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Of Wines Less Ordinary "I love old Bordeaux, Burgundy and Rhone wines, especially those in the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s," Paulson shared. Despite being the owner of a mighty collection, he was nevertheless a picture of gentility, eager to share his wine experiences as he rattled off name after name, label after label, vintage after vintage. "The thing about these older vintages is that I always get very nervous before they are served, even when I know how it tastes like," he humbly revealed during a tasting and lunch session conducted at Au Jardin Les Amis. He was referring to the 1964 Château Gruaud Larose, St Julien, Bordeaux and 1953 Bonnes Mares, Bouchard, Bourgogne generously shared from his own cellar. How one set foot into such fields may be a mind boggler, but to Paulson, this was a natural process. It was initially the golf club activities that he was invited to as a student studying dentistry at the Royal Dental Hospital that exposed him to wines. When he moved to Germany ("and with more money," he added), he started buying wines at auctions and selling some of his collection so he could add on others. Eventually he started up this business in 1986, which he runs together with his wife, Bridget. "Most of my wines are from Bordeaux, really, but I have started taking an interest in white wines and Austrian wines recently," he said, eyes twinkling behind the horn-rimmed glasses. He further explained, "Austrian white wines are the greatest white wines in the world. They have the body and high alcohol content and are as voluptuous as a Burgundy but have the acidity and freshness of German wines." This factor positions the wines as what he termed, "good food wines", especially when encountering the spicy nature of Asian food. To prove his conviction, the dishes on the menu during the luncheon by Chef de Cuisine Galvin Lim had Asian hints upon his request. The 1999 sauvignon blanc Hochgrassnitzberg, Polz and 2000 riesling Smagard Achleiten, Prager were served alongside a delectable dish of succulent fried prawns with poached oysters, silver sprouts and light curry emulsion, paired to the T. "I suppose I can say I am fortunate enough to have tried most of the great Bordeaux," he said with a blissful smile. And as one eagerly asked, what is the greatest wine you've ever drunk? "The Château Mouton Rothschild '49. It's wonderful every time I try it and it's got less than 11% alcohol. Just goes to prove that high alcohol does not always improve the aging ability of the wine!" he commented. He was quick, however, to caution that he stands apart from wine brokers. "Wine brokers don't own bottles and usually will not do the shipping and only sell by the case. I cater more to the consumer level," he explained. Although he has had buyers from Singapore who order wines from his collection online, this is the first time Paulson has been to Singapore. Collectors in Asia, he identifies, are similar to those in certain parts of Europe. "Countries like Germany, Austria and Scandinavia have started drinking serious wines in the last 20 years. I see that there is a parallel between Austria and Asia in that one is starting to ask 'what should I buy?' So they look at wine journalists and magazines and point charts," he said. This presents a contrast to other parts in Europe - the people in the wine growing countries of Italy, Spain and France have been drinking wine since young and have developed their own tastes, so they don't need to refer to Robert Parker or wine scribes. Ironically, despite being associated with 'great wines', France is not the best market for mature wines. The French, according to Paulson's years of experience, thrive better at making wines than their wine knowledge. "If you go to a restaurant in Bordeaux and ask for a mature wine, you will probably only be able to get a '95 or '96," shared Paulson. Great Britain, on the other hand, has traditionally been buying wines from Bordeaux for hundreds of years, as compared to the clientele in Paris that only started drinking them about 20 years ago. Today, he is able to identify two types of customers. "Firstly, you have those who buy for their collections and tasting. However, increasingly, especially in places like Germany, it is getting popular to give someone for their birthday the wine produced in the year they are born in!" As he sipped his glass of 1999 No. 8 Welschriesling Trockenbeerenauslese
produced by his good friend and winemaker, Kracher, he concluded with
a dash of rare wine gospel, "I hope people will realise how well
Austrian wines match the food in Asia. Most of the winemakers I know
will love to be represented here." JT |
