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Quebec vintner turns tomatoes into wine

Pascal Miche, breeder of the first wine made of tomato, smells the ‘Omerto’ wine at a stage of the soaking in his laboratory on July 23 in Bras in Baie-Saint-Paul, Quebec. Photo: AFP

Pascal Miche, breeder of the first wine made of tomato, smells the ‘Omerto’ wine at a stage of the soaking in his laboratory on July 23 in Bras in Baie-Saint-Paul, Quebec. Photo: AFP

Canadian wine lovers have been raising a glass to an increasingly popular but unusual vintage crafted from a secret Belgian family recipe four generations old using... tomatoes.

Pascal Miche, a former pork butcher in his 40s, says his is the first tomato wine to be successfully commercialised – with sales at 34,000 bottles annually only three years since he launched the project.

“I wanted to finish what my great-grandfather had started” in the 1930s, he told AFP as he inspected his crop of 6,200 heirloom tomato plants on his “vineyard” in Charlevoix, about 400 kilometres northeast of Montreal in the picturesque north shore region of the Saint Lawrence river.

Miche immigrated to Quebec province from Belgium seven years ago. He said he always had plans in the back of his mind to commercialise his great grandfather’s recipe for what his website calls an aperitif wine “from a family recipe that was kept secret for four generations”.

He took the plunge in 2009 and the tomatoes getting ready to ripen by mid-August will be his third harvest of the golden elixir – which is more often a home brew limited to a few bottles made by winemaking enthusiasts.

In North America, Miche can legally call his product ‘wine’ but he will have to rename it if he follows through with plans to export notably to France, where only alcoholic beverages made from fermented grape juice may use the appellation.

Passionate about his subject, Miche says he chooses his tomatoes with the same care that vintners select their grapes, and puts them through the same paces: crushing, soaking, fermenting and pressing.

He produces two varieties: a dry wine and a mellow wine that has been compared to a sweet Pineau des Charentes.

In order to call his product a wine, Miche first had to convince authorities that the tomato is indeed a fruit.

“I went all the way back to the 15th century to retrace the different varieties of tomatoes,” he explained.

Science supports his view. Botanically speaking, the tomato is a fruit, largely because it contains seeds of the plant. But its culinary usage in mostly savory dishes has led many to believe it is a vegetable.

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