Annabells Wine

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Archive for the tag “Wine”

WSTA urges greater consultation on minimum pricing

The Wine and Spirits Trade Association has called on MPs for greater consultation on minimum pricing plans as European opposition grows.

The European Commission has joined Bulgaria, Spain, Italy and Portugal in lodging complaints about the Scottish government’s proposals to introduce minimum unit pricing.

The UK government will now have to justify the proposals made by the Scottish Parliament to the Commission.

A consultation for minimum unit pricing in England and Wales, which is due to begin soon, was meant to be finished by Christmas but the WSTA is calling for a full 12 week consultation period instead.

Miles Beale, chief executive of the WSTA, reiterated the comments he made at the annual conference this week by saying: “It is now abundantly clear that plans for minimum unit pricing in Scotland have hit a wall of opposition in Europe. “While the legality of the Scottish Government’s proposals is in question any notion of a short consultation here is totally inappropriate.”

 

Bruce Jack launches £65 Pinotage

South African winemaker Bruce Jack of Flagstone in Somerset West has launched a £65 single vineyard Pinotage onto the market.

Called Time Manner Place, just 1,500 bottles of the inaugural 2010 vintage will go on sale.

“My aim is to make the best wine in the world from Pinotage” Jack told the drinks business at Cape Wine 2012 in Cape Town this week.

“This won’t be a wine we produce every year, only in years we deem good enough,” Jack added.

The Pinotage grapes that go into the wine are grown in a south east facing, high altitude single vineyard in the little-known Breedekloof region in Worcester, north of Paarl.

“I looked at a load of maps and drove around the best looking slopes in the region. Striking upon one I particularly liked, I drove up to the farmer’s gate and knocked on his door. Luckily, he let me in,” Jack recalled to db.

“The grape grower, Anton Roos, is six foot tall and six foot wide and hunts buffalo with a bow and arrow,” Jack added.

He describes the smell of the wine as “ethereal”, and the palate as being intense, concentrated and black fruited with notes of mulberry and a wild strawberry twist in the finish.

Jack is adamant to stress that he’s not making the wine in order to convince sceptics about the merits of the much-maligned Pinotage, but rather because of his pride for and belief in the gape.

“Lots of people blame bad Pinotage wines on the grape, which is ridiculous. You could quite easily taste ten Burgundies and only one would be decent but no one ever blames Pinot Noir.

“I’ve made a great Pinotage because I’ve chosen a good site and worked hard on it, giving it the care and attention it demands, just like its mother grape, Pinot Noir, which is equally demanding,” he said.

Jack works with low yields, discarding up to 50% of the crop if needed.

“I’m not trying to change consumer perceptions about Pinotage, neither am I trying to make a point. I simply believe that we can make the best wine in the world out of Pinotage,” he added.

Flagstone Time Manner Place Pinotage Reserve 2010 will go on sale in the UK next month through Direct Wines.

Oregon: Part 1 – 50 years in the making

Oregon wine country as we know it today really started to formulate in the 1960s.

In 1961, Richard Sommer, a U.C. Davis graduate, began making wine south of Portland in the Umpqua Valley under the Hillcrest Vineyard label. In 1964, David Lett, ignoring U.C. Davis professor, Maynard Amerine’s advice that Oregon was too cold and wet for grapes, went ahead and searched for an ideal vineyard site in the State. In went pinot noir vines in a temporary nursery in Corvalis before Lett found his preferred spot in the Willamette Valley’s Dundee Hills. It was here that Eyrie Vineyards was born.

Charles Coury may have followed next, although local debate continues today as to whether he preceded David Lett in planting the first pinot noir in the Willamette Valley. While the Lett family has sound documentation as proof, the Coury family has anecdotal evidence that says they planted a year prior to the Letts. In either event, the 1960s was a great time of exploration in the Willamette Valley.

