'Whatever
happened,' I say to my wife, 'to Hungarian red wine? We used to drink
a ton of it.'
'It
was horrible, wasn't it?' she says, baring her teeth at her new
smartphone.
'It
was, quite. But not quite horrible enough.'
'How
do I delete an app?'
My
phone is so dumb that I don't have apps as such. On the other hand, I
do have a working phone. I take the opportunity to drive home my
advantage.
'It
was really, really cheap. And quite drinkable, in 1990.'
'Why
don't you help me for once?'
'Bull's
Blood? Whatever happened to Bull's Blood? We used to drink a ton of
it.'
'Now
look what you made me do. I've got rid of the browser, and the
browser is the one thing I wanted.'
'So
you couldn't look something up for me on your smartphone?'
'The
browser's gone!'
'About
Hungarian wines.'
Normally
she would hurl her phone at me with a cry, only the thing is so new
that I know she won't. Thwarted, she has to growl instead, unable to
decide whether to growl at me or the smartphone. Two easy goals in
the space of five minutes, I tell myself. I saunter off to my old
desktop computer, feeling that the day is not going too badly.
But
the problem remains. I want some old-school Hungarian red, but where
is it? The big three supermarkets - Tesco, Sainsbury and Asda - only
seem to do whites. Bafflingly, an online supermarket wine aggregator
lists a Hungarian Cabernet Sauvignon from Asda, followed by Not
Available and No Price, so I guess that line may have bitten the
dust. Asda themselves list a Bulgarian
Cabernet Sauvignon, but, like the other two supermarkets, they only
seem to sell Hungarian whites.
Waitrose
sell a white, too, and I know this because I actually wrote about it
two years ago: Eva's Vineyard Chenin Blanc. Back then I called it 'A
wholly transparent straw-coloured wine beverage whose colour did not
change as a result of being exposed to the air' which induced 'a
pleasing floral throb in my temples'. Clearly I was on top of my
game, in those days. More surprisingly, the celebrated Fiona Beckett
has also written it up, noting that it'd be 'Good for a bank holiday
barbecue to which you've impulsively invited the entire
neighbourhood.'
Even
more surprisingly, and in the same piece, she draws our attention to
Eva's Vineyard's own Merlot, which is listed by Supermarket Wine at
the shatteringly sensible price of £3.99.
Even more surprisingly than that,
the page on which the Merlot sits is graced by a single outsider's
comment, inserted
by PK,
in which he quotes the transparent straw-coloured crap review I
had written nine months earlier about the Chenin Blanc. I am now
consulting myself at several removes about a wine I think I might, in
this world, want to buy on a web page which refers to a different
wine altogether. This opens up such a dizzying avenue of perspectives
that I have to go and lie down.
It
is also the case that I am no nearer a cheap Hungarian red, because
although Supermarket Wine puts it up there, Waitrose's own website
doesn't, and it's certainly the case that only white is on sale at
the branch down the road.
What
else? Well, I can order something red online from the Hungarian WineHouse, but their cheapest is £10.80
a bottle, about three times the price I was hoping to get away with.
Or I could get some actual Bull's Blood from DrinkSupermarket, at
a much more bearable £5.69,
but now I'm starting to ask myself, how badly do I want this stuff?
At best it's a whim, at worst a folly, and the thought of making up a
case and waiting three days for it to arrive makes me lose whatever
enthusiasm I once had. I mean, a cheap Hungarian red is an impulse
nostalgia buy or nothing at all. I can't even remember what it was
about those reds that now seems so irresistible. Apart from their
simplicity, incredible cheapness, robustness. Did they have a
particular dusty, granular quality that, back in the Nineties, came
over as sophisticated?
I
return to the kitchen, where my wife has got her smartphone working
again.
'It
was in the rubbish bin,' she announces, smugly. 'So I just pulled it
out of the rubbish bin and put it back on the start page. What did
you want to look up?'
'Nothing,'
I say. 'Nothing at all.'
CJ
I am looking for a bottle of Bulls Blood too - for an orient express tasting - with postage they come up to £20 which is more than I wanted to pay (£15 is average).
ReplyDeleteHas anyone found any?