Committee Musings, Sept 2022

Presenter etiquette

As a courtesy, can we remind members to please listen when the invited presenters are presenting during their sessions? We will build in time during the presentations for discussion at your tables.

For those wondering what wine & tasting etiquette may be about, check out:

Club meeting formats
Etiquette
Tasting terms

December dinner

Your committee is again considering having our next Club dinner in the Courtenay Place area, close to public transport. This time we are considering going to the prestigious Istana Malaysia with a fixed banquet menu rather than individual meal choices. However, before further planning, we need to have a show of hands at the September tasting to gauge support for this idea. This is a spacious venue, great for BYO and well-established. If you can’t make the September tasting evening, please let the Editor know if you have any comments about this idea.

Stop Press!! Cellar Club Wins Trifecta of Top Hawke’s Bay wineries!!

June – Te Mata, Hawkes Bay w/ Keith Tibble and Brett Newell

August – Villa Maria / Esk Valley w/ Gordon Russell

and, in September, Brooksfields w/ Peter Robertson

The Committee has been able to arrange for another top-flight Hawke’s Bay winemaker to present to the Club on Wednesday 14th September. This time it is Peter Robertson of Brookfields Winery, one of the doyens of winemaking in Hawke’s Bay.

A top selection of eight wines will be on offer. The wines will be available for purchase on the night at very good prices.

Founded in 1937, Brookfields is Hawke’s Bay’s oldest winery. It is located alongside the Tutaekuri River at Meeanee (between Napier and Hastings). The winery was purchased by its current owner and winemaker, Peter Robertson, in 1977, who transformed it into a leading winery for premium wines. The history of Brookfields is revealed in the handmade 25cm concrete blocks used to build the winery and cellar in the 1930s. These blocks create the perfect environment for ageing great wines and keeping the cellar cool during Hawke’s Bay’s hot summers. Peter creates classic wines with grapes that are only grown in specific locations and have strict growing policies.

Brookfield’s reputation has been built on stunning red wines. For example, the 1989 Gold Label cabernet/merlot on release stunned the critics and trade with its excellence. Subsequent vintages have firmly placed Brookfields as one of the best red winemakers.

Producing between 8,000 and 10,000 cases of wine each year, Brookfields has no desire to push up volumes when there is always the challenge of creating even more dramatic wine. Peter has been crafting exquisite wines from his vineyards in and around Meeanee since he bought the winery in 1977. He is often referred to as a quiet achiever, diligently going about his business, shunning the spotlight, and letting his wines speak for themselves. Showing the meticulous attention to detail that characterises the man himself, the depth, excellence and brilliance of all varietals remind you of his adept talent.

As he himself says, “It is my belief that superior wine comes from superior fruit; great wines are made in the vineyard. Much of the winemaking at Brookfields is traditional. The “Bergman” chardonnay is barrel fermented. The “Reserve” reds are hand-plunged and then aged in French oak barrels for at least a year. Time is a winemaker’s friend.”

Yvonne Lorkin hosts Brockenchack Wines, Barossa

I’m inviting your wonderful wine club members to join me for a very fun and delicious wine dinner at Shed 5, at 6 pm on Tuesday, Sept 6th, with Brockenchack Wines.

Brockenwho? Brockenthewhatnow?

Well, they’re a tiny, family-owned winery, they’re from the Barossa, they’re finally here in New Zealand, and I’ve been a massive fan for years now. This is why I’m co-hosting this tasting, and I’m really hoping some of your club members will join me!

Tickets are $90 per person for delicious food, wonderful wine, and excellent banter, guaranteeing you’ll leave with new knowledge AND happy tastebuds.

Please forward this invitation to your members and instruct them to register today.

Seats are super-limited, just 40 seats – so be speedy! I’m looking forward to meeting you all on September 6th!

Warmest wishes and phone me anytime on 021 3 798 77 to discuss.

