Clark Wine Center

Bldg 6460 Clark Field Observatory Building,
Manuel A. Roxas Highway corner A Bonifacio Ave,
Clark Air Base, Clark Freeport Zone, Pampanga, Philippines 2023
Clark, Pampanga: (045) 499-6200
Mobile/SMS: 0977-837-9012
Ordering: 0977-837-9012 / 0917-520-4393
Manila: (632) 8637-5019

New grape needed to keep wine flowing

January 20, 2011
Disease is a constant issue for growers; but new regulations are likely to curb the use of chemical treatments.
US researchers have made genome maps of more than 1,000 vine samples.
Writing in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), they say this type of data plots the way to disease-resistant grape varieties.
The grape varieties whose wine we like to drink – merlot, chardonnay, semillon, riesling and the rest – have mainly been developed from one species, Vitis vinifera vinifera.
It was probably “domesticated” about 5,000 years ago, in or close to what is now Turkey.
Since then, it has become the staple for wine-making as far from its homeland as Australia, Chile, the US and South Africa.
“Start Quote
We can’t just go on using the same cultivars for the next thousand years”
End Quote Sean Myles
Vinifera has been honed into hundreds of varieties, red and white; but the grapes are all still members of the same species, with limited cross-breeding between different varieties.
“The degree to which that was done seems to have been extremely limited,” said Sean Myles, lead author on the new study.
“Once we found good cultivars that were working for us, we adopted them and as a result they’re sitting ducks for pathogens,” he told BBC News.
Dr Myles is affiliated to Stanford University School of Medicine, but was based at Cornell University while this project – also involving researchers from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Italian instutitions, and funded by the USDA – was running.
Chemical curbs
Just as the grapes travelled from the shores of Europe across the world, diseases have travelled in the other direction.
Powdery mildew, for example, evolved in North America.
Vinifera grapes have no natural resistance; and in Australia alone, dealing with this disease costs an estimated $100m per year, largely through the fungicidal chemicals that are used to protect vines.
Seventy percent of fungicides used in US agriculture are sprayed in vineyards.
The powdery mildew fungus is one of a number of major grape diseases
But as the EU – which still produces nearly 70% of the world’s wine – seeks to improve the environmental footprint of its farm sector, the bloc is trying to reduce the use of such chemicals.
One proposal from the European Commission would heavily restrict spraying on “non-essential” crops from 2013.
Scientists from several institutions have been trying to develop new grape varieties that are immune to infection, either through cross-breeding with resistant species or through manipulating the genes that make plants susceptible to infection and damage.
But conventional cross-breeding is costly and laborious for grapes.
Plants have to be grown for three or four years until they fruit.
Then wine has to be made, tasted and assessed before growers know whether they have something viable; and even if they do, there is no guarantee that people will take to the taste over their preferred varieties.
What the Cornell/Stanford team has done is to produce genomic maps of more than 1,000 samples, which link the presence of genetic “markers” (sequences of DNA) to traits such as acidity, sugar content, or disease resistance.
“If you know the genetic markers associated with these traits, you can plant them out as seedlings, look at its DNA as soon as you get the first leaf tissue, and say for example ‘we’ll keep these five because we know their genetic profiles are associated with the traits we’re interested in’,” said Dr Myles.
“That’ll save an enormous amount of time and money.
“But you do need to have genome-wide data from lots of individual plants – on the other hand that’s getting increasingly cheap, so that compared with the method we used you can now do it 100 times cheaper.”
Although commercial factors tended to make wine-making a conservative profession, he said change must come.
“We can’t just go on using the same cultivars for the next thousand years.”
The good news is that more experimentation should in principle produce a wider variety of wines.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12209801

Leading Philippines Wine Supplier Yats Wine Cellars based in Clark Philippines with outlets in Angeles City, Subic Freeport and Manila Philippines has been not only a wine shop for fine wines covering all major wine regions but also a source of reliable and useful information about wine, wine appreciation, wine accessories, wine and health, food and wine pairing and all other matters relating to wine and its appreciation. This Philippines Clark Freeport based Wine Supplier and Wine Shop frequently holds public wine tasting events in Pampana Clark Freeport Zone, Angeles City, Subic Bay area, Makati, Fort Bonifacio and other areas in Philippines capital city Manila. Private Wine events such as private wine tasting and private wine dinners are also designed and organized for private clientele for their wine loving guests.

This wine shop in Angeles Clark Philippines is also renowned for a very unique product called Vintage Beer which many characterize as “Champagne beer” because it comes in a bottle with a Champagne stopper and metal restrainer. Vintage beers are top-of-the-line luxury beers bottle-conditioned for a slow fermentation to take place inside the bottle, a process that is very similar to Champagne which is designed to not only create the bubbles but also for an amazing complexity and depth of flavors.

For fans of Port and Sauternes, this wine shop in Clark Pampanga has a large selection of vintage port, Sauternes and Barsac as well as Eiswein/Icewine from Austria and Germany. Likewise, there is a good selection of Vintage Champagne at the wine shoppers’ disposal in the cellars of this wine shop in Clark Pampanga.

http://www.ClarkWineCenter.com

Getting to this wine shop in Pampanga Angeles City Clark Freeport Zone Philippines from Manila
Getting to the Clark Wine Center wine shop from Manila is quite simple: after entering Clark Freeport from Dau and Angeles City, proceed straight along the main highway M A Roxas. Clark Wine Center is the stand-along white building on the right, at the corner A Bonifacio Ave. From the Clark International Airport DMIA, ask the taxi to drive towards the entrance of Clark going to Angeles City. From Mimosa, just proceed towards the exit of Clark and this wine shop is on the opposite side of the main road M A Roxas.

For inquires and reservations, contact us here

Clark Wine Center
Bldg 6460 Clark Observatory Building
Manuel A. Roxas Highway corner A Bonifacio Ave,
Angeles Clark Freeport Zone, Pampanga 2023
0922-870-5173 0917-826-8790 (ask for Ana Fe)

Wine@Yats-International.com

YATS Wine Cellars
Manila Sales Office
3003C East Tower, Phil Stock Exchange Center,
Exchange Rd Ortigas Metro Manila, Philippines 1605
(632) 637-5019 0917-520-4393 ask for Rea or Chay

Best place to buy wine in Clark Pampanga outside Manila near Subic and Angeles City Philippines is Clark Wine Center. Visitors buy wine in Manila and Pampanga should not miss stopping at this wine shop for a few bottles of fine vintage wines to bring home.


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