It wouldn’t be long before Dick Erath, then David and Ginny Adelsheim, Ronald and Marjorie Vuylsteke, Dick and Nancy Ponzi, Joe and Pat Campbell, and Susan and Bill Sokol Blosser all planted vines, and themselves, in the Willamette Valley.

The 1976 Judgment of Paris did its part to propel Oregon wine country forward. Although it was California wines which were personally thrust into the limelight at this tasting event, other American wine regions felt the warm glow. If great wine could be made in California, well then, why not Oregon?

The early pioneers pinned their hopes on pinot noir. They likened the climate to Burgundy and noted both regions fell at the same latitude: 45 degrees north. Specific topographical differences were not a concern at the time, and so the general consensus went: Oregon could make wines like the great reds of Burgundy.

It appears they were on to something. Awards came early to Oregon. In a tasting pitting top French wines against their new world emulates, David Lett’s 1975 Eyrie South Block Reserve pinot noir won great acclaim in Paris in 1979 at the Gault-Millau Wine Olympiad, rating among the top ten along with grand Burgundies.

These awards stirred a new wave of plantings and devotees to Oregon wine country. This only picked up pace when Robert Parker proclaimed that the best Oregon pinot noirs have an amazing similarity to good red Burgundies in 1987.

The 1980s saw an incredible boom, along with new investment in the region. The Burgundy negociant, Joseph Drouhin, turned his intrigue with Oregon’s awards into opportunity, and opened Domaine Drouhin in Willamette Valley. Ed King III brought in loads of cash and established King Estate.

Much of the money was infiltrating into Willamette Valley. This was one of the State’s first AVAs, established in 1984, and home today to two-thirds of Oregon’s wineries and vineyards.

There are numerous factors making Willamette Valley good land for grape growing. Several of these factors began to form twelve to fifteen million years ago when Willamette Valley, along with the rest of western Oregon, literally swam with the fishes.  Western Oregon was part of the Pacific Ocean floor.

The collision of the Pacific and North American plates pushed what is now Willamette Valley out of the ocean, and gave the region its Dundee and Eola Hills along with other aspects of Willamette Valley’s terrain. Happy vines, it seems, follow calamity.

The marine sediment of the region now forms the bedrock of the oldest soils in the region and has been layered with volcanic basalt and sedimentary sandstone, wind-blown silt (loess), and deposits from glacier dam floods.

The Pacific Ocean continues its influence on the region today, especially by mitigating the general climate and providing for milder winters. While the region is wet, the rain comes mainly outside the heart of growing season– from October to April.  That is not to say there is not rain at harvest or heat stress in the summer; difficult vintages there are.  And in general, producers in the region have stopped trying to make wines that emulate the great red Burgundies. They now embrace the regions’ differences and strive to make the very best Oregon wines.

Today, Oregon wine is serious business.  As of 2011, the State has 450 wineries and 849 vineyards. Approximately 1.9 million cases of Oregon wine was sold in 2010, and wine tourism has provided $158 million to the State’s economy in 2010. The industry itself brings 2.76 million to Oregon’s economy.

This may not be huge comparatively; economies of scale don’t work here. This is a region of quality and not quantity. But it has just been some 50 odd years since Oregon first strived for quality wine, and the world already knows about Oregon’s wines. That is quite a feat.

Debra Meiburg rounds off Brazilian wine’s China tour

Hong Kong’s wine enthusiasts and buyers were treated to a brief introduction to Brazilian wine by Debra Meiburg MW.

The Californian, one of only 273 people to hold the title Master of Wine, and the only woman in Asia to have been afforded the title, gave a small audience a brief introduction to Brazil’s five main winemaking regions, their terrain, climate and typical grape varieties.

Her introduction complemented a tasting on 14 September, which featured five Brazilian wineries. The invitation-only event, designed to introduce Chinese consumers to the little-known world of Brazilian wine. Organized by Ibravin, the Brazilian Wine Institute, ApexBrazil, a trade promotion agency and the Department of Development and Investment Promotion.

