Filed under WineTech

3 days in Lisbon and all I did was piss off a bull

And there was also that axe guy…

Recently took a quick jaunt to Lisbon in the hope of becoming a  better person, better soul and most importantly a better blogger, as I was attending the world-famous European Wine Bloggers Conference.

It was a three-day event, broken down in to a day of forums and seminars (all useful in their own way), some tastings and finally a tour day in a wine region, I went to Tejo to look at a cork forest.
Now, when people talk about cork forests it’s not like any forest you or I can imagine.  It’s more like a few trees in a field, I was imagining some sort of highly dense forest with animals swinging from cork branch to cork branch but no, it’s just like an orchard.
The trip was jointly sponsored by Quinta Lagoalva and Amorim (a cork company).

So, how was I able to piss off a bull and get close to some guy with an axe??? Watch the video below to find out.

Alas, the bulls didn’t chase me, but I got in trouble with the corker farmer guys…this was the bull (sorry this link is weird after you click bull there, there is a small menu of links on the page, clink on “animals” – that’s the bull!) eyeing me up btw, mean looking fella.

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This is the only photo I took. It's a naked cork tree. The bark (which is the cork) was recently harvested, the red colour is natural.

The whole affair was organised by the triad of Gabriella and Ryan Opaz (catavino.net) and Robert McIntosh (wineconversation.com) all I have to say to them is GREAT JOB!

What did I learn besides corks?

The thing I learnt , surprisingly enough, wasn’t how to best use Google to bring traffic to my site, nor tips on producing better videos for my Imbibe video stuff…no, the  most ongoing subject matter of the whole event: bloggers shouldn’t accept samples!  I kid you not, there seems to be a real big anti-accepting samples thing going on in the wine-blogging world.   In fact, if I were to use this conference alone, I would think that bloggers are the most morally driven breed around.

Having worked in the trade for a while, I’ve just accepted samples as a way of life.   And this any anti-sample thing was mentioned in pretty much every seminar I attended.  I got so bored of hearing it that I ended up sending emails out to PR’s asking for samples to be sent to the most vocal of the anti-group.

The two main reasons why sample acceptance is supposedly bad seem to be: 1) said sample will sway said bloggers away from the pureness of the blog and 2) that once samples are accepted, bloggers are obligated to report on them despite not liking them.  I am sure there are loads more but honestly my ears were bleeding so bad from the anti-sample’s shrill that I didn’t get them all down.

C’mon guys, really? I for one would like to put the record straight for spiltwine.com: WE ACCEPT ALL SAMPLES!  If they don’t cut the mustard they won’t get written up, easy as that.  Which leads nicely too…

Wine(s) of the week!

The Bibendum wine tasting was a few weeks back and here are a couple of wines I liked.  (Note to other wine bloggers – please don’t chastise me, they weren’t samples but I tried them for free.)

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Shampoo d'Anglais

Chapel Down, Primrose Hill, Brut Prestigre NV (Kent, England) £18.11

46% Reichensteiner, 36% Muller Thurgau, 18% Pinot Noir

It isn’t too bad a price for a non-Champers bubbly but hey, we gotta support our home-grown! Fresh nose of raw apricot and peaches and a little bit of biscuit, nice crisp palate with more stone fruits and some crisp citrus.

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French stuff

Ch des Sarrins, Les Sarrins Blanc de Rolle 2007 (Provence, France) £17.25

100% Rolle

How do I manage to find the most expensive bottles in the room?  This Southern French wine had loads of personality.  The nose smelt of an unburnt matchstick (without the sulphur).  Lots of melon flavours as well as some dried herbs with a sort of dirty, edgy palate that shined brightly against some of the highly polished NW wines on offer.  Liked it a lot!

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a miscellaneous compilation – but all about wine

Bottles made from other dead bottles, arrghhh.

I only had a quick ten minutes in the Wines of South Africa tasting a few weeks back, but ten minutes was long enough to see these bottles below; a range of wines from the collaborative efforts of winemaker Charles Back and fashion designer Mark Eisen, donning the catchy name of Back & Eisen.  In wine I am not usually sucked in by marketing, and in pretty much all cases believe that the wine itself should stand out.  At first glance here, I walked right past thinking it was a wrap around stick-on label…and who’s gonna be impressed with that?

Back & Eisen Bottles

There is a huge chemical equation that creates those designs.

It wasn’t until I held the bottle and realised not only are these graphics etched on but for the first time with wine I couldn’t care less what was in the bottle, because the bottle itself was so cool.

Lucky enough once trying the wine, I found out all was not lost, the wines are easily drinkable, but meant for mass appeal (as too are the bottles, I imagine). Admittedly, I only liked the Shiraz/Mourvédre blend (dark berry fruit/smooth, slightly oaked palate/semi-lengthy finish).  And while tasting, my geeky gadget side (which rarely rears its head at trade-tastings) took over, I was obsessed with the design and how it all worked…

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iphone photo

So, I found out that the process is kind of complicated, excuse me for a second whilst I don my lab coat and safety specs to explain…

First it’s a 360° design…that means the graphic has no ending edge and has to be perfect and continuous the whole way round (if this doesn’t make sense…ask me later).  That continuous flowing design, I’m told, is difficult to do.
Second, the graphic itself is a mix of ink + powdered fine glass + inky wax base.  The bottles are made from some recycled glass so all those greenies out there can be happy :-0 yay! Oh and the bottles themselves are 100% recyclable

Finally, when put under extremely high temperatures the three ingredients from step two fuse themselves to the bottle surface…and presto you get Dino DNA. Okay maybe not but you are left with what Back & Eisen are hoping is a souvenir bottle.

They are going mid-range with the price though and expect to see these hitting the shelves at the £10 mark (I hear Liberty Wines are going to import them).  Oh and I must thank Mark Eisen for the design procedure.

Mischief and Mayhem

The headline says it all; M&M are a fairly new Burgundian negociant based in Aloxe Corton (they are not related to the multi-coloured, sugar-coated chocolate of the same name, blues the best btw).
While I was down there a month ago one of my sommelier buddies suggested I should check them out…so lucky enough I found them!

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The mischievous Michael Ragg is only one of the M's

But unlike most French tasting rooms, which usually need an appointment, or a knock at some Napoleonic sized door (I mean big door from Napoleonic times, not small door because Napoleon was short), that never gets answered, M&M has an open door policy.  It’s quite an inviting place too.  In fact, it’s pretty hard to miss in the relatively small village of Aloxe Corton.

I tried a few of the range and sadly my tasting notes are boxed up at the moment (I’m moving…hate moving).  What I do remember is that on a whole these wines are very approachable and competitively priced, the generic Chardonnay and Pinot Noir were particularly nice and will cost about £12-£15.  Some of the Mischief and Mayhem wines are available here at Armit Wines

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Finally, I’m of to the European Wine Bloggers Conference this weekend and will try and give you an update on what’s going on there! I really hope it’s worth the investment and it sounds like it’ll be great fun!

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