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April 10, 2017 4:14 pm
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4 Cups, 5 Stars: Kosher Wine Increasingly Popular at Passover Seders

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avatar by Deborah Fineblum / JNS.org

Opinion

A Passover seder, with wine bottles. Photo: Wiki Commons.

JNS.org – Even the most finicky wine snob won’t be able to “pass over” the new generation of kosher wines. And if Jews are commanded to drink four cups of wine at the Passover seder, they might as well drink high-quality wine in the process.

Over the past decade, there has been a veritable explosion in the quality of kosher wine now available — a far cry from the heavy, sweet and vaguely medicinal wines that graced seder tables of yesteryear.

“These days there are so many different kosher wines out there, that even Trader Joe’s sells them, and you know what? They’re not bad,” says Arlene Mathes-Scharf. She told JNS.org that her email is humming, her phone is ringing off the hook and her website — kashrut.com — is getting countless hits from consumers who find themselves in Passover-related food and wine quandaries.

“Today’s Jewish consumer is more sophisticated and discerning, and not satisfied with sacramental wine,” says Jay Buchsbaum, a vice president at the New Jersey-based Royal Wine Corporation. “They have more disposable income and they’re willing to spend a little more for a good wine. They’re not willing to settle.”

In addition to kosher wine industry giants such as Carmel in Israel, Baron Herzog in California and Bartenura in Italy, many smaller European boutique wineries are securing kosher certification for a segment of their wines.

“They like that there’s a ready market for better kosher wine today,” Buchsbaum says. “They know that the moment the grapes are crushed, the wine has already been bought.”

Why is Passover high season for kosher wine?

The demand for kosher wine usually increases at Passover, the widely celebrated Jewish holiday that often attracts a mix of family members and friends with varying kashrut needs. In such scenarios, even those who don’t keep koshermight purchase kosher wines. “It’s safer that way,” says Buchsbaum.

It’s no wonder, then, that 40 percent of all kosher wine is sold in the months leading up to Passover.

“If you estimate that a seder has 18 adults who each drink four cups, that adds up. There’s a lot of wine coming in the door,” says Israeli wine blogger and columnist David Rhodes, who runs the “Drink Israel” Facebook page.

Since seder participants drink so much wine at the traditional gathering — much of it on a relatively empty stomach before the meal — it’s important to supply wine that won’t make them too drunk, warns California-based kosher wine critic and blogger David Raccah, who runs kosherwinemusings.com.

“That’s why it’s the worst time to try ‘bombastic,’ high-alcohol wines,” Raccah says. “You’ll want to stick to light wines like Via Sparkling, preferably under 10 percent alcohol, that won’t land you flat on your back by the time the food is served.”

Israeli wines: the ‘hottest trend’

Kosher wine consumers often select wines from Israel, which exports some 1.5 million bottles to the US each year.

“Not only is Israel the place that the story of Passover is about — wine is mentioned over 70 times in the Torah — but buying Israeli is a chance to support Israel and Israelis,” says Rhodes, who adds that vineyards are an efficient way to use the Jewish state’s land, because grapes are both a low-water and high-profit crop.

“You can get upscale French and Italian kosher wines along with California ones, but the hottest trend is the Israeli wines,” says Royal Wine’s Buchsbaum.

According to Rhodes, Israel’s expanding high-quality wine market took off in 1983, when Golan Heights Winery (under its Yarden label) opened its doors. These days, Israeli wines are bringing home prizes from international competitions; “2016 was a very good year for Israeli wine,” notes Rhodes. Eran Pick of Tzora Winery was recently named Israel’s first-ever accredited “Master of Wine,” and a story on Israeli wines was featured on the cover of the October 2016 issue of the popular Wine Spectator magazine. The same magazine’s 2016 list of the world’s Top 100 wines included two from Israel — selections from the Tzora and Galil Mountain wineries.

“We’re only the 36th wine producer in the world in terms of size. We produce 1/400th of the French output, a drop in the barrel. But our recognition is growing geometrically,” Rhodes says.

Raccah says that the Israeli market is still somewhat bifurcated between the religious Jews “who just want to make kiddush” and the more yuppified Tel Aviv market “that demands excellent boutique wines whether for home or to order in restaurants.”

But Rhodes says that he is optimistic that the two market sectors can coexist, “since Israel is increasingly able to produce kosher wines that are religiously proper while still pleasing a more refined palate.”

“You don’t have to compromise anymore,” Buchsbaum adds. “You can buy kosher, support Israel and still enjoy wonderful wines.”

Buchsbaum says that he has heard hundreds of consumers say, “I’m not really kosher, but I had to bring something nice to a seder once, and I’ve been drinking that wine ever since.”

“Look at it this way,” Buchsbaum adds. “The largest-selling Moscato (an Italian sparkling wine) in the world is a kosher wine by Bartenura that sells 5 million bottles annually. Most of those customers aren’t even Jewish. They just like the wine.”

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