine these days