Category Archives: History

Wine at America’s Table

 

The following is a guest post written by Marlene Rossman.   See her bio at the end of this post. You may also find her on Facebook by clicking here.

We in America, declared Thomas Jefferson in 1808, can make wine “doubtless as good” as the great wines of Europe. No one at that time promoted wine more enthusiastically than Jefferson. “Good wine,” he once said, “is a daily necessity.” Jefferson was also one of America’s first “foodies.” He imported both macaroni and Parmesan cheese for his own use in 1802, when both were unknown in the U.S., and Jefferson even served a “macaroni pie” at a state dinner.

Jefferson, who was third President of the United States (1801–1809), would have been thrilled to see the development of the American wine industry in the

Gilbert Stuart [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

21st century. He would likewise have been delighted to see how the quality of   food has developed/evolved. And he would have been lifted to the heavens to have a meal with American wine and food that are both equal to or better than any other place in the world.

“There is no love sincerer than the love of food,” said Irish dramatist George Bernard Shaw.

Over the last 30+ years, the U.S. has moved from a tuna casserole, soda pop and martini society to a developing wine culture, with the number of Americans who report they drink wine increasing rapidly. California, Washington, Oregon and even New York wines are now considered first rate. Along with the rise of American wine, America’s food culture is also changing for the better, as seen proliferation of ethnic cuisine and cross-cultural combinations, like Mexican/Korean or Japanese/French, and unusual “gastro-fusion” dishes that have found their way into the mainstream.

The American food and wine revolution is starting emerge in every grocery store and fast-food restaurant in big and little cities all over the U.S. of A. Foods our grandparents never heard of are now standard fare: sushi, tofu, chipotle, arugula, Parmagiano Reggiano, EVOO!

We have no real history intertwining our wine and food in America. But today, we can cook good food anywhere and we make wine in all 50 states. It is no accident that America’s food and wine have changed together. A glass of wine can lift a mundane dish to the magical. A dish as simple as roasted cauliflower topped with goat cheese becomes regal when paired with a glass of California Sauvignon Blanc. Foodies love good wine, and wine lovers appreciate great food.

The U.S. is a land of immigrants and our food history is a mish-mash of influences from our collective European, Asian, African and Latin American heritage. And the influence on food after World War two was the transformation of our agricultural economy to an industrial one, as the familiar foods we ate in the second half of the 20th century were more manufactured than grown. Have a look at “American cheese,” which many of us grew up on. The slimy, shiny cheese was created in a lab, not in a cave or a cellar. American food at that time used to be Kraft Mac & cheese, but in the last 30 years, we went from Kraft Food to craft food!

Unlike Europe, the U.S. does not have a long history of winemaking or wine drinking. In fact, it wasn’t until the Judgment of Paris in 1976 where California

By flickr user pinguino [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

wines bested their French counterparts that American wine was taken seriously. Before then, wine was either imported or, in California, made into “jug wines” from inexpensive varieties such as Colombard, Chenin Blanc and Carignane. Fast forward to 2011, as U.S. consumers downed close to 350 million cases of wine, although most of that was drunk (I can say drunk in a wine story :) ) on the East and West coasts.

Today, farmer’s markets are now fixtures all over the land and proliferating. Although 90% of all wine produced in the U.S. is from California, the Pacific Northwest has embraced the locally-grown movement, and its newfound awareness is definitely linked to the growth of wine production in Oregon and Washington State.

Just as American wine was beginning to gain recognition, Alice Waters opened her Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley in 1971. By 1978, the French Laundry opened, signaling the beginnings of a new level of cuisine in Napa Valley, and creating a model for the rest of the country.

By the mid-1980s on the East Coast, Danny Meyer opened his signature restaurant, Union Square Café, in Manhattan. The restaurant was one of the first “new American” restaurants in New York. Meyer sourced much of his produce from the first New York City Greenmarket, and the crowds came. Among other early adopters of the farm-to table movement were Alfred Portale and Mario Batali.
Before that, on the East coast, dining out was mostly at pretentious French restaurants that insisted on formal dress in order to gain entry. But, like the West Coast, the East coast has become “American forward” when it comes to dining and even drinking. Smith & Wollensky, a highly- regarded steakhouse in Manhattan was the first New York restaurant to feature American wines exclusively, opting out from offering imported wine, in 2003.

Thanks in part to America’s 40-year interest in fine wine, which I believe led to the revolution in the foods we now eat— witness the Food Channel— and even network restaurant shows, a growing number of us are cooking and eating better and more interesting food.

