Bob Parsons Alberta. wrote:Niagara is one grape variety I have never come across but Paul Bs frequent posts make it seem like an old friend. Agh well, back to my Baco Noir.
You know, Bob, the trouble with that (and the reason for it actually) is that labrusca varieties were excluded from VQA, and so today no winery in Ontario will grow them - they were officially banned from use for commercial table wines.
My response to this is twofold: Yes, there were some really poor, indifferent industrial "wines" produced in the bad old days in Ontario from Niagara (and Concord), but the grapes took the hit for that bad reputation - when in fact it was industrial, non-estate-minded practices that resulted in the poor quality to begin with: the grapes themselves, when treated with the correct mindset, can produce wonderfully light, fragrant, clean wines like Chaddsford's Niagara from Pennsylvania, which Paulo brought to NiagaraCool '06. At just a couple of degrees of residual sugar (not the watered-down, sugared-down junk that used to be made in Ontario), this modern Niagara is a beautiful wine.
There is also a low return on labrusca varieties so nobody grows them for premium wine in Ontario - yet in the eastern U.S. they still retain a following - mostly as quite sweet wines, but more and more wineries are heeding the howl and are starting to offer versions with much lower r.s.
I wouldn't hold my breath to see any Ontario-grown quality labrusca wines yet, Bob. About the only way to try the good ones would be to travel to select Eastern U.S. wineries or meet up with a passionate home winemaker who's dedicated to the variety.