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The first wine I tasted, or rather the first wine I tasted and liked was an old white Port my father used to serve at home with dessert on weekends. I loved the sweet fruit of the Port, quite a difference to the harsh tannins of the reds served with the main course. My next contacts with Port was during my time as a student in London when I occasionally was invited to dinner in a gentlemens- or a golfclub. These dinners invariably ended with a decanter of Vintage Port being passed clockwise around the table and I have been very fond of this wonderful drink ever since. One highlight of my wine career was being enthroned as a Cavaleiro to the Confraria do Vinho do Porto at a magnificent cermony at the Palácio da Bolsa followed by a procession through the streets of Porto. The history of Port is very closely linked with the British and it was their wars with France during the 17th and 18th century that made them search for other sources of wine to replace the not any longer steady supply from France and particularly Bordeaux. Portugal was an ally of Britain and thus an increasing amount of trade took place with wine, cotton and fruit traded for British textiles. These red wines were basically dry simple wines, but the British had a special fondness of deep coloured, strong wines with some sweetness, so the wines of Douro were coloured with elderberry juice and some brandy was added to the casks before shipping to make the wine cope better with the ship journey. No one is really sure when it became the custom to make Port as sweet as it is now, however 1820 was a vintage that was renowned for its sweet, dark and full-bodied wines and the producers started to add ever increasing amounts of brandy to the wines to get a wine of the style asked for in Britain. Port is made from grapes grown within a demarcated region along the river
Douro and its tributaries, this is a vast area with very varied microclimates
and, as as someone once said, "A place with eight months of winter
and four months of hell". This is the most spectacular wine region
in the world with its extremely high steep slopes making one wonder how
it is possible for humans to work these terrasses. There are more than
a hundred different grape varieties found in the vineyards of Douro often
growing in a wild mixture next to each other as no one really cared what
was what in the old days. Now much work has been done in analysing which
varietals fit best to the different soils and microclimates present at
each particular vineyard, and there is an increasing quality of the grapes
being produced now. The most common varieties are Tinto Cão, Tinta
Roriz, Touriga Francesa, Tinta Barroca and Touriga Nacional. Types of Port. Ports aged in wood. Tawny Ports without a vintage or indication of age are quite simple Ports to be drunk young. Tawny Ports with an indication of age are a totally different matter as these mostly are of great quality. Most Port houses produce a 10, 20 and 30 years old Tawny. The age indicated means that this is a blend of different vintages with an average age of 10, 20 or 30 years. This is where a Port house can show its own typical style through skillful blending of several lots to produce a characteristic taste being consistent from year to year. This is not unlike the way a Cognac or a Champagne from a great producer gets crafted.These Ports are very undervalued and offer great value for their prices. Colheita Ports are Tawny Ports from a single vintage having aged in wood for at least seven years before being bottled, it is however common to find Colheitas that have been kept in wood for much longer being bottled according to command. These are very long lived wines and it is very popular to present someone with a bottle from his or her year of birth as a present. A curiosity are Garrafeira Ports, these are only produced by Niepoort - one of the few still family-owned Port houses. The Port is aged for seven years in wood and then transferred to large antique glass demijohns containg about ten Liters. These wines retain their freshness extremely long and I greatly enjoyed several glasses of the sensational 1931 at Dirk Niepoorts wedding this summer. Ports aged in bottle. Late Bottled Vintage Port or LBV. Vintage Port. When to drink Port. Tawny Ports and Colheitas are wonderful on their own at the end of a meal or on a cold winter afternoon in front of an open fireplace. A Late Bottled Vintage Port works very well with strong meat dishes, particularly Steak au Poivre where its power and sweetness contrasts beautifully with the sharpness of the pepper. Vintage Port is the perfect drink with cheese, particularly blueveined cheeses like Stilton or Roquefort and I can not imagine a christmas without my Port. Port has been getting increasingly popular in the last ten years with rapidly growing new markets the whole world over as more and more winelovers gets to know and love these unique treasures. Do try a Port and let yourself get seduced by its charm. |
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Grüner Veltliner - the worlds greatest white wines? Results of a blind tasting. I have just arrived back from Vienna where I had been arranging an interesting
comparative tasting of Chardonnays from all over the world. Four years
ago I was asked by the Austrian Wine Marketing Board if I would like to
arrange a comparative tasting to see where Austria was standing internationally.
