bubbles - Drinks trade
Transcription
bubbles - Drinks trade
your news, your views October/November 2014 issue 43 DRINKS: SPIRITS MIXING IT WITH VODKA DRINKS: FEATURES & INSIGHTS PETER BRIEN RETIRES AUSTRALIA’S FIRST FAMILIES OF WINE CHAMPAGNE SALON WHISKY GIRL - LAURA HAY SPECIALTY RETAILERS AUSTRALIAN DRINKS AWARDS - TURN OVER BUBBLES CHAMPAGNE, SPARKLING & DRINKS: BEER THE WORLD OF BEER DRINKS: WINES VICTORIA CHAMPAGNE, SPARKLING & PROSECCO PROSECCO VICTORIAN WINE REGIONS AUSTRALIA’S HIGHEST CIRCULATING LIQUOR INDUSTRY MAGAZINE THE JOHNNIE WALKER, BLACK LABEL AND DOUBLE BLACK WORDS, THE STRIDING FIGURE DEVICE AND ASSOCIATED LOGOS ARE TRADE MARKS. ©JOHN WALKER & SONS 2014. DDJ1569_HOW_DPS_270x440mm.indd 1 1/10/2014 3:55 pm Contents Contents Contributors Matt Kirkegaard is a Brisbanebased freelance beer writer who has developed a national reputation as an independent beer educator and advocate. October/November 2014 26 Winsor Dobbin has been a journalist for over three decades. Winsor is a former sports writer and foreign correspondent, but now writes about wine, food and travel for a range of national and international publications. Ken Gargett is a former lawyer, winner of the Vin de Champagne award (which he credits as being “a long time ago”) and freelance wine writer. Ken is a regular wine contributor to drinks weekly. 47 34 78 98 84 drinks trade INSIGHTS FEATURES REGULARS 44 ALSA Conference 10News 26 Peter Brien Ben Canaider is a monoaward winning drinks writer and lifestyle commentator. Ben has also written for television and is a regular contributor to radio. In between, Ben has also managed to write a number of award winning books. 47 World of Beer 24 Global News 28 Australia’s First Families of Wine 54Vodka 42 Aussies Abroad 32 Whisky Girl - Laura Hay 72Victoria 45 Beer & Cider 34 Champagne Salon 78 Champagne, Prosecco & Sparkling 52 Spirits & Liqueurs 37Henkell 38 Specialist bottle shops 64 G. Vine Bartending competition 67Wine 86 Champagne, Prosecco & Sparkling Tasting Panel 96 Trade Activity 98 The Eye 94 drinks Library drinks trade 07 Editor’s note CREDITS PUBLISHER the drinks association EDITORIAL Editor’s Note PUBLISHING EDITOR Ashley Pini ashley@hipmedia.com.au MARKETING DIRECTOR Leone Cruden leone@hipmedia.com.au ASSOCIATE EDITOR Hannah Sparks hannah@hipmedia.com.au EDITORIAL & SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR social@hipmedia.com.au Lauren Hunter INTERN Sarah Ayre CONTRIBUTORS Welcome to the October/November edition of drinks trade magazine. This is a very special edition for the drinks industry as we celebrate the winners of the Australian drinks Awards, recently held at The Star in Sydney. The inclusion of exclusive interviews with the winners and a detailed look at each category has made this a bumper edition of 160 pages - the largest publication of our eight year history. Dave Upson, Matt Kirkegaard, Winsor Dobbin, Ken Gargett, Ben Canaider, Nigel Weisbaum DESIGN ART DIRECTOR Evelyn Rueda evelyn@hipmedia.com.au SENIOR DESIGNER Gilly Bibb, Glenna Gabriel ADVERTISING NATIONAL SALES MANAGER Eoghan Hennessy eoghan@hipmedia.com.au NATIONAL ACCOUNT MANAGER Chris Wheelerchris@hipmedia.com.au You can simply reverse the edition if you want to get straight to the winners, or take your time and check out the pages of our regular October/November edition. This issue is packed with interviews and features, along with our annual Champagne, Prosecco and Sparkling tasting panel. This month it’s all heating up, leading into the most important trading period of the year. There’s nothing new when you hear that the industry is ‘doing it tough’, and I’ve fielded a number of views that tell me that there’s little point in focusing on the difficulties we face, but rather how we can be doing it better, with some useful suggestions on how the drinks industry should be working closer together to bring us to a common goal. With that in mind we bring you insights into those excelling in our industry, particularly specialising in their areas of expertise. Turn to page 38 and 39 to see the specialist bottle shop insight. This edition we feature high quality mixers to go with your premium spirits, while also looking at mixing with vodka. Rarely given the coverage it deserves, the mixers in our bars and on bottle shop shelves have such an impact on the quality of the final drink; logically you would expect it to get the attention it deserves. drinks trade spoke to a number of on-premise venues to get their view on quality mixers, the feature (including vodka) starts on page 54. It’s all about the bubbles at this time of year and we’ve got this well covered. We also welcome Winsor Dobbin’s article on prosecco, booming across new and older markets alike. Ken Gargett shares his knowledge on vintage versus