Wine writing

“Life is what happens to us, when we are making other plans”

How did I enter the wine trade is a relatively simple question to answer – I inadvertently reversed into it whilst looking the other way.

Why I chose to continue, needs more rigorous address.

That dubious British establishment, once known as the landed gentry, laudably gave up its sons to run the country, and by default maintain an empire. The first would be sent into politics, the second to the armed forces, the third into law and with the main buttresses in place, the fourth would be consigned to the church. Were there to be a fifth son, this apparently decreasing professional lineage would have doubtless provided a safe haven – that of the wine trade. The term trade being thought too vulgar perhaps, the term profession too arrogant, the wine trade has more recently chosen to define its uncertain activities as an occupation – and indeed, many souls does it occupy. Like watching the endless credit list scroll down at the end of the Harry Potter films, one has but to visit any one of the numerous global wine fairs to see just how many people are bound into its embrace.

What makes up this caucus is an indiscriminate group dedicated to amusement, diversion and congeniality. Entering such a profession makes little sense to those who require either commercial security or financial gain. It is frowned upon by bankers, accountants and clerics and spurned by global investors. Wine is principally spared the vicissitudes experienced by the constant desire for profit. The oft-quoted maxim that ‘in order to make a small fortune in the wine game, you have to start with a large one’ rings out clearer than a country church bell across a hazy meadow.

The cast of thousands that contribute to this perambulating circus are neither strangers to false modesty nor blessed with altruism. They are in the main a motley crew of rapscallions, chancers, new-age philosophers, delusional imbibers, promiscuous sommeliers and amiable misfits. Some purport to old-school protocol others to bohemian ostentation, but above all they exhibit the desire for hospitality, camaraderie and a need to share and dispense what they fervently believe to be that bewitching nectar of the Gods – wine.

Their limited aspirations may well be shared with another more noble occupation. When Picasso was informed, by a young visitor to his studio “…that when I grow up I want to be an artist”, he replied, “You can’t do both”.

 What has been of unexpected entitlement, has been the task of visiting wine-growing regions across the globe, and wine growing regions by definition encompass some of the most staggeringly beautiful scenery any country has on offer. Coupled with a willing immersion in aspects of local geography, culture, history, sociology, biology, gastronomy and chemistry – there have been, and continue to be, a host of shared tributes along the path from vine to glass.

As a wine merchant, restaurateur and writer, I am pleased to have been part of their ranks and contributed to some of their diversions over the last twenty years.

I have been drinking wine (in preference to any other alcoholic beverage) for nearly forty years, I have been selling wine for nearly twenty years, but I have been writing about it for only ten – clearly there appears to be a lot of catching up to do. However, even if such a concept were possible, wine will inevitably outrun me, or you for that matter, as it transforms and renews itself every season, every harvest and almost every bottle. Every time you think you have nailed a preference for a specific country or a region, a grape variety or style, wine will shape-shift in front of your very eyes to adopt a new and sometimes disarming persona. As wine is never static, its commentators must therefore embrace the same outlook. A new bottle is not an immutable product it is a living adventure, an expedition full of twists and turns and the only offer I can make here is to ask that you join me on the exciting journey I know it to be.

Wine writing blogs

The wonder of Wachau’s wine – June 23 2007

It is that much more satisfying when wine recommendations and in particular this column, are prompted by the demands of a particular cuisine with which they are to be partnered: Nowhere more so than when a leading Thai restaurant in Norwich, nestling conspicuously...

A taste for that smoke-free zone – May 26 2007

A taste for that smoke-free zone – May 26 2007

Having recently returned from a buying trip to the Loire, one is perpetually surprised at the wines that abound along France’s longest river. Of its 1375 kilometres the Loire gently snakes its way through no less than ten distinct and often terribly neglected wine...

Why we’re the best tasters – April 28 2007

Why we’re the best tasters – April 28 2007

With some frequency the commercial vagaries of my profession give way to the social history of the task. Never more so than at present. This is the time of year where our office is frantically preparing for our forthcoming annual wine tasting. We make this something...

Shaken, but not stirred. – April 14 2007

When I began this occasional column, I had outlined a programme for myself which looked to cover some of the more common enquiries relating to wine consumption and also some free spots which would be made available to any topical wine matters that may crop up from...

Matteo and the pride of Puglia – March 17 2007

Matteo and the pride of Puglia – March 17 2007

Well, apart form the Aqueduct, Sanitation, Roads, Medicine and Education what did they do for us? Answer – Pinot Grigio. Well it wasn’t really the Romans it was the winemakers of Fruili, Pinot’s heartland in north eastern Italy. Believe it or not, this was a serious...

Choices to curry favour. Eastern Daily Press – January 20 2007

Choices to curry favour. Eastern Daily Press – January 20 2007

With the Yuletide family festivities behind us, some friends suggest the inevitable alternatives that only a visit to an Indian Restaurant can offer. Off we set to the city centre for a curry frenzy. As my friends will doubtless confirm, I can rarely get through any...

A sparkle over Christmas – December 23 2006

A sparkle over Christmas – December 23 2006

We have reached the time of year when reviewers are traditionally asked to cite their favourite holiday, hotel, top ten books or a wish list of suitable CD’s with which to enhance their, or their readers Festive break. The yuletide demands of a wine merchant are...

Budget – November 2006

Budget – November 2006

With the recent news that the European Court of Justice is likely to consider that  stay-at-home internet shoppers may well be able to substantially reduce the duty they pay on beer, spirits, wine and cigarettes, I felt it time to examine the thorny issue of excise...

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