I agreed to do this under certain conditions, the first being that I had
free choice to choose the wines for the tasting myself - I did not want
to lend my name to one of those tastings where one tries to make certain
wines look good by comparing them with wines from poor vintages or producers
from other regions. The other condition was that it had to be judged by
a truly international jury. Regarding the choice of wines, I asked the growers or their importers themselves, where possible, what they would like to show, in other cases I asked reknowned specialists and wine journalists for suggestions. All in all I think it is a fair selection of wines from the different wine regions of the world. The only exception is Australia, where I had asked one of their most important wine journalists to select the wines for me, unfortunately the wines did not arrive in time and we had to try what we could find in Vienna on a short notice. The jury consisted of 39 wine journalists and other experienced tasters from 13 different countries. The wines were tasted blind in flights of 6 and were scored on a 100 point scale, the highest and lowest score not counting. There was also some bottle variations and here only the good bottles were scored. First we tasted 18 wines from 1999 and 2000. Here the winner was the 1999 Grüner Veltliner Spiegel Alte Reben from Fred Loimer in Kamptal, ahead of the 2000 Grüner Veltliner Exceptional Reserve from Freie Weingärtner Wachau - probably the worlds best cooperative winery. In the third place came the 1999 Chardonnay Monte Bello from Ridge Vineyards, California. We then tasted 12 wines from 1995 to 1998. Here the winner (and overall winner of the whole tasting) was the 1997 Grüner Veltliner Ried Lamm from Willi Bründlmayer in Kamptal. I would like to add that it was his 1995 Grüner Veltliner Ried Lamm that was the overall winner 4 years ago as well. In second place came Mondavi's 1998 Byron Chardonnay Nielson Vineyards followed by another californian wine that 4 years ago also showed very well, the 1995 Chardonnay Mer & Soleil from Chuck Wagner of Caymus Vineyards. Finally 6 mature wines from 1990 to 1992 were tasted and the 3 austrian
wines took all the medal placings. In first place the only Grüner
Veltliner in the flight - the 1990 Grüner Veltliner Vinothekfüllung
from Weingut Knoll in Wachau. Second place was taken by the 1990 Chardonnay
from Weingut Bründlmayer in Kamptal and third place by the 1992 Chardonnay
Ratscher Nussberg from Weingut Gross in Styria. A complete list of the wines placed in order with their average score: 1. 94,64 1997 Grüner Veltliner Ried Lamm, Bründlmayer, Kamptal. The value of a tasting like this may be well be argued and should not
be taken too serious. |
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Austrian sweet wine - a concise history. The history of sweet winemaking in Austria is on one side very long, dating back to the middle ages, on the other side it is a short one, as great sweet wines have only been produced on a regular basis in the last 10 to 20 years. Sweet wine can be produced by three basic methods: by picking frozen
grapes and pressing these carefully, thereby leaving the water in the
form of ice crystalls behind. These are called "Eiswein" or
ice wine. The first Trockenbeerenauslese known in Austria was the legendary "Lutherwein" from 1526 produced in Donnerskirchen near the Neusiedlersee in Burgenland. This wine was so highly regarded that as wine was taken out of the cask, washed pebbles would be added so as to keep air out to prevent a too rapid ageing of the wine. It is said that the wine from these casks was drunk for over 300 years. The most famous sweet wine of Austria came from the town of Rust where small amounts of healthy grapes were added to grapes affected by botrytis to produce "Ruster Ausbruch". This wine was similar in style to the famous hungarian wine of Tokay, as a matter of fact the area now known as Burgenland belonged to Hungary until 1921, when the people of the region voted in a referendum to belong to Austria rather than Hungary. The most prosperous time for the Ruster wines was during the 16th and 17th centuries, but they still remaining popular until the drying out of the shallow Neusiedlersee between 1865 and 1871. Sweet wines were still being produced in Austria after this, but never
with any regularity or with quality being of great importance. During
the 1960s the demand for cheap sweet wine in Germany grew so large that,
as not enough could be produced at home, wine was imported - mainly from
Austria and Italy - to be sold as german Beerenauslesen and Trockenbeerenauslesen
in the supermarkets. As low prices was the prime criterium, quality suffered
