Obligatory Royal Wedding Post

Seeing as everyone’s in the mood at the moment, it seems only right to tip the hat to the Royal wedding which takes place tomorrow in the UK. I’ll skip the preamble as I’m certain you know the score! As a fellow St Andrews graduate I should probably show some solidarity.

Well, apparently the Royal Wedding Champagne will be Pol Roger. William clearly takes after his father, who also chose Pol Roger for his wedding to Princess Diana. This is a famous wine for its association with the elites, especially in Britain. Don’t forget that it was Pol Roger who released a special vintage in honour of Winston Churchill, a devoted fan of the Epernay sparkler. Royal wedding celebrants can happily drink along as well, the happy couple have apparently requested a non-vintage which shouldn’t break the bank!

Rumours are rife about what will constitute the English presence, with the Daily Mail seemingly hinting that Chapel Down will provide their own English sparkling wine to complement the event. Chapel Down have garnered an impressive reputation in recent years, with multiple awards and numerous rave reviews. It’s definitely one worth looking out for if you can get a hold of it. Chapel Down is the largest English producer and perhaps the most famous at the moment. Contrasting rumours, however, are hinting at the wines coming from Camel Valley, with journalists spotting a curious ordering pattern which has gone through Waitrose. As might be expected, all the producers are tight-lipped, though I’m sure we’ll all hear in time! Expect similar prices to Champagne for English sparklers, they’re usually low-yield with high production costs. Nonetheless, they are more than worth sampling and represent a relatively unexplored area for most oenophiles.

Whatever you’re drinking, I certainly hope you’ll raise a toast to the happy couple!

Keeping the home fires burning

The most recent Decanter World Wine Awards have recently been presented. The prestigious competition turned up a fair few surprises, however, amongst its nearly 11,000 entries from 41 countries. With so many countries represented, a few awards were always likely to find their way outside of France, California, Italy and all the usual suspects. In recent years New Zealand has been somewhat of a darling of the award scene, with fresh interesting produce attracting praise and recognition from many sources. Yet this year, the biggest winners were a little closer to home.

Welsh wine may not be the most internationally renowned, yet it certainly has a base to build on after its performance this year. Ancre Hill Estates in Monmouth picked up an award for the first ever wine it has produced. The tiny grower has picked up a regional award for its White blend, much to the surprise of onlookers. The Decanter site was proud to broadcast the views of its winners, especially in such an unusual case. They quoted Richard Morris of Ancre Hill Estates as saying ” The wine has been very well received in Wales but we were surprised it was so successful in the competition… We are incredibly proud to be flying the flag as the only Welsh winners and we look forward to entering our 2009 bottles again next year.”

Wales was not the only surprising winner, however. The exclusive and prestigious title of best sparkling wine is generally the preserve of the top Champagne houses and the occasional Champagne producer trying their hand with overseas production. Yet, despite strong entries from Taittinger, Heidseick and Thienot it was an English wine that triumphed. Ridgeview winery, with 5.8ha located in East Sussex, surprised both the audience and themselves with a historic win which saw English wine upstage the giants of Champagne. The popular winner was founded in 1995 and is a family run affair, drawing in husband, wife, son and daughter to the operation. The founder, Mike Roberts, expressed complete surprise at the victory, verging on disbelief.

The Decanter site again quoted the congratulations of judges. Their Tastings Director, Christelle Guibert, was quoted as saying that the superb performance “unequivocally rubberstamps England’s membership to that exclusive club of truly world class, sparkling wine producers. Up against a clutch of Champagne’s finest, Ridgeview has produced a stupendous wine that defeated them all. It’s a truly remarkable win.”

A surprising and successful night then for the underdogs! If there is a lesson for the consumer, outside of the obvious and inspiring success of hard-working individuals, it is to be adventurous in your choices. With Welsh and English wine winning awards, perhaps it may be time to try a tipple from close to home alongside your clutch of old favourites. Well done to the winners, a full list of which can be found on the Decanter website.

A trick!

I thought I’d post up this short article as a way of sharing something I recently spotted in a local restaurant whilst out for dinner. The table was annoyingly wobbly and the waiter noticed this when he put down some wine glasses. Being a decent sort of guy, he offered to fix this and we duly accepted. Moments later he returned with a cork cut in to a wedge. He put it under the table base like a door stop and the problem was solved! This seemed like an ingenious solution to a common problem with something which is widely available in almost any restaurant. Below I’ve put a brief description of how to make your own table steadying cork wedge so that you can slip one into a bag or pocket when you next visit a restaurant. The wedge is soft, light and unlikely to damage furniture. It’s the perfect solution and it’s both free and easy!

Step 1:

Take one ordinarily sized cork from a winebottle. Place it on a flat surface and find an appropriate knife to cut it.

Step 2:

Cut it from top left to bottom right, diagonally across the cork as shown. Watch out as the cork can be a little tough to cut and you should obviously be careful when using a knife.

Step 3:

Two cork wedges perfect to slip under any wobbly tables!

What exactly are Sulphites?

