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What's American-blood wine, and why was it banned by the French government?

Meet the man who's spent 30 years fighting to change this.
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Published Dec. 10, 2020.

What's American-blood wine, and why was it banned by the French government?

Hervé Garnier is in his late 60s. He’s got a round face with short cropped gray hair and a pointed nose. He’s a free spirit with a wry grin and a quiet confidence. And he’s been in a fight with the French government for almost 30 years.

In 1971, after getting lost hitchhiking from his hometown in eastern France, then 18-year-old Garnier landed in the tiny village of Beaumont, in the Ardeche region of Southeast France. He never left. Surrounded by the village’s live-and-let-live nonconformists, he fit right in.

He made a name for himself as a capable handyman and befriended his neighbors, a pair of brothers named Jules and Paul. Jules and Paul had a small vineyard in front of their house where they grew their own grapes and turned them into a fruity, sweet wine that they referred to as American-blood wine.

At that point the brothers were old men, so they asked Garnier to help them harvest the grapes. When the brothers died, Garnier started the process of buying the vineyard.

But he didn’t get very far. He soon discovered that the type of wine Jules and Paul had been making for decades was illegal, and had been since the 1930s, when the French government and European Union outlawed the use of hybrid grapes, like the Franco-American ones grown on the brothers’ vineyard.

But why? And how could Garnier get the law changed?

To answer that, he had to learn the history of these hybrid grapes—how they originated, how they got to France, and how they fell out of favor after once being deemed the “savior” of the French wine industry. (That history involves a murderous louse, claims of madness, and the subjectivity of “good-tasting” wine.)

Check out this episode of Proof, in which Paris-based reporter Rebecca Rosman talks to Garnier about his decades-long, David-and-Goliath fight to get the law reversed.

Proof Podcast

France's Forbidden Wine

A French winemaker using hybrid American grapes battles the government to legalize production.
Listen to Episode

More From This Episode

Winemaker Herve Garnier
Winemaker Hervé Garnier standing in the vineyard in the Cevennes Mountains, where he grows hybrid Franco-American grapes to make "illegal" wine.
Volunteers picking grapes
Volunteers pick grapes in Beaumont, France.
Herve Garnier picking grapes
Winemaker Hervé Garnier picking grapes for his clandestine American-blood wine.
A basket of Jacquez grapes
A basket of Jacquez grapes, a hybrid crossbreed of American and French varieties.

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