A few months back we sold-out of the well-priced and terrifically easy-drinking, smooth, accessible little Chianti Classico “Terra Firma” 2007. I was more than a wee bit miffed that the Importer ran out without pre-warning me. Anyway, Henry and I tried the new 2008 Vintage yesterday. Differently styled but perhaps even better value than the 2007. The 2008 is more substantial, more structured, fruitier. A big and better wine overall. It will cellar and obviously soften in time but for a round a tenner this is a very engaging and in truth, practical little Tuscan. A Party Wine or for a simple Monday night…
Chianti Classico “Terra Firma” 2008 Tuscany at £ 10.95 per Bottle
(Or £ 10.00 per Bottle for 3 Cases)
In stock early next week.
Weekly indulgence:
12 Bottles of:
Chapelle-Chambertin Grand Cru 2001
Domaine Drouhin-Laroze at £ 55.00 per Bottle
Charity Kick
Earlier in the month we had a small soirée for a customer who is due to run the New York Marathon and he will be aiming to raise a few thousand pounds to donate to his chosen Charity, Whizz Kidz. During the evening about a dozen or so bought some specially selected half-cases of wine and as such we are just about to donate a tad over £ 500.00. Thank you to Christopher T. and good luck in the Marathon.
Silly Season
I do realize that Russian leaders always end up being embalmed for gory public consumption but surely Putain, I mean Putin has jumped the gun a bit? Whatever work he has had done, whatever nail bar he is visiting, he simply looks like a Madame Tussaud’s waxwork figure. A taut, shiny face that looks as if he should be on a mortuary slab. It is supposed to be about vanity but I truly don’t understand it as there are almost always only ever two results – the dummy, so to speak either looks worse, or worse still, different. A different person. What is the point? Shane Warne…Simon Cowell…Gordon Ramsay… When I looked on the front page of the Sunday Times Magazine I didn’t recognize the man but the title said Jamie Oliver. I looked again and again and I still couldn’t equate it. Sometimes it is just plain photography that can make you look totally different but whatever me mate Jamie has or hasn’t done (and I have no clue), I wouldn’t recognize him in the street. Come on men, what’s so wrong with just being a man?
I have written much this year about the relative crassness of Bordeaux. Whilst the financial world hangs by a long and narrow thread, many Châteaux owners restrict and brashly market to hype their wares. An agricultural product but one that can at times enchant. Nonetheless, these are not the times to be stitching up your customers 40% or even 10%. 5% in current times would be my ceiling. Now I do speak from a position of ignorance in that, is Jade Jagger actually a talented designer in her own right or only or mostly offspring of someone pretty famous on the music scene? I genuinely don’t know. Nonetheless, as I turned the page of the F.T. Magazine I almost choked on my Weetabix as I saw a full-page garish, Versace like, advert of gold rococo swirls on black heralding “JADE JAGGER SIGNS THE NEW JEWEL IN THE CROWN OF DUCRU BEAUCAILLOU. Jade Jagger.” Has Ducru-Beaucaillou altered their famous yellow etiquette? No. The new jewel is a second wine. A second wine in Bordeaux serves its purpose (except perhaps at Pontet-Canet) but laughable prices of Carruades-de-Lafite aside, they will always and simply be that, a second wine. This is a sub £ 30 bottle of wine and it is being dressed up like an Essex dog’s dinner. Please, please Mike Leigh, start scripting your own jewel of these bouffon buffoons. (The advert is in our Shop if you wish to take a peak and judge for yourself its veritable merits.)
Still in the Sunday Times I read a pretty glowing review on “One On One” by Craig Brown. A clever idea as it takes famous people (starting with Adolph Hitler) and links encounters with other famous names, until it has run full circle (back to Herr Hitler). Some of the stories are genuinely interesting, beginning with Herr H being run over by an Old Etonian. Shame, if he’d been an Old Harrovian he probably would have done a better job of it and History would have been oh-so different. Others of interest, James Dean and Helen Keller but far outweighed by Kipling; Madonna; Michael Jackson, Nancy Reagan, Jackie Kennedy, Duke of Windsor, Andy Warhol…etc where I must confess that their little encounters are just that and in truth dreadfully dull. Furthermore, the writing I just do not feel gives it any lift whatsoever. A good story is still a good story and dull is as Warhol knows, dull. Moral of the story, don’t believe glowing reviews. Id est, disregard every piece of advice I have ever pushed out!
Technically I am not actually here, just a figment of my own imagination. I am on my Summer Holiday though I didn’t make it across the Channel as intended and I am still as much in the Shop as not. Henry will be here the rest of the week however. That has given me a chance to skip out and see a few films. A wee bit slow and simple is “Dolphin Tale” (with Morgan Freeman) but it is about a dolphin so you kind of have to take your children to see this one. It opens this Friday. “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” is equally slow but in a masterful way, brilliantly evoking the 1970’s with wonderful, almost painful, photography as it holds one firmly in the dour and grimy decade that the ‘70’s really was. This could not be more different from the Bourne Supremacy, Ultimatum etc., and for that difference alone, worth seeing.
Henry has finally persuaded me to get a Blackberry. Am I dumb or dumber? No Jim Carey comparisons please.