If you’re in the UK, or even anywhere else within the EU, you’ll have no doubt noticed the small sentence on your wine’s label which says “Contains Sulphites”. Many people worry about such declarations, as they assume it means someone’s been dabbling with the chemistry set and you’re about to sit down to a glass of bubbling E numbers haphazardly mixed with grape juice. Clearly, this is not the case. If you’ve been keeping an eye out, you’ll notice that this declaration is made on all bottles of wine which you can buy. So, let’s try and answer some common questions.

Firstly, what exactly are sulphites? Sulphites are any compound which contains the chemical Sulphur dioxide. The statement on the label has been mandatory since November 2005, when new regulations necessitated the declaration of any additives to wine. The vague declaration is not, in itself, a particularly useful guide to what’s going on, however. There are maximum levels, yet the declaration doesn’t tell you whether your wine contains a bare minimum or the very maximum.

Secondly, why are they in my wine? To put it simply, they are a preservative. I’m not talking microwave meal/ freezer food preservative, however. Sulphites allow wine to age, and wines with absolutely no added sulphites would be unlikely to age more than even a few months. Even in wine where no preservatives have been added at all, sulphur is still present to the tune of 10mg per litre as it is a natural by-product of the fermentation process. Sulphur dioxide serves as an anti-microbial agent which helps to limit the growth of potentially ruinous yeasts and bacteria in wine. It is also an antioxidant which prevents browning by preserving the colour of the grape skins in the wine. White wine generally contains larger amounts of added Sulphur Dioxide as it does not contain as many anti-oxidants from the grape skins as red does.

Sulphites have been a recognised additive in wine since at least 1487, when the first recorded decree permitting their usage was issued by the Prussian Royal state. At this moment, Sulphur Dioxide was being added to wine in small quantities to permit it to travel for trade or supplies in exploration. Indeed, the practice had been inherited from the Romans, who first developed the trick of burning sulphur candles inside wine barrels before filling them, which was taken up by British and Dutch merchants in turn.

Thirdly, do I have a choice? Broadly, the answer is no. When working at wine shops in the past, I have had people ask for Suplhite-free wine and insist that they’d had it before. To be honest, they’ve probably been mis-sold in another shop, with a sales assistant happily telling them exactly what they want to hear in order to get them to the till then out the door. As made clear in the answer to the last question, Sulphites are a natural by-product of the fermentation process which distinguishes wine from grape juice. You cannot drink wine which is totally free from Sulphites. Some Biodynamic and Organic producers commit themselves to using an absolute minimum of additives and this often means lower levels of Sulphur dioxide. If you’re dead set on trying to avoid them, you’d be best to go for organic or biodynamic red wines.

A very tiny minority of people are sensitive to Sulphites, as with just about any other substance on earth. It can give people migraines and skin conditions and even worsen Asthma. As someone who is asthmatic, I can attest this has never bothered me. If you are affected, laying off the wine is sadly the only realistic answer. The very lowest quality of wine may also contain an excess of Sulphites, added recklessly to ensure a long shelf-life for bargain basement wines. If you smell something like a burnt match when you open a bottle of wine, it’s probably had a little too much added. However, the use of Stelvin closures now means that this smell can be more common with white wines with no fault, as a perfect air seal prevents any gradual dissipation of excess Sulphur dioxide during transit. If it clears after opening, taste the wine as usual and determine any faults from the glass, not the bottle. As always, drink better and smarter and you’re less likely to run into problems.

Basically, there’s no need to panic. Sulphites appear in all wines and you should only worry if you’re drinking industrially cheap wine or are one of the tiny minority with a dietary sensitivity. Best get drinking up!

Bargain Hunt: House Wines and ‘Second Bottle Syndrome’


House wines can be very good indeed. They can also be appalling. The cheapest bottle of wine on the menu plays an interesting role in any restaurant and can say quite a lot about that particular restaurant’s ethos. If you’re in a Michelin starred palace of food, I’ll wager that house wine will be superb. If you’re at a cut-price eatery looking for a quick meal, I’m betting it won’t be. Of course, there’s a world in between, and this is where many of us live. It’s this situation I’d like to briefly mention.

Many people are put off by the notion of buying a house wine, especially if they are eating with friends and want to appear magnanimous. The standard reaction, in this situation, is to opt for the wine directly above the house wine – the next cheapest, as it were.

It is important also to recognise particular reactions that can be manipulated. Again, this is a perfectly valid way of going about things if it has served you well in the past. However, it is also important to realise that it’s not just you doing this and that you haven’t single-handedly cracked the system. Many restaurants place their highest margin wine in this position in order to drive sales with the many people who choose in exactly this way.

Many years ago, when working for the now-defunct Threshers, we were preached to about the virtues of the ‘Power Shelf’. This was the shelf which sat at eye-level amongst a wall full of wine. For the less selective customer a bottle placed here and covered in point-of-sale was the end of the search. Yet again, however, it was also the highest margin bottles placed on this shelf. It didn’t make them bad quality, it just made them high-margin.

Judge yourself whether or not your restaurant is looking to make a statement with a house wine. If it is, so much the better. If it isn’t and you’re looking only at the cost, that’s fine too. The same applies to automatically choosing the second bottle. The point of this post is not to give you hard and fast rules to live by, but merely to point out that some gut decisions can be a bit predictable…

There is no spoon: Does a silver spoon keep the fizz in Champagne?

