Wine
on the Radio - April 4, 2003
American
Roots
Eighty-five
percent of the wine grapes in the world grow on American roots.
It's
true.
Back
in the late 1800's there was a devastating plague that hit Europe
's vineyards caused by a small
insect that attacks the roots of wine producing grapevines.
This tiny bug, called phylloxera, destroyed much of the continent's
grapevines.
Now
this little guy originally came from the roots of an American
grape species introduced into Europe . . . that's the bad news.
The
good news is that this American grape species was immune to it.
The
answer . . . get to the root of the problem . . . graft the European
wine producing vines on to these immune American roots and replant
the vineyards.
This
brilliant move is responsible for the great variety of quality
wine we have today.
No
pesticides, just a lot of ingenuity.
Phylloxera
hasn't gone away but these American roots make it mostly just
a memory.
Listen
to the show