Now, back to our traditional Thanksgiving programming, as I must select wines to pair with turkey, ham and (terribly tannic) cranberry sauce, and of course, dear old Aunt Ethel’s stuffing. Happy Holidays!

© 2012 Marlene Rossman

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7e/Thanksgiving_1900.JPG Under Public Domain

According to her bio, “Marlene is the wine columnist for Chef magazine and writes on wine for Andy Dias Blue’s Tasting Panel, Sommelier Journal and International Sommelier magazines.  She was the Editor-in-Chief and columnist for Wine Country International magazine, wine columnist/editor for Orange County Home, New York’s Flatiron magazine and wrote for Beverage Media, and Wine Business Monthly. She was the featured commentator with Stephen Spurrier, in a program on “American Wine” produced by Associated Press Television News.  She is a member of the North American Sommelier Association.”  She is a former sommelier and currently the distinguished instructor of wine at UC-Irvine.

A Closer Look into History: The Phylloxera Crisis in France and Long-term Health Impacts

Today’s review paper topic ties in issues related to viticulture, health, history, and finance.  Carried out by a group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), this post presents a paper looking at possible long-run health impacts of “income shocks” related to wine and the phylloxera pest in late 19th century France. 

How could a sudden drop in income effect long-run health?

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Studies have shown that poor environmental conditions in utero have adverse effects on long-term health outcomes, including life expectancy, height, cognitive abilities, and overall productivity.  Many environmental factors can influence the severity of damage regarding the aforementioned health outcomes, including the disease environment, public health infrastructure, food availability, and certain seasonal nutrients.  Studies have also shown that for developing countries, the nutritional state of children is affected by the income of their family.  Therefore, in developing countries, it is speculated that financial crises may have long-term health impacts on children born during that period of stress, though there have not been enough studies to confirm or refute this idea.

The aim of the study presented today was to look deeper into the phylloxera crisis in 19th century France, and examine whether or not the income shocks associated with this sudden drop in grape and wine production had any long-term effects on the health of those that were born during that period of time.

Phylloxera and 19th Century France

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Phylloxera, an insect of the aphid family, attacks the roots of vines, which causes dry leaves, a reduced yield of fruit, and ultimately the death of the plant.  Native to North America, the insect is thought to have arrived in France in the early 1860s, either in the wood used for packaging materials from the US to France, or in a shipment of American vines.  The pest had two points of establishment, one on the southern coast of France near the mouth of the Rhône, and the other on the west coast in the Bordeaux region.  The insect spread relatively quickly, moving northward up the Rhône and outward along the coast, as well as southeast along the Dordogne and Garonne rivers and north to the Loire valley, all by 1878.  By 1885, the phylloxera pest had reached Paris.

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When the phylloxera first arrived, no one knew exactly what the cause of the plight was, since it was a completely new occurrence for them.  As it spread, and after nearly 40% of the vineyards in France were destroyed, it was apparent that it was causing a huge decrease in production, and a commission to investigate was formed.  After discovering the cause of the dying vines was the phylloxera pest that destroyed the root structure, a solution was found in the 1880s, which was to graft the phylloxera-resistant American vine root stock onto the European vines.  As a result of this discovery and solution implementation, the European vine recovery was well on its way, with eventually 4/5 of the vineyards in Europe being replaced with the new grafted vines.

Economy of Wine in 19th Century France

Before the phylloxera infestation, 1/6th of French agriculture income came from wine, which was produced mainly in several small highly specialized wine growing regions.  The authors of the study presented today estimated that the loss in agricultural income during the phylloxera crisis was about 16-22% in the wine producing regions of France (which is a major income shock).

Instead of facing major wine shortages in France, government officials relaxed wine import rules, so that the prices of wine did not change to reflect the decrease in grape production during the phylloxera crisis.  For example, in the 1860s (before the phylloxera crisis), 0.2 million hectoliters of wine were imported from places other than France.  After relaxing import rules as a result of the phylloxera crisis, 10 million hectoliters of wine were imported in the 1880s.  After replacing the European vines with the new phylloxera-resistant grafts, the wine importation rules were once again implemented, and wine imports decreased in the 1890s.  This effectively kept the prices of French wine rising as fast as the production was decreasing. 