Ngā mihi nui

Yvonne

The Wine Show

Editor: I’m taking it that everyone has found The Wine Show on your TV screens now – Prime TV, Thursdays around 7:30 pm. This UK production delves into the history of wine and compares European varieties and vineyards in different countries.

Joe Fattorini, the Oracle of Wine (or the David Attenborough of Oddbins depending on who you ask) is here for you.
Joe Fattorini, the Oracle of Wine (or the David Attenborough of Oddbins depending on who you ask) is here for you.

Were you aware that in the 17th century, France used to export wine to Britain, where it sat on the wharves for a consequential time, such as the business of moving products [sound familiar?]

Because of the time sitting on the wharves, the wine went through a second fermentation, making what we now call Cuvee, Champagne or Sparking wine! So even the French admit that Britain ‘invented’ champagne! Of course, Britain still can’t use the name of the area now world famous for the beverage. This programme is informative and also a light-hearted journey.

Check out the Wine Shows’ YouTube channel.

Field & Green, mid-winter dinner – July 2022

This was held at Field & Green in the Wellington CBD last month. It was well attended, albeit we did have a couple of last-minute cancellations due to Covid, which meant we did not hit the maximum seating of 48 that we were booked for at the beginning of that week.

Everyone was welcomed with a glass of the Club’s bubbly, and a good variety of wines was brought to create a jovial atmosphere for the evening. The food was well presented, and the committee received a host of favourable feedback after the event, indicating that this was a venue that members would like to attend again sometime in the future.

We know members particularly enjoyed the Treacle Tarte with clotted cream. Laura, the chef at Field & Green, has kindly agreed to share her recipe with club members, and you will find it as a separate attachment to this newsletter. Thanks, Laura and thanks, Helen, for securing this for us.

We thank Terry Friel for suggesting Field & Green and working with them to produce an excellent menu for the night.

Esk Valley and Gordon Russell tasting – August 2022

The Committee is excited to present Esk Valley wines with presenter and renowned winemaker Gordon Russell on Wednesday, 10 August 2022.

Range

An interesting range of wines will be presented, including a rose, three whites and three reds. These include several of Gordon’s recently released “Artisanal” ranges, which will be new to many of you. These wines will be available to order on the night at very special prices.

History

Esk Valley, Another Prestige Tasting for August
Esk Valley, another prestige tasting for August

Esk Valley winery has come a long way since Sir George Fistonich purchased the historic Glenvale Winery from the Bird family in 1986. Esk Valley broke boundaries by introducing new grape varieties and wine styles to Hawke’s Bay. From its original cellars in north Hawke’s Bay to the new purpose-built winery in the Gimblett Gravels area, Esk Valley has produced a collection of wines regarded as among New Zealand’s finest.

About Gordon

Gordon Russell, legend, winemaker
Gordon Russell, legend, winemaker

Gordon Russell was born in New Plymouth, and his desire to travel took him to England and Europe for three years after university. During that time, he expanded his interest in different flavours and food to include an appreciation for fine wine.

Gordon was appointed Esk Valley’s winemaker in 1993 after working as a cellar hand for Villa Maria in Auckland from 1987, then as assistant winemaker to Grant Edmonds at Esk Valley from 1990. Gordon produces a natural style of wine, paying attention to detail in the vineyard, using wild yeast and long-term lees ageing. These are modern styles of wine hand-crafted by a master.

This promises to be a great tasting by one of the legends among the country’s winemakers. We look forward to seeing you there.

 

China’s third largest wine producer offloads 300 ha of Australian vineyards

Weilong Grape Co, one of the biggest wine producers in China, has announced the sale of 320 hectares of Australian vineyards for AUS$143 million (RMB 660.6 million).

Weilong is China’s third largest wine producer and the country’s biggest organic winery.

The company announced plans to sell its vineyard holdings in Coomealla and Nyah in Murray, which account for 76% of its total wine production in Australia, as reported by Vino Joy.

According to a statement released by Weilong on 6 July, the sale will “alleviate its financial and managerial stress for its Australian subsidiary”.

