So
I'm having a glass of wine with a pal, and it's rather a nice Seyval
Blanc. It's chilled, lightly effervescent, extremely tasty and, to
be perfectly frank we're eating a bit of smoked salmon at the same
time, and all is good - but here's the thing: our wine is home-made
and is served from an old Tesco Cava bottle which arrives stoppered
with a crown cap, like a beer bottle. Have we gone mad?
No. The pal - whose wine this is, and who has made it himself,
with his own hands and someone else's bottles - is actually a big
deal in the wine beer and spirits industry and
has a background in biochemistry. He can make beer, he can make wine,
he can probably service my car. As he puts it, 'Making wine is a
mug's game. It's so easy. Especially in comparison with beer, which
is a complete pain'.
Naturally,
one casts one's mind back to homemade brews of the past, just about
all of them bleakly underwhelming - from the teenage homebrew beer I
used to neck, sediment and all, just to get plotzed in a mate's front
room; to my Pa-in-Law's ineffable spider
wine,
made with bits of tendrils, weedkiller and, key ingredient, dead
insects. But one would be wrong to lump the Seyval Blanc in with this
tragic historical debris.
It's
made using the méthode
traditionelle,
which in this case means not much more than crushing and pressing the
grapes (which come from an allotment in the sunny outer suburbs of
London; used to be a microvineyard in Sussex, but too much travelling
involved), sticking the juice in a steel bin for a week or so before
decanting it into a second bin, and leaving it until some time the
following year, when the new wine is siphoned off and rudely bottled
and stoppered.
Of
course, there's more to it than that. 'They all have some acidity
correction,' he notes. 'Nothing more than precipitated chalk.' I
carefully note down precipitated
chalk,
back in the school chemistry lab, equally adrift. 'And this one's got
glycerine in it, to add to the mouthfeel. When I was making country
wines, years ago - ' wines made from anything at all, parsnips,
rhubarb, chicken wire ' - I used to tip in a load of glycerine I got
from Boots.'
'Uh
huh,' I say, as if I understand.
'And
at the end, when I'm bottling the wine, I put in a bit more yeast and
sugar, to create the effervescence and up the alcohol content.
They're English grapes, so they never give much more than 8%. I have
to add sugar early on to get it to around 10. On the other hand, the
great thing about Seyval Blanc, is that it's idiot-proof. And it
makes quite a nice sparkling wine.'
I
find myself reflecting helplessly that if that's all there is, why
don't we all do it? But I am not a trained biochemist with years of
experience in the making and flogging of mass consumer beverages. All
I can do is observe that his 2012 homebrew is a bit tart, with that
slightly brassy sherryish introduction one rightly fears in hobbyist
wine; although it mellows nicely by the finish. The 2011, on the
other hand, is just delicious. Bit of moss in the nose, a hint of
lychee further along, well-controlled acidity, altogether an
extremely shapely drink with a finish that keeps on going. The only
thing one has to remember is to decant it first, on account of the
fine lees at the bottom of the bottle. Fortunately, my pal has the
steadiest pouring hand I have ever seen.
'It
gets better the longer you leave it. The yeast dies and releases all
sorts of things that improve the flavour. Trouble is, we tend to make
a start on it as soon as it's drinkable. After six months, we're
saying, this
is really good.
But by then there are only a couple of bottles left.'
Is
it too late to acquire this kind of competence? Have I wasted my life
buying drink instead of confecting it myself, in the back yard? I
forget to ask the unit cost per bottle, but it can't be too high,
even allowing for the expenditure on a couple of stainless steel
tanks and a press (which can be also used for apples, pears, some
laundry). Oh, but there is a cloud in the sky: 'The biggest pain,'
the pal says ruminatively, 'is getting clean bottles. We keep our old
champagne bottles and scrounge the rest from friends and neighbours.
But do you know, they don't all rinse them out before giving them to
us?'
'Some
people,' I say. 'Don't tell me we've drunk it all.'
Fascinating. It so happens I found myself in Chesterfield market last Thursday where I stumbled across Keith who is the Derbyshire Winery Ltd. He makes & bottles a range of wines in Bakewell from imported grapes, using the necessary appellation of British Wine. I tried a good range of reds, a rose and a fruit wine and came away with 2 bottles. I thought they were beautifully made. I would recommend them to anyone who wants to buy a very unusual Xmas present. (He charges either £7 or £9).
ReplyDeleteInteresting - my only problem would be £7+ for a domestic wine - cavilling, perhaps, but it would probably stop me from taking the plunge
ReplyDeleteOh CJ, my view in a nutshell (I assume PK took an exeat while you were replying.) Mrs LP expressed surprise I had gone over a fiver when I told her. But I think that a few quid is a justifiable outlay if it supports a bloke doing something astonishing in the dales. And you would get full value when you served it blind to dinner guests. I would - if we ever had any.
ReplyDeletePostscript. Just seen in M&S a wine made from E European grapes in what is said to be London's only winery. £16 a bottle! Reckon 7 quid's a bargain for Ch. Bakewell.
ReplyDelete