but noone seemed to care. He has had an enormous influence in Austria and there are now a large number of young winemakers producing lovely sweet world class wines. Most of these come from the area around the Neusiedlersee as the conditions for Botrytis are perfect here. The topnames from Rust include Feiler-Artinger, Peter Schandl, Ernst Triebaumer, Weingut Wenzl and Heidi Schröck. Other top growers from Burgenland include the Velich brothers, Helmut Lang, Martin Haider, Willi Opitz, Gerhard Nekowitsch, Tschida-Angerhof and Josef Lentsch who also runs one of the best restaurants in the area. It has never been the tradition to make sweet wines in other regions of Austria, but in some years Botrytis would affect the grapes so rapidly and massively that you couldn't do anything but sweet wine with them. In the last ten years however, a growing numbers of winegrowers have been leaving grapes on the vines in the hope of Botrytis developing. Among the first in this field was Toni Bodenstein from Weingut Prager in Wachau, very fine wines have also been produced here by Emmerich Knoll and Franz Hirtzberger. The allround winemaker Willi Bründlmayer has long been making very good sweet wines, as does Fritz Wieninger in the austrian capital Vienna and Johann Reinisch on its outskirts. Even Manfred Tement from Styria on and off produces impressive TBAs from Chardonnay or Morillon as it is locally known. Sweet wines used to be the most sought after and expensive wines throughout
the centuries, often being reserved for royalty and nobility. Unfortunately
they seemed to get out of favour during the beginning of the 20th century,
in part due to the prohibition in the USA and the russian revolution,
Russia and USA belonging to the largest importers of top sweet wine at
the time. |
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A short history of austrian wine: Wine has been grown in Austria at
least since the days of the romans and was for centuries mainly in the
hands of the church. Contrary to France and Germany, Austria does not
have a history of a small number of premium wines with a higher reputation
and price than their peers. The great bulk was sold for local consumption
at low prices and usually drunk the year following the harvest. Austrian
wine was almost totally unknown outside of its own borders and the export
market was in the hands of a small group of winemerchants selling wine
in bulk. |
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Burgenland is austrias second largest winegrowing region. It borders Slovakia in the north, Hungary in the east and Slovenia in the south. Hardly any other region in Austria (and for that matter, Europe) has experienced such a growth in quality and diversity of their wines as Burgenland in the last 10 to 15 years. It now produces world class sweet wines, very impressive Chardonnays and increasingly interesting red wines. This is historically a very interesting region so I will try to describe
its historical background in short. The region was now mainly under hungarian influence with hungarian being the official language. After the the First World War and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire a referendum was held in 1921, where two thirds of the population voted for Burgenland to belong to Austria rather than Hungary. The period that now followed were one of poverty and large numbers of the population emigrated to other parts of the world. After the Second World War the region slowly recovered but its reputation as a wine producing area was not very high. Only in the 1980s did things start to change for the better. The climatic conditions of Lake Neusiedler with its warm pannonian
climate and the large number of shallow pools of water leads to the
development of botrytis or "noble rot" of the grapes. For
this to succeed you need a combination of healthy grapes, humidity and
warmth. These conditions can cause the microscopic fungus Botrytis cinerea
to grow on the grapes causing numerous minute pores of the grape skin,
allowing water to evaporate thereby shrivelling the grapes and concentrating
their sugar content. These wines are called Trockenbeerenauslesen or
Beerenauslesen. In my opinion this is also the method producing sweet
wines with the most complexity and elegance. Other famous regions for
these types of wine are Sauternes, Alsace, Tokay and the german regions