Australian wine exports are still being impacted by challenging conditions and Chinese tariffs, as figures showed exports plummeted 26% in the 12 months to May 2022.

Most of this decline was attributed to China’s tariffs on bottled Australian wine imports in November 2020, which saw a loss of AUS$844 million.

While the tariffs look set to remain in place for the foreseeable future, some Australian companies, such as Treasury Wine Estates, are devising ways to work around them.

But for Weilong Grape Co, punitive tariffs’ financial weight has proved too heavy.

This marks the first major selloff from a Chinese company heavily restricted by these tariffs from selling Australian wine back to the Chinese market.

The Shandong-based wine producer bought the vineyards between 2016 and 2018, when international relations were friendly, China was Australia’s most profitable export market.

Weilong purchased approximately 600 hectares of vineyards in Victoria and New South Wales, according to Vino Joy, building a 26,000-tonne capacity winery just south of Mildura.

As disclosed to the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the sale includes 167.6 ha of vineyards in Coomealla and 260.4 ha in Nyah, along with other associated assets, for AUS$26.6 million and AUS$44.4 million each.

Can’t decide on a wine for the night? Now you can choose with emojis

Amberleigh Jack, Stuff | 31 May 2022

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF Wine emojis to help you choose a bottle.
MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
Wine emojis to help you choose a bottle.

If you feel lost as to what wine to serve at your Moroccan-inspired dinner party this weekend, one website is on a mission to help – using a database of unique, and very cute, specialised emojis.

When lockdown forced Wellington’s Noble Rot Wine Bar to close in March 2020, three wine experts used the downtime to create a database of wine profiles. The ultimate goal was to simplify the wine-buying process for the average consumer.

Two years later, Wine-oji, is a website featuring 221 emoji-like images designed to help anyone pick the perfect bottle of wine, whether they know what wine they enjoy or not.

Noble Rot owners Josh Pointon and Maciej Zimny, with head sommelier Jessica Wood, launched Wine-oji last December. Wood says the response has been “amazing” from consumers and producers.

But what exactly is Wine-oji, and how does a collection of wine-related emojis help someone pick a bottle of wine?

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF Wine-Oji was an idea born out of lockdown.
MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
Wine-Oji was an idea born out of lockdown.

The website is a colourful, busy and interactive library of images used to describe flavour profiles, production methods and ideal food pairings for wines.

The list is pretty extensive. Images are allocated to primary aromas, such as fruits and vegetables, as well as floral notes such as jasmine and honeysuckle or earthy tones of oak and wet stone.

Secondary aromas, which come from the winemaking process, oak ageing, oxidation and bottle ageing include popcorn, butterscotch, oak, berries and fruit and tar and rubber, among others.

Wood says while the library of wine emojis is fun, the interactive “find your perfect match” section is where customers can hone in on exactly what they are after in a wine.

“You can search any winery or flavour,” she says. Users can also simply search for the food they plan to eat and find the perfect pairing.

“If you’re cooking snapper tonight, you can type snapper, and it will bring up all the wines that have any of those Wine-ojis allocated to the profile.”

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF The initial idea began when Wood realised she was fielding questions from customers at Noble Rot about what certain wines taste like.
MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
The initial idea began when Wood realised she was fielding questions from customers at Noble Rot about what certain wines taste like.

She says the site also allows people to open their minds a bit to try new wines.

“[You can find] things you’ll actually like, rather than based on wine that’s discounted heavily at the store, or because you tried it before, or like the label. It’s actually all about your experience of the wine.”

The initial idea began when Wood realised she was fielding questions from customers at Noble Rot about what certain wines taste like, and what wines pair best with certain foods.

And so the idea of creating a database of flavours, profiles and distributor information began to form.

“We … started composing a list of the key aromas and flavours, and structural components of the wine, that we could then build into a bit of a library. That became the new language – the language of Wine-oji,” she says.

The creation of the images was hugely important, Wood says. They brought in a local graphic designer to help create the library. They needed to be well-designed, but they also had to appeal to people who are not wine experts.

