Fine wines
Wine offers a potent example of how becoming a conscientious
consumer can sometimes be a complex business. Many vegetarians who
are scrupulous about not eating animal foods are unaware that if
they choose to take a glass or two of wine with their meal, the
chances are that it will include animal products used as part of
the fining (clearing) process.
The majority of wines on sale in off-licences and
supermarkets have been cleared using any one of a variety of animal
'bits' and - in most cases - there is no ingredient list to check
which (if any). Possibilities include marrow, egg albumen (egg white),
fish oil, or gelatine (jelly obtained by boiling animal tissues
such as skin, tendons, ligaments, etc. or bones), isinglass (from
the air bladders of fish), milk or milk casein, chitin (organic
base of the hard parts of insects), blood and bone.
The use of animal products in wine making is a tradition rather
than a necessity and there are plenty of non-animal alternatives
available that do not detract from the quality of the final product.
Amongst them are limestone, bentonite, kaolin and kieslguhr (clays),
silica gel and vegetable plaques.
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Carte d'Or Brut: José Ardinat is a classic, golden vegan
bubbly for that extra special occasion. Available by the case, or
as part of our special celebration case, from the online
shop.
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Vegetarian choice
Buying wines that have been fined using non-animal products is
no longer an enormous problem, though the range is sometimes limited.
Various specialist wine merchants such as Vinceremos offer a vegetarian
range, a variety of which are available through the Animal
Aid mail order catalogue. Most of the big supermarket chains
offer one or two wines that carry the vegetarian symbol, though
these tend not to be at the cheaper end of the market.
The shining light as far as supermarkets are concerned is the Co-op,
which states on the label when its wines are suitable for vegetarians
and/or vegans (as it does with all its food and drink products).
The Co-op also scores higher than its competitors on two other fronts.
Firstly, it offers far greater choice across a wide price range:
secondly, it has led the way on food labelling, clearly declaring
all ingredients used, including the clearing agent. Alternatively,
if you purchase wine through a specialised high street merchant,
they should be able to find out which of their suppliers can provide
products completely free from animal ingredients.
Drinking out is more of a problem. Unless you are lucky enough
to live in Brighton - which has its own vegetarian pub - the chances
are that the house wines will contain animal products. The same
goes for restaurants, other than some completely vegetarian establishments.
And what about when visiting friends? If you're a keen wine drinker
there are serious choices to make there, too.
Other issues
Suppose that you have decided to drink only wines guaranteed suitable
for vegetarians and/or vegans. Are you then free to enjoy your tipple
with an additional warm glow of self-righteous contentment? If only
it were so simple.
As with almost everything we consume, there are plenty of other
'living without cruelty' issues you might like to consider. Should
we be buying at all from supermarkets with their cut-throat competitiveness
and destructive impact upon local economies and environmental pollution
(though, to be fair to the Co-op, it is freer from some of these
charges than others, given its non-profit-making origins and community-based
principles)? All of them are also massive players in the livestock
industry - amongst the biggest meat producers in the nation.
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Celebration fizz - vegan, organic, and available by the case from
the online shop.
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we be supporting only organic vegetarian wines? (They do exist.)
What about the way in which wine is produced as far as human exploitation
is concerned? Wines that carry the fairtrade symbol are also available
- notably at the Co-op on some bottles from South Africa and Chile.
Then again, should we be purchasing wines from the other side of
the world at all? Given the horrendous impact of 'air miles' upon
global warming - recognised as the greatest long-term threat both
to people and wildlife - should we not be making a point of buying
only those produced nearer to home?
More questions than answers?
So how far should we go? That can only be for each individual to
decide. For most of us, the final decision is usually a compromise
governed by time constraints, convenience, financial restrictions
and the degree of importance we attribute to each particular social
issue. If you've a stock of 'local' organic wine purchased from
a country with a favourable human rights record through a vegetarian-only
catalogue, then congratulations are in order. Or perhaps - even
sounder still - you make your own? I confess that my own response
is currently more of a compromise. The bottle open in my kitchen
was purchased from the Co-op, and though labelled suitable for vegetarians
and vegans, was produced far away in Argentina. No marks for me
on global warming!
With wine - as with most products we buy - cruelty-free
perfection is not simple, but at least it is better to be inconsistently
kind than consistently cruel.
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Smooth and delicious red wine which is suitable for vegetarians
and vegans. Available in mixed cases from the online
shop.
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