along the rivers Mosel and the Rhine. He has had an enormous influence in Austria and there are now a large number of young winemakers producing lovely sweet world class wines. Most of these come from the area around the Neusiedlersee as the conditions for Botrytis are perfect here. The top names from Rust include Feiler-Artinger, Peter Schandl, Ernst Triebaumer, Weingut Wenzl and Heidi Schröck. Other top growers from Burgenland include the Velich brothers, Helmut Lang, Martin Haider, Willi Opitz, Gerhard Nekowitsch, Tschida-Angerhof and Josef Lentsch who also runs one of the best restaurants in the area. The white wines from Burgenland do not as a rule have the minerality and "nerve" of the whites from Wachau or Langenlois, but some great Chardonnays are being produced here. Particularly the "Tiglat" from Weingut Velich, which in a recent "blind" tasting in London came top of a group of 21 Chardonnays from the very most famous producers in the world including many top producers from Burgundy. Other good Chardonnays are produced by Paul Achs, Ernst Triebaumer and Birgit Braunstein. It is however the red wines from Burgenland that are the hottest wines
in Austria at the moment. This is where the changes have been the greatest
in recent years. Burgenland is a great area for taking a holiday with its agreeable climate, historic sites, the bustling Neusiedler See, a wonderful Nationalpark, good food, charming people and of course their fabulous wines! |
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Château La Mission Haut Brion |
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If asked, it is very likely that I would nominate Château Latour
as my personal "Desert Island Wine". In other words, if I was
only allowed to drink one wine for the rest of my days, I would chose
Latour. Latour has been mentioned as a separate estate for over 700 years and
was early on planted with vines. At the later part of the 17th century
a few estates in Graves and Médoc started to produce the style
of Bordeaux we know today. For the first time wine was sold under the
name of the estate rather than the village or the region where it was
produced. The status of Latour has for over 200 years never been questioned - a
feat that can not only be the result of good winemaking. So there must
be something else to explain why it still stands out in a class of its
own even in these competitive times where vineyard management and winemaking
techniques are getting globally standardised. Latour has about 60 hectares of vineyards in 3 plots. The wine for the
Grand Vin (about 175.000 bottles) comes from the largest plot surrounding
the château - L'Enclos. The wine from the other two plots as well
as the wine from L'Enclos that do not quite reach the quality expected
for the Grand Vin go into Latours excellent 2nd wine - Les Forts de Latour
( 140.000 bottles) or as a simple, but good Pauillac. The ownership had remained in french hands until 1963 when the majority was sold to british owners - the Pearson group. It was a hard blow for the french pride and President de Gaulle was said to have commented that "at least they can't take the soil away". 30 years later in 1993 Latour was back in french ownership when Francois Pinault, a succesful businessman bought the estate. He thereby fulfilled a longtime dream, but takes no active part in the running of Latour. This is done by a young french team under the leadership of Frédéric Engerer who, unusually, did not have a background in the wine business. But an understanding of international business and management talent is increasingly important in running an estate of this calibre and a lot of changes have been made in the last ten years. Fortunately these have been to fine tune the wine rather than to alter its basic character. There have been changes in the vineyards treating different parcels individually according to its needs in order to get better grapes every year, also harvesting parcel by parcel. The winemaking facilities have also been improved to take this into account and to be able to produce the best wine possible. I am certain that at Latour, having one of the greatest terroirs on earth, one will not be tempted to change the wines character to pamper to popular demand for big, jammy wines to be drunk young. I have been fortunate to drink my fair share of bottles and can hardly
remember ever having been disappointed. It is true that Latour often gets
underrated when young, sometimes appearing too tough but time has proven
many a wine critic wrong. Latour has a wonderful and unique terroir and the people in charge lets this express itself in the wine, producing one of the most distinctive, stylish and majestic wines in the world again and again and again. |
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Wine is the most wonderful of drinks produced by the hard work of winegrowers to be enjoyed by wine lovers all over the world, but is it also suitable as a financial investment? There are a number of arguments that speak for this, particularly after
the negative experiences on the stockmarkets in the last couple of years.