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With a huge decrease in production and no increase in wine prices, the phylloxera crisis was therefore a huge income shock for those producing wine at the time.  Without yearly data on overall agricultural production, it cannot be determined what the overall drop in GDP was during the phylloxera crisis.  However, there is reason to believe there was no switch from wine production to any other agricultural activity (such as wheat production) by wine growers affected by the phylloxera, therefore the decline in wine production led to a overall decline in income for wine producers.  This trend has been confirmed in other studies related to the phylloxera crisis in France.  The total loss of income in the wine-producing regions on France during the phylloxera crisis was between 16-22%.

Methods:  Health Information and Measurement

In the late 19th century, France could be considered a developing country.  The female life expectancy in 1876 was 43 years old, infant mortality was 22%, and the average height of males at the age of 20 was 1.65 meters (5 feet, 5 inches).  Height has been shown to be a relatively good measure of overall health, and it has been shown to be correlated with other adult outcomes.

To acquire health information for those individuals born during the phylloxera crisis in the late 19th century France, the authors of the study went to military data sets for numbers.  Since 1798, men had to report for military service in the year they turned 20 in the region where there father lived.  It is then that health information (including height measurements) was recorded.  Rejections due to health reasons (including being too short) were recorded as well.

Many mathematical models were used to determine the results of this study after controlling for many potential influencing factors, and will not be presented in this summary post; however I am happy to present that information to you, should you be interested.  Simply comment below with questions.

Results

Effect of Phylloxera-induced Income Shocks on Height

  •       At the age of 20, those born in wine-producing regions that lost all of its production due to phylloxera would be 3.2 mm shorter than those born in other regions.
  •       Those born in wine-producing regions that lost 80% of its production due to phylloxera would be 1.9 mm shorter than those born in other regions.
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  •       A drop of 10% in a wine-producing regions’ income would result in a decrease of 1.06-1.9mm in height.
  •       In wine-producing regions, 1 more hectare of vineyard per capita increases the probability that a 20 year old male born in years where production was at least 20% lower due to the phylloxera crisis is shorter by 1.85% and reduces his height by 7mm.
  •       A child born into a wine-producing family during the phylloxera crisis was 0.5 to 0.9 cm shorter by the age of 20 than he/she would be otherwise.

o   Considering than overall heights in France during that time grew only by 2cm, that effect is a large one.

  •       The probability of being rejected for military service due to short height was 1.5% higher for each additional hectare of wine per capita in a wine-producing region.
  •       There were no long-term height effects on young children 1-2 years old), toddlers (2-5 years old) or teenagers who were born before the phylloxera crisis hit.

Effect of Phylloxera-induced Income Shocks on Other Health Outcomes

·         There was no effect on mortality or life expectancy as a result of phylloxera-induced income shocks in late 19th century France.

·         The number of men rejected for military service for health reasons is actually smaller for those effected by phylloxera (though it’s uncertain what exactly the health reasons were, and there is a potential for sampling bias in this study which may alter the results slightly).

·         Overall, there is no evidence of a negative long-term impact of the phylloxera crisis on any health condition, other than height.

What does this all mean?

Since the only health outcome apparently affected by the phylloxera crisis in 19th century France was height, the authors speculated that it was most likely due to nutritional deficits during childhood, and not necessarily due to stress in utero.  Overall health status may have been protected by other factors, such as decent public health infrastructure, which alleviated any potential health risk often associated with income shocks.

Since those in wine-producing regions were often wealthier with a high social status compared to those living in other regions, it is possible that the loss in income was not significant enough to cause much stress in utero, which would have had negative effects on long-term health outcomes.  Perhaps those in wine-producing regions were more able to recover from a loss in income than a poorer individual working in other industries in France at that time.

In summary, it appears that stress in utero has negative effects on health outcomes in adulthood, however, the income shocks due to the vine-damaging phylloxera crisis was not enough to illicit such a response.  Perhaps those families affected were wealthy enough to withstand the blow without harsh consequences, or perhaps all of the wine being consumed kept everyone in a happy, stress-free state!

Please feel free to comment below!  I’d love to hear from you!

Full citation for the article discussed today:

Banerjee, A., Duflo, E., Postel-Vinay, G., and Watts, T. 2010. Long-run health impacts of income shocks: wine and the phylloxera in nineteenth-century France. The Review of Economics and Statistics 92(4): 714-728.

I am not a health professional, nor do I pretend to be. Please consult your doctor before altering your alcohol consumption habits. Do not consume alcohol if you are under the age of 21. Do not drink and drive. Enjoy responsibly!