non-vintage (NV) Champagne and our own Hannah Sparks talks all things sparkling. As if that wasn’t enough, Ben Canaider shares his Victorian wine region expertise. Cheers! Ashley Pini Publishing editor www.drinkscentral.com.au Produced and contract published by: DIRECTOR: Ashley Pini GENERAL MANAGER: Melinda Virgona 169 Blues Point Road, McMahons Point NSW 2060 Ph: 02 9492 7999 | www.hipmedia.com.au | facebook.com/drinksmedia ABN: 42 126 291 914 All enquiries to: the drinks association Locked Bag 4100, Chatswood NSW 2067 www.drinkscentral.com.au ABN 26 001 376 423 The views expressed in drinks trade are those of the respective contributors and are not necessarily those of the magazine or the drinks association. Copyright is held by the drinks association and reproduction in whole or in part, without prior consent, is not permitted. Other drinks association publications include: drinks weekly drinks guide online drinks guide drinks yearbook Member of Publishers Australia 08 drinks trade melinda@hipmedia.com.au ACCOUNTS: accounts@hipmedia.com.au GRANGE • BIN 707 • RWT • MAGILL ESTATE • YATTARNA • ST HENRI RESERVE BIN A • BIN 389 • BIN 407 • BIN 150 • BIN 28 • BIN 51 • BIN 8 • BIN 2 • BIN 9 1844 THE PENFOLDS COLLECTION. A FAMILY OF FINE WINES, EACH WITH A DISTINCT CHARACTER, QUALITY AND PROVENANCE. A TESTAMENT TO THE ENDURING ‘HOUSE STYLE’ AND WINEMAKING PHILOSOPHY THAT PENFOLDS HAS PROUDLY UPHELD SINCE 1844. NUMBERS CAN BE EXTRAORDINARY PENFOLDS.COM Penfolds_PostLaunch_DRINKS_TRADE_270x220_AUS.indd 1 06/10/2014 17:36 News NEWS Industry news from global markets 2014 RIVERINA WINE SHOW RESULTS The Wine Museum in Griffith played host to the 40th annual Riverina Wine Show in September, which saw the 2013 Santolin Wines Individual Vineyard Chardonnay take home Best Still Wine of Show. For the fourth year in a row, a Barossa riesling won the Best Dry, Floral Style White Trophy and yet again the Hunter Valley dominated in the Best Semillon category. Heathcote shiraz again impressed the judges, not only claiming the Shiraz Trophy for the second time this year, but also the Best Popular Premium Red Trophy, thanks to the De Bortoli Windy Peak 2013 Shiraz. WFA 2014 OUTLOOK CONFERENCE The Winemakers’ Federations of Australia (WFA) 2014 Outlook Conference, which took place in Adelaide earlier in October, highlighted a need for the Australian wine industry to unite. Tony D’Aloisio AM, President of the WFA said: “An important pre-requisite to our industry taking charge of its future is unity. An effective unity or united voice is the only way of maximising our chances of success.” Following the conference, the WFA has begun to implement Actions surrounding profitability across supply and demand, health and alcohol, oversupply and supermarket power. A full list of the actions can be found on the WFA’s website. AUSTRALIAN DISTILLERS ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCE NOVEMBER 12 CONFERENCE Australia’s peak industry body for craft distillers, The Australian Distillers Association (ADA), has announced its new Executive Committee and renewed commitment to further strengthen the burgeoning Australian craft distilling community. The new Executive Committee, selected at the ADA’s recent Annual General Meeting, will be led by recently designated president Stuart Gregor from Four Pillars Gin and newly elected vice president Cameron Syme, from Great Southern Distilling Co. To inject new life into the Australian craft spirits industry, the ADA will hold a conference on November 12 in Melbourne to discuss future plans. BROWN-FORMAN CORPORATION QUARTER YEAR RESULTS Brown-Forman Corporation has released financial results for its first quarter that ended July 31, 2014. According to the results, the company grew net sales by 3 per cent to $921 million, and Australia also registered solid gains in the quarter. Darry Osborn OAM and Wolf Blass AM at the WFA Outlook 2014 Conference. 10 drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates WOLFGANG BLASS AM TURNS 80 Australian wine industry icon Wolfgang Blass AM turned 80 on 2 September. In celebration Wolf Blass created the limited edition Master Langhorne Creek Pasquin Vineyard Cabernet Shiraz 2012 and released the 2014 Wolf Blass Luxury Collection, both distributed by Treasury Wine Estates in Australia. TASTE CHAMPAGNE In August, Tysen Stelzer hosted Taste Champagne at the Sydney Maritime Museum. According to Tysen, Australia has been placed among the fastest growing Champagne markets in the world, with a growth rate topped only by China and Russia. Australia’s growth remains more remarkable however, due to the fact that both China and Russia each consume a mere quarter of the volume of champagne consumed in Australia. AperolSpritzAU GET READY FOR OUR SUMMER CAMPAIGN WHERE VODKA