Thursday, March 26, 2009

Rosé wine hits retail price index, EU upsets producers

For some reason the newspapers took great delight in the ascendancy of rosé wine to the "nation's shopping basket" - "people are turning to pink wine, hot cooked chicken and parmesan as boxes of wine and tinned cat food fall out of favour", reported the Times in fairly typical fashion. I guess its just easier for journalists to write about the shopping habits of those with 2.4 children than address what's actually happening to the retail price index and the implications for our economy. We're not even going to pretend we understand, content to simply jump on the bandwagon with this genuinely fantastic rosé offer - £3 off the stunning Arbaude of Provence.


Those with a taste for the pink stuff may also be interested in EU proposals that would allow wine producers to mix red with a splash of white, and bottle the result as rosé - heresy as far as France is concerned (particularly in Provence, the spiritual home of rosé itself), and more fun for newspaper headline writers (e.g. "French rose producers pink-faced over EU wine plans").
To placate the French, the European Commission is proposing that its rosé wine would be specially designated and labelled as "traditional rosé", with "rosé" itself up for grabs by anyone who wants to make a pink wine drink. Given the questionable heritage of much of the rosé in the UK, it probably won't make much difference to the "average consumer", but then nor apparently does the taste. Learn more about traditional Provence rosé here.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

93 Wine Enthusiast points for Romitorio's Brunello

A big well done to our friends over at Castello Romitorio, whose 2004 Brunello di Montalcino has been awarded a very impressive 93 points.

Castello Romitorio delivers one of our favorite 2004 Brunellos. Managed by an artist-winemaker father and son team, the estate brings us a beautifully compact and elegant wine that is brimming with fresh fruit tones of cherry and blackberry. The mouthfeel is generous and soft with a luscious fruit-filled finish.
Quite so, but not yet released over here. In the meantime you can avail yourself of the 2003 vintage, exclusively at Wineaux. 

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An adventure in Burgundy

The deal...
Four wine professionals from London are off to Burgundy for 3 days of tasting (drinking?). Four winery visits leading up to the annual tasting of Burgundy wines at the Abbey in Tournus.
Burgundy has always been a but of a tricky deal in wine buying terms. Though the region is legendary in wine circles and features two of my favourite grapes - Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, I have far to often had to drink my way through gallons of mediocracy to find something that makes sense in terms of price/value. The really good stuff is impossible to get and expensive whilst anything near entry level always seems to disappoint. 
Well, the aim for the next few days is to find that gem, that little winner that you would proudly take to any dinner party and secretly drink way to much of at home. That special wine that isn't the most expensive, the most concentrated or even the best. I'm looking for a wine that is perfect everytime, a wine that hits never ceases to amaze when you drink it and never leaves you thinking about what you paid for it.
How it went...
The first winery - Meix-Foulot, in Mercurey was where we stopped that night - the wines were well made but were Pinots I can take or leave. To my taste they felt watery and light and though they were representative of wines from this southern part of Bourgogne, I was unimpressed. Nevertheless, the proprietor of the estate was lovely and after a long trip spent talking, dreaming and gagging about wine - they did the job they needed to.
The next day started with much coffee and a heavy head - the evening before spent eating the best steak tartar I've ever had and an amazing snail ravioli - check out Port des Anges in Beaune. Its a little expensive but decent with a good, smallish wine list.
The next 10 hours were a blur of vineyard walks, winery visits and tastings from Domaine Edmund Cornu in Ladoix to Jean Chauvenet in Nuits St Georges and onto Jean-Claude Belland in the Cote de Beaune. Many of the wines were truly excellent and 2007 will be a fine vintage for Burgundy with the wines well worth buying.
Bugundy is a complex region - with huge variation from vineyard to vineyard and quality difficult to pin point. As a general rule to regularly get good Burgundy you need to choose your producer first, the vintage next and finally the village where the wine was made. So, a good producer may produce a good wine in a bad year but a wine from a well known village could be quite average. You need to know your producers - this is true anywhere in the wine world but especially so in Burgundy.
Best producers (and their style):
Domaine Jean-Claude Belland - his wines are soft, fruity and very approachable. From the modest village of Ladoix the soft red fruits in his reds are truly gourgeous (his Maranges, Bourgogne rouge were easily the best sub £15 wines on show). Good Aloxe-Cortons, lovely Grand Cru Corton Cloas de la Vigne au Saint and the Chambertin Grand Cru a strong 8/10 among all the Chambertin's tasted. The Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru stole the show, it is full of de-comissioned Chambertin fruit and a top buy.
Domaine Bitouzet-Prieur - simmply some of the best Meursaults I have ever tasted - not so much the entry level village Meursault but rather the sublime 1er Cru Santenots and Perrieres. We had an '02 Santenots for the Gala dinner after the tasting and it was balanced, complex and truly world class.
Domaine Lignier - Top Chambolle-Musigny, soft, wild strawberry character and great value. The best wines were the Grand Cru Bonne Mares and Clos de la Roche - both 9-9.5/10 wines and drinking so nicely now.
Domaine Sordet - really lovely Pommard especially the 1 er Cru Clos de la Boucherottes - magnificent!
Did I find any gems? The truth is I found a few and reignited my love with Burgundy that had run a little dry recently. Cornu's Maranges would be the winner, a gem from this trip - unfussy, high quality, effortlessly drinkable, affordable (c. £15) and giving a real taste and insight into what is possible from this region. At the higher end it was a revelation - stunning wines of such variety and poise and passion. If you can get the good stuff, few things compare.