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF People need no previous knowledge of wine to use the emoji wine website.
MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
People need no previous knowledge of wine to use the emoji wine website.

“They had to be easily recognisable, quite quickly, by the average consumer.”

“There is a huge problem in that people don’t know what wine they like, or what wine they should buy. There’s never really been an understanding of their flavour profile or their taste preferences.”

“We were thinking, how can we translate to people quickly and instantly what’s in their bottle of wine using images rather than words?” she says.

The resulting database is something Wood insists people need no previous knowledge of wine to use.

“You just need to know if you like something or not,” she says.

Using the interactive section of the site, a search for “lemon” results in 33 bottles of wine. Of those, two are Pinot Gris and 12 are Chardonnay. The selections can be further filtered by wine type or vintage.

For each bottle, the full Wine-oji profile can be viewed. There are eight sections: aroma, flavour, sweetness, acidity, body, oak, finish and food. Each is illustrated with the relevant Wine-ojis.

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF Wine-Oji will give you the nous to have a good nose for wine - no experience required.
MONIQUE FORD/STUFF
Wine-Oji will give you the nous to have a good nose for wine – no experience required.

My 2019 Main Divide Riesling, for instance, had an acidity rating of 4½ lemons out of 5. Its sweetness is only worthy of one lollipop, however, and in terms of the body, my chosen riesling shows 2½ bodybuilders out of a possible 5.

My chosen wine also pairs well with prawn skewers, pad thai, Moroccan couscous and snapper ceviche.

And after two years of creating an extensive database of wine-related imagery, what are Wood’s favourite Wine-ojis?

She has a few, including lily, jasmine and ginger. She is also a fan of the food pairings.

“The rabbit is very cute.”

Purchase your Wine-ojis, now!

Tasting – Te Mata w/ Keith Tibble and Brett Newell, June 2022

The Te Mata evening last month was a great success, with Keith Tibble and Brett Newell from EuroVintage filling in for Te Mata’s Reps. They were both informative and interesting about the vintages, the people who own and work the vineyards and the different classes of wine that Te Mata produces and sells. There was a good level of orders from members.

The vertical tasting of the two Cabernet Merlots was also interesting, as these helped educate us on the different processes that are used on the different classes of grapes the Winery handles. The taste of these two wines was an eye-opener.

NB: Don’t forget Brett Newell’s tip that you don’t decant older wines too early before you want to drink them, as their taste will not be the best by the time you drink them. ‘Old’ is anything older than ten years.

Update on Te Mata orders

The orders are in hand if a little delayed. Keith Tibble from EuroVintage has been ill and given the orders are compiled in Auckland and then shipped as a single order to Wellington, there has been a delay. The orders are due to Murray by the end of this week and as soon as received will be delivered to you or arrangements made. The charges at this point have not gone on to your credit cards. Apologies for the delay.

Cellar Club mid-winter dinner at Field & Green

262 Wakefield Street, Te Aro, Wellington

European Soul Food

7 pm for 7:30 pm dinner – Wednesday 13th July

There will be the usual Club bubbles on arrival.

This promises to be a great evening at a very good restaurant. As of last weekend, we had reached our maximum of 48 people, which is very pleasing to the committee who view this as a huge reward for all the effort that goes into planning such events.

Wayne currently has a waitlist in operation in case COVID or some other sudden reason prevents someone from attending. If you find yourself in this situation, can you please let him know ASAP either by text to 027 452 3802 or email?

Next week you can expect to receive an email from Wayne giving you your seat number and the confirmation of what you have ordered. If that information is correct, you do not need to do anything apart from seeking out a bottle of wine to match your food. But if you need to change something or Wayne has misrecorded your choices, please get back to him urgently. That email will also include another copy of the menu.

If you intend to use public transport to get to the dinner, then simply get off the bus at Courtenay Place, walk down Allen St, turn left onto Wakefield Street and you will find the restaurant on your left approx. 30 metres.

