So
my Brother-in-Law is set to go on one of his cross-Channel dashes in
search of drink, and very kindly asks if he can get anything for me
while he's there. There
being The Calais Wine Superstore, chosen by him not least because it
is strong on New World wines, his kind of wine, and also because they
have given him a free ferry ticket for himself, his partner, and his
car. If there is the tiniest inconvenience in this deal, it is merely
that he has to go in mid-January, and a Severe Gale Force 9 is
forecast.
The
only other inconvenience, or at least it would be an inconvenience to
me, is having to work out how much drink to buy in order to maximise
the differential in duty between French and English prices, as well
as make enough of a turn on it to cover the cost of the petrol. But
this is easy for him, because he is a financial wizard, such a wizard
that he actually aims to save about £300 net by getting his drink
this way.
Off he goes in the severe gale, but both he and P&O are made of the right stuff, and the Force 9 blows but fruitlessly, and he returns with the booze and his partner and the car headlights pointing at forty-five degrees up into the night sky on account of the incredible quantity of drink in the back.
Off he goes in the severe gale, but both he and P&O are made of the right stuff, and the Force 9 blows but fruitlessly, and he returns with the booze and his partner and the car headlights pointing at forty-five degrees up into the night sky on account of the incredible quantity of drink in the back.
And
what has he bought on my behalf? Well, I had a quick scan of the
Calais WIne website before he left and succumbed to the old old
tendency: in other words, I dived straight to the bottom as if I was
trying to salvage a Mediterranean wreck, and found this generic 2011Côtes du Rhône going for an eye-wateringly sensible £2.69 a bottle. Usual cockamamy reasoning: at this price, it doesn't
matter what it tastes like. I'm the only one drinking it. If it
doesn't kill me, I'm ahead of the game. I can always use it for fence
paint.
Get
me some of that, I said. My Bro-in-Law thought he could squeeze in
half a case.
Now,
as it turns out, he has been able to squeeze in a whole case, which
is extremely decent of him, only for me, alarm bells are starting to
ring. It is not exactly a question of retrospectively being careful what
you wish for, but something like that. Six bottles of poisonous crap
I can deal with, if indeed it turns out to be poisonous crap. Twelve
bottles, on the other hand, are a bit more of a burden, a bit more difficult to get rid of,
even if they do cost the same as a single bottle of good wine, even
if they cost virtually nothing. How many chicken stews will twelve
bottles make? How many marinades? How many solitary tussles with my
liver will I have to endure? The stuff will be hanging around
forever, like a curse.
Still.
It comes in a nice bottle with a cork, and certainly looks the part.
In fact it looks almost as good as a 2007 Saint-Émilion Grand Cru
which I drank last week (not at all bad, suave but a bit one note, a
bit George Sanders) or a 2009 Crozes Hermitage, also drunk last
week (not bad either, a bit more frantic but still one note, kind of
Al Pacino), so that's promising. And the cork comes out okay,
too, not something you can always take for granted at this level.
The
taste, though, the taste. Straight off the bat, there seems to be no
nose, and no finish. In the middle, however, there's a disturbing
amount of action, involving a tangled blackberry sensation, some
sandpaper, and most worrying, an invisible chemical gas I can't put a
name to, the kind of smell that comes out of a car body shop or the
duty-free section of an airport in the tropics. I start to fret that
it, whatever it is, might blind me or cause irreversible brain
damage. I am, frankly, scared. So I cork the bottle up again and leave
it for a good six hours.
By
evening, it's calmed down enough to drink without hurting, and,
paired with some really aggressive Italian cheese, it could almost be
wine, with a personality oscillating wildly between Sid James and
Rutger Hauer. And in the morning, I feel no lingering effects beyond
the usual ones of age and alcohol. So I think we can get through
this. The lesson learned, being to let the stuff breathe for about
half a day before drinking. And keep the windows open. And probably
not attempt more than one bottle a month. And choose more wisely the
next time someone offers a helping hand. And, now I think about it, I
might as well update my will, just in case.
CJ
PS: Two weeks later, CJ is still trying to get through the wretched stuff:
http://www.sedimentblog.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/tales-of-occult-2011-cotes-du-rhone-pt.html
http://www.sedimentblog.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/tales-of-occult-2011-cotes-du-rhone-pt.html
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