US
federal authorities have taken a dim view of ageing wine underwater, warning it
may be illegal to sell wine that have been aged that way.
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However, Dyke may have to shelve his plans as
the practice has caught the attention of the Treasury Department’s Alcohol and
Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau who warned that potential contact with ocean water
would render the wines “adulterated” and thus illegal to sell. The bureau, which oversees alcohol labelling,
can prohibit wineries, breweries and distilleries from selling or shipping
their products if they are judged to have been “adulterated” in some way. The bureau referred to the US Food and Drug
Administration which said that wine aged underwater “may” render than
adulterated under federal law because they have been stored in “unsanitary”
conditions.
The bureau continued that degradation of the
seal – wax and cork – while underwater could lead to the wine being exposed to:
“Gasoline, oil, heavy metals, plastics, drug residues, pesticides, as well as
various types of filth, including waste materials from biological sources,
sludge, decaying organic matter, runoff from farms, effluents from sewage
treatment plants, and bilge waters from vessels.”
Dyke said he was disappointed with the news
but pointed out that all of the bottles he’d aged underwater and then tasted,
none showed any hint of contamination with seawater.
You can read more at http://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2015/03/us-authorities-torpedo-underwater-ageing/
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