As is usual, please try to arrive close to 7 pm as possible, as arriving too early can cause issues. Thanks in advance for your co-operation with this.

Menu

Entrees

Mushroom soup, Madeira cream
Smoked trevally soufflé, leek and chive sauce
Duck, prune and green peppercorn rillettes, toasted brioche, chutney

Mains

Roast tarakihi, cloudy bay clams, chorizo and braised fennel
Confit chicken leg, braised Savoy cabbage Toulouse sausage, lentils, lemon cream
Beef Bourguignon, pomme puree

Dessert

Treacle tart, clotted cream
Meringue roulade, passionfruit and raspberries, hazelnut praline
White and dark chocolate cheesecake, sour cherry compote

This menu includes the complimentary house-made sourdough bread with a house-made fennel gluten-free cracker is also available upon request.

AGM News, May 2022

26 people attended the AGM and enjoyed the supper and selection of the club’s wines that followed.

Matter arising from the meeting requiring action post the AGM were:

Annual Accounts and President’s Annual Report

If you couldn’t make the AGM, copies of both of these have been uploaded to the Club’s website for your perusal.

The Club’s Special Licence

There was some discussion at the AGM about the need for the Club to have a liquor licence and the associated high annual cost. Suggestions were made that approaches should be made to City Councillors and politicians, especially in light of the upcoming elections.

Richard Taylor, who has managed the licencing process for the Club for several years, has made the following comments in order to inform members of his experience of the current position with regard to the licence. He advised he has already spoken to Councillors who have advised that the District Licensing Committee, which is administered by WCC, is only applying current law, so there appears to be no opportunity for change at that level. Local MPs he has spoken to have said trying to make a change by way of a Member’s Bill is extremely unlikely to succeed.

That leaves, as the only avenue, submissions at the time of the next review of the Sale of Liquor Act. Richard said he continues to keep a watch on the situation so that any favourable shifts can be seized upon straight away

The Club’s Sound System

Thanks go to Jan Sammons for providing feedback to the committee post the AGM that reaffirmed that the use of the Community Centre sound system would mean over a 50% increase in the cost of us hiring the hall for each tasting. Rather than incur this cost, the committee has resolved to first try using a suitable lapel microphone and use that with the boom box/speaker at the back of the room. Also, they will ask the presenter to try and stay behind the table.

Ability to purchase wines if unable to attend a tasting

The committee was asked to consider ways that absent members might be able to order wines. Several logistical issues were identified and after discussing these, the committee resolved not to pursue this idea any further. Instead, the committee preferred an informal arrangement where an absent member could ask a friend attending or one of the committee before the tasting to order the wine for them.

Te Mata, Hawkes Bay w/ Keith Tibble and Brett Newell, June 2022

Established in 1896, Te Mata Estate remains family-owned, producing internationally recognised wines exclusively from its Hawkes Bay vineyards. The Chambers family, the original owners, sold the property in 1919.

TMV Te Mata Vineyards was established, and the property had two other owners until it was acquired by the Buck and Morris Families in 1974 – the two families behind the modern interpretation of this historic NZ estate.

Te Mata Estate is committed to improving its performance in terms of environmental, social and economic sustainability through the Sustainable Winegrowing New Zealand (SWNZ) programme, established in 1995 as an industry-initiated programme directed by NZ Winegrowers. Te Mata Estate’s vineyards were amongst the first to be accredited in 1995, as was the winery in 2005.

This evening was going to be presented by Te Mata vineyard but is now being covered by Eurovintage with Keith Tibble and Brett Newell hosting the evening for us.

Indictive wines for the evening, still being worked on at the time this  newsletter went out:

  • Starting with Estate Range Sauvignon Blanc
  • Premium Sauvignon Blanc
  • Two premium reds – Awatea and Bullnose ranges
  • Estate Range – Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon

The above selection is indicative only as it will depend on the availability of stock at this time.

This will be both a surprising and informative evening with great wines to taste across Te Mata’s different wine ranges and looks to be an experience that you wouldn’t normally get anywhere else.