Wine is an asset just like gold or real estate. A great wine can never
become worthless -if the worst comes to the worst you can always drink
it. An advantage to real estate is that you can sell it bottle by bottle
according to your needs. I have a customer who sells me a couple of bottles
from his wellstocked cellar every year to finance his holidays. Anyone
who has been buying the "right" wines at the right moment can
show a very nice gain indeed. Which wines are suitable as investments? Only wines of highest quality produced in limited numbers from a clearly
defined area and with a long "life" ahead. The most important
examples are the top wines from Bordeaux. These wines have proved their
quality over centuries. Only a few wines from outside Bordeaux have "Investment
Potential", namely some great wines from Burgundy (e.g. Domaine Romanée
Conti and Leroy) and Rhône (Jaboulet, Guigal and Rayas). White wines
are only in very rare cases suitable as investments. Only the very best
sweet wines come into question but these rarely obtain spectacular price
increases due to their limited market. What factors determine demand? The demand for a wine is first of all depending on its quality and the judgement of this by wine critics and other opinion makers. The american wine critic Robert Parker is still the single most important of his kind, particularly when it comes to determine the demand for the "En-Primeur" trade where the wines of the latest vintage is offered in the spring after the harvest. The danger of investing in the "En-Primeur" wines is the fact that the wines can develope quite differently and not live up to the promise of an early cask sample. It is no big secret that the most important wine journalists get to taste samples from selected rather than average casks. Another factor adding to the insecurity is that no one knows what following vintages will be like. The demand for a young wine will decrease if an even better vintage is to follow. What factors determine supply? The supply is the number of bottles of a wine available at a particular time. This is first of all determined by the amount of wines originally harvested - Pétrus or Le Pin are good examples of wines obtaining extremely high prices because of their very limited production. Secondly, the supply is determined by the age of the wine. A top wine from Bordeaux usually needs about 10 years to reach maturity, before this time only relatively few bottles will be drunk. The supply during the first years after the harvest is high and only after reaching maturity does the supply drop with each bottle enjoyed at dining tables all over the world. A third factor is the number of bottles actually being offered on the market - as long as the wine is being kept in private cellars rather than in the warehouses of winemerchants or wineries there will be increasing prices. Another determining factor is the willingness of private collectors to part with their treasures. This happens as a rule when they urgently need money, particularly after having made losses on the financial markets. There are a number of important rules that one should follow to be succesful in this field: 1. Buy the right wines - a good knowledge about wine is of utmost importance. 2. Provide good storage condition - wines in imacculate condition will obtain better prices. 3. Buy and sell wine in their original cases. An unopened original case of a wine will achieve a higher price than a split case will. 4. Your profit will obviously depend on your ability to buy as cheap and sell as expensive as possible. A private person buying his wines from the trade pays the winemerchants mark-up as well as VAT. On selling back to the trade the same factors will be taken into account in establishing the price being paid. It is clear that a wine need to increase about 50% in value before any profit remains for the investor. By buying and selling at auctions a bit more gain is possible but there are insecurities regarding the condition of the wines and the final prices achieved. Increasingly popular alternatives are the few Wine Investment Funds on
the market. Their advantage is that experienced wine-professionals are
in charge of buying and storing the wines. These have good contacts in
the trade and can therefore buy at better prices than the private individual.