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A tale of two tastings - Italian style

Gambero Rosso 2009 ... more like 'gamble on a rosso'!
On 16 February 2009 a number of us attended the Gambero Rosso tasting of Italian wines at the Landmark Hotel in London. 57 top wineries, over 200 wines, it promised to be good overview of Italian wines and after last years decent effort I was looking forward to it immensely.
My aim was to taste widely and benchmark the Tuscan wines in particular to the Chianti and Brunello wines my company imports. First we attended the seminar taking a look at a wide range of wines from Italy's top regions - it was a 6 out of 10 at most. Though the wines were generally well made, too many didn't quite hit the spot on the palate or in your heart. Also, I was confounded that Steven Spurrier presented, no disrespect to him but his knowledge of Italian wines seemed limited and I couldn't help feeling that an Italian wine tasting expert would have been better.
So it wasn't a great start, onto the main tasting room. The first thing I noticed was that the tasting included a lot of the big boys of Italian wine and their respective importers - for my liking there were too many large commercial producers here and some of the wines reflected that. I liked the wines from Donnafugata, Masi and in particular Mastroberardino (the last two being imported by Berkmann - well done!) Mastroberardino's whites were lovely with the Greco di Tufo (a fantastic white grape) 2007 showing a pronounced floral nose, stoney minerality and drinking perfectly - this is a wine you could fall in love with immediately. Their Sannio Falanghina 2007 was diferent, more fruity but equally mineral and slightly heavier. The red Taurasi was superb.
Illuminati and Sella & Mosca also tasted well, as did Tenuta San Guido whose 3 reds showed great character, depth and power. I must say I was baffled by some of the so called superstars. Biondi-Santi's '04 Brunello was limpid and acidic and showed close to nothing (2004 was an excellent vintage as well!), I poured it out. Il Molina di Grace from Chianti was average as was Ruffino and Fontanafredda in Piedmont didn't work for me at all. Now these are some big names, and names that regularly get good ratings. Overall my experience of the tasting was quite hit and miss - too many wines were acidic and unapproachable and many had little character. Overall, I preferred the whites over the reds (wierd for Italy). I would also warn anyone who buys Italian wine based on ratings to be ready for disappointment. Far better to taste widely, put your trust in a good quality merchant or two and make your own mind up. Italy hides real treasures in the wine world and overall is my favourite country to buy wine from at the moment. Unfortunately for them I'm don't think this tasting did them too much justice.
As an aside - this was the second UK based tasting this year that seemed to heavily feature large commercial wineries. Is this a credit crunch thing - only the big boys can afford to exhibit in London? I hope not - I'd hate to see the disappearance of small boutique producers at these tastings. Maybe it's just the direction of Gambero Rosso? Who knows?
Faith restored in Italian vino
Thank god! Last week's taste of Tuscany tasting restored everything that Gambero Rosso succceeded so well in destroying. Hosted in the Dorchester's Crystal room the tasting featured small independent producers, interesting native grape varietals, styles ranging from the steadfastly traditional to modern and avant garde and even wine made from a new and unknown grape variety (it tasted like something between a cabernet and a merlot - the perfect Bordeaux singel varietal?)
Stars of the show:
- Petra - superb range and brand proposition, all the wines were superb (classic french and italian grapes and lots of blending) and had impressive levels of balance, supreme drinkability and stunning low-yield fruit. Damn Alivini for already representing these guys! Really switched on wineries with such a comprehensive package and such a good product are few and far between in the wine world. I would recommend these wines to anyone.
- Fattoria di Gratena - great range featuring 'Siro' that wine made from an unknown (and unamed) grape varietal, interesting and very different. Lousy packaging though - shame.
I also tasted some very intersting Brunello and Chianti though luckily nothing better than our own Tenuta di Riseccoli and Castello di Romitorio.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Women's Commonwealth Expedition fuelled by Wineaux

