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FOOD AND DRINK

Vegan Nutella to hit supermarket shelves in Italy and France this week

Italian food giant Ferrero on Tuesday announced the imminent launch of a vegan version of its popular hazelnut spread Nutella in Italy, France and Belgium, saying the move was in response to changing consumer tastes.

Nutella Jar
File photo of a Nutella jar sold in the US. Photo by JUSTIN SULLIVAN / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP

Vegan Nutella will no longer contain any dairy ingredients, which are to be replaced with chickpeas and rice syrup, Ferrero said in a statement.

“No compromises” were made concerning the taste of Nutella, launched 60 years ago and marketed in around 170 countries, the Italian company said.

The new product is to become available from Wednesday, it said.

“More and more consumers are opting to reduce, or cut out, animal products,” it said.

Lactose-intolerant people should, however, be careful about eating plant-based Nutella as it was being made in factories where dairy ingredients were used for other products, said Ferrero, which also owns the Kinder, Tic Tac and Ferrero Rocher brands.

Along with other food companies, Ferrero has come under criticism for using palm oil to make Nutella, thus encouraging the clearing of tropical forests to establish palm oil monocultures.

READ ALSO: Italy’s Nutella spread turns 60: from a factory in Piedmont to global success story

The company has since created a “segregated” chain for palm oil, which it says allows the tracing of its palm oil to the mills, “guaranteeing that it does not come from plantations subject to deforestation”.

Traditional Nutella contains sugar, palm oil, hazelnuts, milk, cocoa, lecithin and vanillin, according to Ferrero.

The spread has a cult-like following across the world, with American blogger Sara Rosso launching World Nutella Day in 2007. This is celebrated on February 5th every year, with fans sharing pictures and recipe ideas.

Among Nutella-inspired initiatives was a challenge to make a record-length Nutella pizza in Sydney earlier this year, stretching for a continuous 100 metres.

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FOOD AND DRINK

Bad weather slashes wine harvest in France’s Jura region

Heavy rainfall, hail and mildew have ravaged most of the wine harvest in eastern France’s Jura region for this year, leaving winegrowers struggling.

Bad weather slashes wine harvest in France’s Jura region

The Jura, nestled between the Burgundy wine region and Switzerland, is one of France’s oldest wine-growing areas, featuring some 200 vineyards spread over 2,000 hectares.

Their unusual elevation and the region’s cool climate give a distinctive flavour to its wines – some of which are famous, notably the white wine known as Vin Jaune (yellow wine).

But this year is delivering a bitter taste for winegrowers as the Jura – the smallest of France’s 17 major wine-growing regions – is headed for a drop of 71 percent in this year’s wine production volume, according to a government estimate.

The main culprit is a period of frost in April that destroyed many of the budding vines.

“The vines had already grown shoots of three or four centimetres,” said Benoit Sermier, 33, a winegrower in the Jura. “Those leaves were very thin and fragile, and sub-zero temperatures destroyed them, costing us 60 percent of the harvest.”

Although this year’s harvest is expected to be of high quality, the lack of quantity has put winegrowers in a precarious position, as frost in previous years has not allowed them to build up enough wine stock for lean times, said Sermier, who heads a local wine cooperative.

Winegrowers were also hit hard by incessant rain in July, which forced them to reapply protective vine treatments ‘every three or four days’, said Patrick Rolet, who grows organic wine and owns cattle. “I don’t think any winegrower remembers having ever seen this much rainfall,” he said.

The persistent humidity also facilitated the spread of mildew, a fungus that can devastate entire vineyards.

“Compared with the past 25 years, our losses are historic,” Olivier Badoureaux, director of the Jura winegrowers committee, said.

France’s overall wine volumes are headed for a fall of almost a fifth this year because of the unfavourable weather, the agriculture ministry said last week.

Overall wine production is now estimated to drop by 18 percent to 39.3 million hectolitres.

A little over a month ago before wine harvesting began, the ministry had still targeted up to 43 million hectolitres.

But ‘particularly unfavourable’ weather forced the revision, as the extent of damage done by frost, hail and also mildew became clearer.

The Charente region, in the southwest of France, is looking at a 35 percent drop in wine production this year, the biggest fall in terms of volume of any French region.

This, said the agriculture ministry, was due to ‘a smaller number of grape bunches’ and ‘insufficient flowering because of humid conditions’.

Losses in the Val de Loire and Burgundy-Beaujolais regions are also expected to come in above average.

Champagne production, meanwhile, is likely to drop by 16 percent, but will remain some eight percent above its average over the past five years.

The impact of bad weather is being compounded by winegrowers’ decision over recent years to reduce the size of vineyards in response to falling wine consumption in France, especially of red wine.

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