GOES TO GET READY Vodka Cruiser is owning pre-drinks this summer, with an integrated media campaign worth over $1 million, focusing on radio, women’s magazines and social media. Half of all Light RTD sales are made over Summer,* don’t miss out on the key consumption period. An extensive partnership with Nova FM Brand ads, advertorials, and editorials 37K+ Facebook likes, and social bloggers as reps 2014 NOV 2015 DEC JAN FEB RADIO MAGAZINES RETAIL MEDIA SOCIAL/DIGITAL Contact your Asahi Premium Beverages representative or call our customer service line on 1800 090 378 to find out more. *Aztec MAT to July 2014. Summer is defined as Nov 2013 to Jan 2014. APBCRU0106_TradePressAd_270x220_v2.indd 1 8/10/2014 5:52 pm News EBIQUITY MERGER THE BOTANIST GIN LAUNCHES AUSTRALIA’S FIRST FORAGED COCKTAIL COMPETITION This spring, The Botanist Gin is holding The Botanist Foraged Cocktail Competition for the first time in Australia. The competition, now open for registration, will be narrowed down to just 40 bartenders, who will be challenged to get creative and come up with a bespoke and seasonal cocktail made from foraged, local ingredients. Entrants will need to document their cocktail creation and judges will be looking for innovation, passion and creativity. The winning prize is a trip to Islay in Scotland to meet The Botanist’s Master Distiller Jim McEwan of Bruichladdich distillery. The Botanist Gin is distributed by SouthTrade International in Australia. CONGRATULATIONS Sandra Clarke from Tyrrell’s Wines notched up 28 years of service at the Hunter Valley-based winery in August. Sandra said commenting on her time at Tyrrell’s Wines: “My 28 years at Tyrrell’s, working directly with Bruce, has seen many changes and an evolution…from Bruce and I doing everything from export (with Bruce travelling overseas six months of the year), sales and marketing, and managing the business as a whole...and how over the years technology has morphed the way Tyrrell’s conduct their business globally.” Leading media consultancy business Ebiquity has merged with its sister company Faulkner Media Management. The merger sees the two combine offices at a new location in Sydney, both operating under the Ebiquity name. The transition in Australia has been anticipated since Ebiquity’s global head quarters acquired Faulkner Media in 2011. The alignment came about as Ebiquity saw opportunity to align Faulkner Media’s advertising intelligence capabilities with its own media consultancy capabilities. Head offices globally have now each begun to merge with Faulkner Media in their respective countries. “Essentially both businesses compliment one another”, Richard added. While Ebiquity’s advertising monitoring services will continue and remain the same, with Faulkner Media the company will now also offer advertising intelligence services. This includes services such as pitch and agency reviews, spend estimates, training and media consulting, and media benchmarking, Richard told drinks weekly. Additionally the merger now extends Managing Director at Ebiquity, Richard Basil-Jones’ role to oversee the Media Consultancy and Ad Intelligence services for both the Australian and New Zealand business. The new address: Level 10, 50 Miller Street, North Sydney NSW 2060 T. 0292 997 911 TWE 2014 FULL YEAR RESULTS TWE has announced its 2014 full year results, reporting EBITS of $184.6 million and net sales revenue per case up by 7.9 per cent. The full year dividend however remained unchanged from the previous year at 13 cents per share. “Having taken the necessary steps in the final quarter of fiscal 2014 to drive improved performance, including increasing consumer marketing, reducing TWE’s cost base and addressing structural challenges within the business, I am confident the company is now positioned for future success,” CEO Michael Clarke added. NEW WINGARA WINE GROUP CEO Following seven years as CEO of Australia’s Wingara Wine Group, Diego Jimenez returned to Spain to resume a senior role with Wingara’s parent company Freixenet. Jose Maria Ferrer assumed the role of CEO mid-August after Diego’s departure. Jose Maria joined Freixenet in 1989 and has previously worked for the brand as President of Freixenet USA and recently as General Manager of Freixenet, Spain. drinks trade 13 News RAISE the BAR It’s interesting talking to venue managers and owners about the challenges of running a profitable operation. Often the conversation swings towards the need to keep wage costs down. A lot of analysis is done around the percentages of wages and margins. Of course monitoring costs is critical in a successful operation, but is it sometimes done to the exclusion of actually raising revenue? This kind of management is reactive rather than proactive. Management would certainly take the