The wine business takes you to some unusual places. And it so was that we found ourselves in the presence of royalty down at the Commonwealth Club last week for the launch of the Commonwealth Women’s Antarctic Expedition. We're sponsoring their fund-raisers and saw them off nicely with with a Penet Chardonnet Champagne. 

The CWAE will see women from the Commonwealth countries of Cyprus, Ghana, India, Singapore, Brunei, New Zealand, Jamaica and the United Kingdom brave blizzards, crevasses and temperatures below -30C as they ski over 800 kilometres across Antarctica to the Geographic South Pole. Marking the 60th aniversary of the Commonwealth, the expedition aims to demonstrate the potential of greater intercultural understanding and exchange, while at the same time highlighting the achievements of women across the world. The expedition team of 8 women from the Commonwealth countries of Brunei, Cyprus, Ghana, India, Jamaica, Singapore, New Zealand and the United Kingdom were selected from over 800 applicants. The women from Brunei, Cyprus, Ghana and Jamaica will be the first person from their nation to ski to the South Pole. Those from India, Singapore and New Zealand will be the first women from their country to do so. 

We salute their efforts and wish them every success (donate here).

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Friday, March 6, 2009

Wine is bad for you, but not as bad as Facebook

In a week when the Daily Mail carried the story that “Facebook causes cancer”, we should probably take claims that "a glass of wine each evening is enough to increase your risk of developing cancer" with a pinch of salt. Especially as you might also have read this week that a "glass of wine 'could prevent gullet cancer'", "a couple of glasses of beer or wine every day is good for your bones" and that "white wines improve the digestion of low fat food and help prevent cardiovascular diseases".

Mixed messages indeed. I'm not a real doctor but i recommend giving up the newspapers. That, or taking one cancer-beating glass of wine with every cancer-causing one. Sadly the contagion's even spread to France, where the current official "drink with moderation" is to be replaced with cigarette style warnings that "the consumption of alcohol is detrimental to your health". In case you're wondering, the idea has been around in the UK since at least 2006. Perhaps we should start preparing for pictures of pickled livers on our pinot?

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Thursday, March 5, 2009

Wineaux Jockeys' Handicap Chase

Check us out at Chepstow Racecourse. Not only are we supplying the wine for the bars and restaurants around the course, we're also sponsoring races throughout the year, the first of which is this weekend. Watch this space for Chepstow race day ticket giveaways, events and reports.














Its a fine looking horse, but my money's on the dog.

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Minimum price per unit for alcohol to stop alcoholism

As the war on drinking looks to upstage even the failures of the wars on drugs and terrorism, the Scottish government has has proposed a range of measures including the "radical" step of a minimum price per unit. It would be the first country in Europe to take the step. Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon said: "Plummeting prices and aggressive promotion have led to a surge in consumption, causing and adding to health problems ranging from liver and heart diseases to diabetes, obesity, dementia and cancers". It's not at all clear whether she's talking about the government or the alcohol. Let's just make everyone pay more for everything, and then everything will be better.

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