Traditional wisdom runs that leaving a silver teaspoon, handle down, in the neck of a champagne bottle can help preserve the bubbles in an open bottle for longer.

There is an element of truth to this, but also a wide-ranging mythology which has grown up around it. Part of the problem in coming to an accurate judgement is the fact that all bottles of sparkling wine produced in the Champagne method are essentially unique micro-climates. Whilst this sounds technical and confusing, all it implies is that the second bottle fermentation which takes place leaves all bottles in slightly varying conditions. This isn’t to say that flavour or the fineness of the bead (a fine bead means that the bubbles in the wine are small, tightly packed and vigorous) varies, simply that its reaction to air once it has been opened is an essentially unknowable variable. The French refer to this loss of fizz as ‘éventage’, and it’s from the Gauls we inherit the spoon trick to prevent exactly this phenomenon.

Now, there have been plenty of investigations into different means to keep Champagne sparkling which have claimed to be scientific. Some are merely PR exercises for wineries, brands or universities, whilst others are led by industry bodies keen to develop best practice. One thing to watch out for is the tone with which the subject is approached. Even studies from respected universities tend to be phrased and conducted in the style of ‘And in other news…’ segments for TV News programs.

What seems clear from the various studies, most notably one from Stanford University, is that the spoon being silver had little to do with the end result. Many studies also found that the spoon’s influence was negligible, if detectable at all. That said, it was certainly not a negative influence. Indeed, the Stanford study found that the best results came from a refrigerated bottle left completely open and unsealed. Yet, the sticking point was that notionally identical bottles tested by the same methods produced differing results due to their innate differences – the micro-climates we spoke about earlier.

Another study conducted by the Centre Interprofessionel des Vins de Champagne (an industry body) agreed that the spoon’s influence seemed to be non-existent. US TV show ‘Mythbusters’ conducted their own limited test and determined that the influence of the spoon was actually negative, reducing the fizz in the bottle on the whole. Such programs cast an air of authority which their methods seldom justify, however, and it seems in this case that they are in direct disagreement with both scientists and industry specialists.

Indeed, Dr Richard Zare of Stanford University has posited that it is temperature which most affects a Champagne’s fizz. Warm liquids hold less gas and this means that chilling the wine ensures that more Carbon Dioxide (what creates the sparkle) is retained in the liquid itself. Likewise, the cleanliness of the glass you pour your Champagne into affects how bubbly the wine appears. Bubble trails start when they come into contact with tiny faults or microscopic dust and lint particles (think the cloth you dried your glass with) and this can start the wine a-bubbling.

Yet circumstantial evidence suggests that the spoon helps. You can speak to any number of different friends and relatives who swear by the method and avow that only silver does the trick. The answer undoubtedly lies in the micro-climate of the bottle. Spoons may do almost nothing, yet some bottles may retain their fizz a little longer naturally, seemingly affirming the impression that it’s the spoon that’s solved the problem. This is the kind of phenomenon which fuels many urban myths.

Another modern experiment (this one done in 2009, whilst Zare’s was back in 1994) has suggested, however, that the spoon can be a positive influence! The South African winery  Twee Jonge Gezellen responded to a travel company’s query and tested the same hypothesis as Zare, Mythbusters and the Champagne organisation. They found that results showed some improvement with the insertion of a spoon into the neck of the open bottle. They theorised that the spoon worked to radiate cold air from the regrigerator into the bottle quicker, creating a seal of cold air in the neck of the bottle better than would be created by an open neck and slowing the ‘éventage’. In this model, silver helps as it is an efficient conductor. Likewise, some have posited that silver’s anti-oxidant qualities may help  in some way ward off oxidisation in the wine, though this remains anecdotal at best.

Others have spoken about a pressure phenomenon called the ‘Venturi effect’ which essentially means that within the open bottle pressure remains high with a pressure differential towards the low pressure outside of the neck. According to this wisdom, a spoon would break this barrier and de-pressurise the bottle quickly, encouraging gas to leave the wine by ventilating the bottle and encouraging ‘éventage’. What’s also important to remember is that the wine seldom bubbles inside the bottle (its almost faultlessly smooth interior belying the effect of your dirty glass) and that anything microscopic attached to the spoon could cause some kind of cross contamination which provokes excess fizz in the short term.

In conclusion, I would hazard a guess at a means of reconciling all these divergent results. Firstly, temperature is obviously important – a fact recognised in all the studies. Secondly, Zare’s tests were conducted for 26 hours, a period of time which would nullify the quick cooling effect of the spoon. This is, to be honest, a slightly unrealistic expectation and it stands to reason that whilst a silver spoon overnight may help ensure an enjoyably sparkling Champagne breakfast, it is unlikely prevent ‘éventage’ in perpetuity. Lastly, and perhaps obviously, use a clean spoon if you’re going to try it.

A silver spoon may not actually preserve the wine, but it may help in some way and is unlikely to do any harm.  The only sure fire solution, it seems, is to drink the lot!