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Wine Journal

The World of Wine

The following series of short articles provide a light-hearted look at the world of wine that I have picked up over the past few years.  I hope they can provide some useful insights for you.

Rob Malcolm

Wine Isn’t Sport


Being an Aussie running a wine shop and bar in Earl's Court I am often asked, “So do you only sell Australian wine?”  The short answer is, “No, we sell wines from everywhere”, but the real answer, one that requires a bit of explanation, is, “To me there is no such thing as Australian wine.” read more

 

Learning About Wine


If you’re a content member of the pure hedonist school of wine -“I’m not interested in learning, but I know what I like” - then life is simple: ignore the guff and drink up merrily!  However, if you are remotely curious, here’s a tip to help you keep it real on your journey in wine... read more

 

Wine – can you taste complexity?


In the universe of beverages wine has the ability to be the most complex and enchanting.  The best way to understand how a wine tastes is to look at the five factors that give each wine its unique taste: read more

 

Grape Varieties and the shame of Chablis


Of the five major factors affecting the different aromas and tastes in wine (variety, vineyard, vintage, vineyard practice and wine making), the variety of the grape is generally the strongest influence on the overall flavour and the best place to start exploring. read more

 

Vineyards and Controversy


Of the five major factors affecting the different aromas and tastes in wine (variety, vineyard, vintage, vineyard practice and wine-making), the vineyard the grape is grown in generates the greatest passion and controversy. Whilst it is certainly true that in some parts of any vineyard grapes grow and ripen better than in other parts, the soil’s role in actually affecting the flavour of wine is scientifically unproven, despite extensive efforts to do so. read more

 

Vintage Notes


Of the five major factors affecting the different aromas and tastes in wine (variety, vineyard, vintage, vineyard practice and wine-making), vintage refers to the weather conditions through the vine’s growing period that will affect both the quality and quantity of wine produced in any given year. read more

 

Sex in the Vineyard


The grape is the means by which a vine propagates sexually, by producing a sweet berry that is designed to appeal to birds.  Growing the perfect grape is a delicate balance of vinous foreplay: if you treat a vines too rough (too cold, hot or dry) it is not physically capable of producing a grape; if you treat a vine too well (good soil, too much water) it becomes selfish and indulges itself in extra leaves and green shoots and forgets about grapes.  So how does the grape farmer treat ‘em mean to keep them keen? read more

 

Winemakers: the chefs of wine


Many in the wine trade would like you to believe that wine virtually makes itself; that their wine is an expression of nature with variety, vineyard, vintage and vineyard practices producing grapes which man hardly touches before it reaches your glass: a nice, wholesome picture, but not an accurate one. read more

Yeasts: the microscopic martyrs


You don’t have to be a genius to taste the difference between the flavour and alcoholic kick of grape juice and wine, so it’s worth taking a few minutes to get to know those responsible.  It’s hard to get excited about microscopic unicellular fungi, and these little guys don’t get much press coverage, but according to scientists yeasts are responsible for around 400 out of the total 1,000 (40%) flavour compounds found in wine. read more

 

Sulphur & Oxygen: the salt and pepper of winemaking


On every bottle of wine you’ll find the safety message, “Contains sulphur dioxide”.   Sulphur has been added to wine for about as long as we’ve added salt to our food.  It is added at various stages of the wine making process for two reasons: to protect the wine from the effects of oxidation; and to prevent the growth of spoilage bacteria.   Without it, wine would be vinegar; nice for salads, but not for drinking. read more

 

The Kiss of Oak


To make a wine with a pure, clean fruit character the winemaker can nowadays use temperature-controlled, hygienic stainless steel vats.  But if all you drank were pure, clean fruit- driven wines you’d soon get pretty bored.  That’s why almost all red wines and about half of all white wines are still made with the influence of oak, because oak interacts with and adds a layer of complexity to the fruit. read more

 

'Tis the Season to be Merry


The sharp bite of winter has arrived and it is a time of office parties, Christmas and New Year's Eve.  I like the word 'merry': for me it captures the rosy-cheeked fun of this time of year in England. read more

 

Food & Wine


Discovering a combination of food and wine is one of the highest hedonistic pleasures available to us.  I will never forget getting home after a long, cold day with both fridge and cellar bare.  A tin of vegetable soup was all I could muster, and there was half a bottle of sherry left in the fridge.  Granted, my expectations were low, but that combination of warm, hearty soup and tangy sherry was so good it almost brought tears to my eyes. read more

 

Wine Ageing


There is a myth that wine improves with age.  Sadly this is untrue for about 99% of all wines produced.  Very few styles of wine are meant to improve with age, and fewer still that actually do so.  read more

 

Wine in Restaurants


Hands up if every time you are handed the wine list in a restaurant you feel resentment swell up at the price the restaurant expects you to pay for a bottle?  You’re not alone.  read more

 

Wine Riots


By the time you’re reading this the Chancellor will have increased the Excise on wine by a few pence.  So what?  read more

 

Wine Journeys


If you haven’t planned all your holidays this year, then what about visiting a wine region?  Wine regions are found on some of the most picturesque slices of earth.  read more

 

The Taste Temptation


How many times should you try a new wine to decide whether you like it or not? read more

 

See our Links page for our own selection of the best of the web.

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

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