The four-city tour, which took in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou before arriving in Hong Kong, featured wineries from a variety of regions, from Vinícola Aurora in Serra Gaúcha, one of the oldest wine-producing regions in the country, to Casa Valduga, also in the south of the country, the boutique winery Lidio Carraro, Miolo, whose wineries span four of the country’s wine-producing regions, and Vinícola Salton, the first winery to be established in Brazil, in 1910.

New owner outlines plan for Stratford’s

FE Barber has revealed further detail about its acquisition of Stratford’s Wine Agencies, which went into administration yesterday.

Andy Sagar, managing director of FE Barber

Emphasising the message of “business as usual”, the company confirmed that Stratford’s would continue to trade as a separate entity from its Berkshire offices.

Commenting on the acquisition, Andy Sagar, managing director of FE Barber, said: “The deal will benefit both parties and provide essential synergies in sales and marketing, buying and the supply chain to grow the business.

“Stratford’s is a well-established agency in the trade, and their experience will be invaluable in our continued effort to provide a total wine solution for all our customers”.

Highlighting Stratford’s “excellent agencies” and “great reputation”, FE Barber’s sales & marketing director Rob Page outlined the short-term plan for the business, saying: “Internally our strategy will develop over the next few months to ensure a smooth integration and to drive the business forward.”

The addition of Stratford’s to its two existing businesses, Kingsland Wines & Spirits and Legacy Wines, marks a move by FE Barber to strengthen its position “as a major European wine company capable of a complete solution for a wider market.”

 

Wrapped wine goes nuts in USA

Wines wrapped in paper have proved an overnight success in the US off-trade, following a launch earlier this month.

The “Evocative Wrapped Bottles” by Stranger & Stranger

Conceived by Kevin Shaw from design agency Stranger & Stranger, wines from Sonoma-based producer Truett-Hurst have been wrapped in a resilient and recyclable paper with a range of messages from food pairings to recipes.

The packaging was inspired by the need to display information that couldn’t easily fit on a standard label, and hit the shelves of US supermarket chain Safeway in early September.

Sales of the wine range went “nuts overnight” according to Helen McGinn from the design agency.

The wines, called Fuchsia, Curious Beasts, Candells, Schucks and Bewitched, come wrapped in sheaths that tell a story, give a recipe, or celebrate a special occasion.

Dubbed Evocative Wrapped Bottles, the packaging is designed to suit the needs of shoppers in a way that standard labels fail to achieve, according to the creator.

“I’ve thought for a long time that there’s a real opportunity to engage wine consumers on their own terms – we offer them products based on provenance and variety, yet they are buying wine for occasions,” said Kevin Shaw, owner of Stranger & Stranger, and designer of the packaging.

“Consumers want a wine for fish, a wine for a barbecue, and a wine that makes a hit at a dinner party; instead, they’re offered 6,000 indistinguishable and unmemorable Pinot Noir brands from various parts of California,” he added.

As previously reported by the drinks business, Shaw moved to the US because slim margins and play-safe commissions are forcing the creativity out of his home nation, the UK.

Safeway’s are carrying a range of skus, which can be viewed over the following pages.

Oxford and London wine cafés to close

The Summertown Wine Café and Finborough Wine Café will both cease trading this Friday after the leases on both buildings were put up for sale.

Company director and investor Valere de Weck is understood to have taken the sudden decision earlier this month, with no indication that efforts will be made to sell either business as a going concern.

While the Finborough Wine Café in Earls Court, west London, is understood to have struggled since it opened two years ago, the original Summertown Wine Café, which opened in 2006 in this upmarket corner of north Oxford, was thought to be in a far healthier trading position.

A popular destination for wine lovers thanks to their regularly changing range of wines available to taste, the venues invited their “members” to take part in monthly panels to vote for the new selection.

As recently as this summer, the Summertown branch had been attracting enthusiastic comments from independent review sites such as Trip Advisor.

Users’ comments included: “If you live in/around Oxford, this is the best place to buy your vino”, “fantastic selection of wines – a must in Summertown!” and “My favourite place in Oxford.”

