McEwen joins wine research board

Rory McEwen has been appointed the new chairman of the Grape and Wine Research and Development Corporation board.

Mr McEwen, who recently retired as the independent Member for Mount Gambier, is the former South Australian minister for agriculture.

He has also spent five years chairing the South Australian Wine Industry Council and says the experience will be extremely valuable in his new role.

“Now, of course, I’ve got to put on a national hat,” he said.

“South Australia is certainly the most significant wine producing state, New South Wales next and Victoria, but obviously Western Australia, Tasmania, Queensland, everybody has got an industry and I’ve got to now just make sure that simply because I’m South Australian-based doesn’t mean that I don’t focus now and put my attention where the industry is going nationally,” he said.

Federal Agriculture Minister Tony Burke says Mr McEwen’s appointment comes at a critical time for the Australian wine industry, which is attempting to restructure in the face of an oversupply.

Now, electronic nose that sniffs out wine’s origin

London, June 28 (ANI): Researchers in France have found a way to identify wine so accurately they can pinpoint where the drink was made and in which barrel it was fermented.

It uses an electronic nose to make even the most well established sommelier a little nervous.

The unique way exploits the complex mix of thousands of compounds found in each bottle of wine that gives the drink subtly different scents and flavours.

Researchers analyzed the compounds in vaporised samples of wine to produce detailed chemical signatures that can be matched against a database of characteristics to identify a wine’s source. They did so by using a kind of electronic nose, known as a mass spectrometer, reports The Telegraph.

It means they can tell exactly which variety of grape a wine is made from, the region and vineyard where it was produced and the source of the wood used in the barrel.

Regis Gougeon, from the University of Bourgogne, in Dijon, France, who led the research, said: “In winemaking, several processes can subtly modulate the characteristics of wine.

“Wine experts use their eyes, mouth and nose as detectors and are able to distinguish wines according to their ages, grape varieties, terroirs.

“All we know is that so far, none of the sensory analyses of the wines we looked at could discriminate like we did.

“Our approach reveals the extremely high yet unknown chemical diversity of wine. It was exciting to be able to observe such a diversity at once, where many compounds, even in low concentration, may contribute to the body of the wine.” (ANI)