Bill, I take your point. But I also have sat myself down, looked at the problem as best I could, and come to the conclusion that a second-season aged grape cutting from my own vineyard is as safe as anything else I could use in my grill/bbq/smoker.
I don't want to get tedious in my analysis here in public, since it would most likely be boring beyond yawns for most folks. But I'd certainly be willing to discuss it with you off-list.
Grapes and I have been involved together since 1971, when I bought my first grape vine, which promptly died. Growing grapes, really good grapes, and making wine, really good wine, can be done in the heart of the heart of the country. But it took a lot of study and learning on my part, and a whole bunch of failures before it started to work. One of the elements is learning the nature, interactions, and fate of the pesticides I must (and I mean "must") use to correctly achieve my goals. I'm most certainly not going to resort to the ad hominem "hey, look how healthy *I* am!". Yet, on the other hand, I think that in the case of many of the chemical products that we use in the industry, two years gives dangers below the noise level of any data we might ever hope to take. If you want certainty, well, sorry, there ain't any. If you want responsible risk, below the noise level of the data, well then, that's where I stand.
Geo
PS. on another topic entirely, my grape-growing partner up here in Montréal has collected his blue clay, and weathered it through this last AWful Winter, and is ready to start construction his Quebecois oven. I'll keep you posted.
Sooo, you like wine and are looking for something good to read? Maybe
*this* will do the trick!