At the time of writing, the drinks business had received no reply from de Weck in response to a request for further details about the decision and creditor payment.

Top 10 wines in the US press

We round up the top 10 wines featured in the US press in the past week.

Eric Pfanner in the International Herald Tribune looks at the French supermarkets’ Annual Wine Fairs which are starting now across the country. What to buy? “Basically, Bordeaux”, says Pfanner. Unlike Burgundy, he says, “it makes huge amounts of wine, even at the high end. The wine fairs are a good way to unload some of it in a way that doesn’t undermine higher prices in export markets.”

Eric Asimov in the New York Times says that “California winemakers share a calling with the Cistercian monks of the Middle Ages: a relentless quest to find the best places to grow pinot noir. Over centuries, the monks settled on the heart of Burgundy, now famous as the Côte d’Or, along with a few scattered sites in Germany that may only now be coming to fruition. In California, the search goes on.” He looks to Alexander Valley, as does Jon Bonné in the San Francisco Chronicle.

Lettie Teague in the Wall Street Journal tries to counter the view that “to many wine drinkers, a light red is anathema, a wine defined by an absence of structure, tannins and wood.”

Week in pictures

db‘s deputy editor is in Portugal visiting the revamped Cockburn’s lodge this week. Among the treasure trove of historical records and books were these zinc-clad cupboards, where The Factory House stores copies of The Times dating right back to the paper’s first edition.

Bordeaux grape quality better than 2011

Head of the newly-expanded wine division of French bank Credit Agricole is forecasting a better vintage this year than 2011 as it gears up for the harvest in Bordeaux.

Despite a very wet June and July in the famous wine region, the grapes are in better condition than last year according to Thierry Budin, managing director of the bank’s châteaux collection called CA Grands Crus.

“We are looking at harvesting a good vintage,” he said when speaking to the drinks business earlier this week, before admitting that the company also had a right bank property to manage for the first time this year.

While he commented that he was concerned about the potential quality of the berries at the end of July after an extremely wet early summer period, he also said, “It seems the condition of grapes may be better than 2011.”

Although he warned, “We can lose everything in a week,” he added, “We expect to have a good harvest and we are surprised at the quality of the whites.”

Achieving healthy grapes this year so far has required attentive care in the vineyard, with Budin recording the need for daily treatments against botrytis due to the damp conditions.

MD Thierry Budin

In Sauternes specifically, where CA Grands Crus manage Château Rayne Vigneau, he forecast a relatively simple harvest with just two passes through the vineyard to select the shrivelled berries.

“This year could be just two tries because we know the botrytis is there.”

In terms of timings, he said the red grape harvest would start at the company’s Medoc properties – Châteaux Grand-Puy Ducasse, Meyney and Blaignan ­– on 25 September for its young vines of Merlot, and the beginning of October for the rest of its grapes.

Meanwhile, Budin said that the harvest at Credit Agricole’s Burgundy estate, Château Philippe-le-Hardi, would be beginning on Monday with white grapes from Mercury and Côte de Beaune.

He added that the Mercury whites would be better than last year following a conversation with his viticulturist in the region.

As previously reported by the drinks business, vineyards in Meursault, Pommard and Volnay suffered from hail damage in late July and early August.

Speaking more generally about the business, Budin told db that Credit Agricole has bought its first right bank Bordeaux estate having purchased Clos Saint Vincent.

Situated near the village of St Émilion, the estate abuts Monbousquet, Plaisance and Valandraud, and Budin described its as “a small estate with good potential”.

Elsewhere, Budin said that he had just taken delivery of a concrete egg-shaped fermenter for CA Grands Crus’ flagship property Grand-Puy Ducasse, having also invested €150,000 in an optical grape sorter in time for this year’s harvest, following trials with the equipment last year.

Finally, according to Bordeaux Undiscovered, in March this year CA Grands Crus bought an 18% stake in Vignobles André Lurton – one of Bordeaux’s biggest wine companies.

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