Some funds will also sell the wines and can as a rule achieve better prices. It is important by all funds to inform oneself regarding the seriosity
and the reputation of the persons in charge. The author of this article, Jan-Erik Paulson, is the owner of a rare-wine company since many years and also manage a Wine Investment Fund. |
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The guests are arriving on their own, in couples or in groups. Most are very smartly dressed, some more casually but all have one thing in common - a look of anticipation in their eyes. The smell of food wafting in from the kitchen heightens this anticipation as the guests are sipping their bubbly and making small talk in the bar. At the same time the hectic and tension in the kitchen is reaching fever pitch, the design of the plates are discussed, guesses about what time the specific dish being prepared by one of the star chefs will have to be on the plates are being made and the last touches of the first course is in full flow. The guests are now taking their seats in the wonderfully decorated restaurant of Hotel Krone, greetings are being made to friends and fellow guests some, one has not seen since the last years festival. There is a hush and then silence as H. B. Ullrich, the owner and host of this lovely hotel wishes the guests welcome before passing the microphone to Michael Herrmann who reads out the menue that will be presented this evening. After much oohs and aahs it is now time for the first winemaker of the evening to present his or her wine while it is being served to an eagerly awaiting audience. The wines are usually served in two's or three's to each course, making an interesting subject for discussion and comparison while the first course is being brought in by the efficient staff under the watchful eyes of Gabriele Kliemt, the leader of the service brigade. The same procedure goes on throughout the evening, the diners working their way through white wines from Rheingau to deep reds from regions like Napa Valley, Ribera del Duero or Bordeaux to finish up with the noble sweet wines from Rheingau. The courses are in most cases created by different chefs from all over the world and this makes it an exceptionally exciting evening. When else do you get the opportunity to taste dishes from chefs the like of Harald Wohlfahrt, Dieter Müller, Johannes King, Willi Mittler, José Ramon Andrés and Cal Stamenov sipped down with wines from Breuer, Weil, Künstler, Pichon Comtesse Lalande, Lynch Bages, Pesquera, Vega Sicilia or Lafite in one evening? How did it all start? Bernhard Breuer from Rüdesheim in the Rheingau was invited to present his wines at the "Masters of Food and Wine" Festival in Carmel, California some years ago. Having found it a lovely experience he started toying with the idea of making something similar at home. If it works on the shore of the Pacific why shouldn't it work on the shores of the Rhine? He spoke to his friend H. B. Ullrich, owner of the Hotel Krone in Assmannshausen and Kronenschlösschen in Hattenheim and the location of the festival was found. The ideal person regarding the logistics of such a large event was Michael Hermann, the organiser of the annual Rheingau Music Festival. It was now only a question of fixing the programm for the first festival. Thanks to the good contacts to the californian sister festival the programme took shape. It had to be a different country or region as main guest each year, the first being California. Top chefs were asked to take part for one or more days, wineries were asked to supply wine for vertical tastings, and other programms like cigar tastings, cooking demonstrations, boat trips and excursions being planned. It was all very exciting as great personalities like Christian Moueix, Chuck Wagner, Heinz Winkler, Joachim Splichal, May-Elaine de Lencquesaing, Thomas Keller and many others promised to come to Assmannshausen. It was a success from the start and this years festival was the sixth
with Spain as the guest country lasting a full twelve days. 3.500 food
and wine lovers took part in 30 different events which were booked to
an amazing 98 %, some dinners were fully booked within a day of the
programme being presented. 4.600 bottles of wine were opened and poured
in 28.000 glasses, 55 Kilograms of foie gras and 3 Kilograms of truffles
were used by 25 chefs producing 125 courses served by 30 waiters. The
prices for the different events varied from 28€ for a presentation
of top wines from the Rhine and the Ebro, 35€ for a tasting of
rare old sherries, 250 € for a 5-course dinner with 8 vintages
of Vega Sicilia to a Rarities dinner led by myself for 1,350 €. Back in the main dining room it is now past midnight and the dinner is drawing to a close with coffee and brandy and the noise level has been increasing with each course and wine. The happy crowd are leaving for home or for their hotelrooms but some drift into the bar which is gradually filling up with winemakers, chefs and waiters having cleared up the dining room. Most chefs are still fully charged with adrenaline and find it difficult to go to sleep and there is a noisy mixture of different languages as colleagues from several countries try to bring their points over. Everyone seem to understand each other and the atmosphere of friendship and joy is tangible. Wine and beer flows until the early hours of the morning and there are only a few hours of peace and quiet until the tables are being laid for the next days luncheon. This goes on day after day during the festival with a routine that has been perfected over the years. Sometimes one has to improvise as in the case of the year where the Rhine was only a few centimeters away from flooding the hotel kitchen hours before the Grand Gala Dinner for 220 guests or when a temperamental chef threw away all the white truffles for his signature dish to be served two days later because they were not up to his expectations, forcing Mr. Ullrich to catch the next to plane to Italy trying to get truffle hunters to get their dogs to find a sufficient quantity in time for the planned dinner. There has been cases of chefs missing their planes and the story of the famous three-star chef refusing to leave the kitchen for the after dinner presentation of the chefs, as he was not mentioned first. However things have always worked out well and most guests happily come back year after year. |