time to ‘counsel’ a supervisor who has let staff stay on roster for too long, but often overlook the opportunity of training the team to sell more product. If our strategy changed to focus on increasing the revenue from existing patrons, the wage cost percentages would naturally improve. Getting new customers in the door is a tough gig when compared to increasing the spend-per-visit of our existing patrons. The best marketers we have are our service team if they are trained to perform properly. Guests do not only visit our establishments because they are hungry or thirsty; what people are looking for is an experience, and the human players in that exchange are critical. There are so many options in today’s consumer driven world and that makes it more important to stand out. Food, beverage and surroundings can be swiftly devalued if the service team is not delivering what your venue promises. Encourage your team to ‘play the part’, to: • Genuinely engage with customers; • Identify opportunities to enhance consumer’s experience; and • Make customers feel like they belong in your venue. Loyal customers return because they remember how they felt during previous visits. By Dave Upson, Managing Director, Train My Venue (online hospitality and tourism training www.trainmyvenue.com). 14 LION H1 TRADING UPDATE Lion has announced its trading update for the half-year ending 31 March 2014. Results show that volumes across Lion’s total Beer, Spirits & Wine businesses in both Australia and New Zealand declined by 2.5 per cent. Lion’s market-leading portfolio in craft however continued to flourish, with James Squire 150 Lashes Pale Ale and The Chancer Golden Ale achieving doubledigit growth. FIVE RED STAR RATING FOR CHÂTEAU TANUNDA Château Tanunda has received a Five Red Star rating in the James Halliday Australian Wine Companion for the third year running. Additionally, the Château Tanunda 100 Year Old Vines Semillon scored 96 points, while over twenty of Château Tanunda’s wines received ratings over 90 points and ten wines scored 94 points and above. Château Tanunda is distributed by Australian Food & Beverage Group in Australia. TWC LAUNCHES NEW WEBSITE Australian eastern seaboard distributer The Wine Company has launched a new website. The website has been redesigned to provide the trade and general public with an in-depth insight into The Wine Company’s history, services, and portfolio offerings. www.wineco.com.au now features a new online request form for account applications and current TWC price lists. Viewers can now also sign up to The Wine Company’s monthly eNewsletter via the site. drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates HARDYS CELEBRATES A CENTURY POL ROGER OFFICIAL CHAMPAGNE PROVIDER FOR POLO IN THE CITY SERIES 2014 French Champagne House Pol Roger will partner with Waterford Crystal as the official Champagne provider for the Polo in the City Series 2014, to be held on 15 November. Australian Brand Manager for Champagne Pol Roger, Tim Evans, said the alignment between the exclusive Champagne house and Polo in the City was a natural fit. Polo in the City was established in 2006 with the aim of introducing the sport to a wider audience and attracting new players. Pol Roger is distributed by Negociants in Australia. New agreements to distribute to South Africa and Mexico, means that the Hardys brand is now distributed to 100 countries – a milestone achievement. For fifth generation Hardys family member William ‘Bill’ Hardy, this tremendous achievement reflects the hard work and talent of the Hardys team. “We have recently undergone some packaging upgrades and launched a number of products, so it’s been a busy 12 months. Reaching over 100 countries is testament to my great, great grandfather’s vision, and I am sure he would be very proud to reach a century,” said Bill. Hardys is distributed by Accolade Wines in Australia. DIAGEO RELEASES PRELIMINARY RESULTS Diageo has released preliminary results for the year ended 30 June 2014, which show the company’s net sales up by 0.4 per cent, while its fourth quarter net sales were up by 0.8 per cent. The results also showed positive consumer trends in Diageo’s higher priced categories, with Diageo’s reserve brands net sales up by 14 per cent. ALSA RETAIL INSIGHT NEW MODULE The Australian Liquor Stores Association (ALSA) has launched a new module to its Retail Insights Program. The new module - Getting the Most from your POS System aims to highlight the value of information a POS system can offer retailers. Mal Higgs ALSA Retail Insights Project Manager explains: “Many retailers are unaware of the number and depth of reports that are available from these various systems. These reports are an essential tool in managing a complex business such as a liquor store.” WOLF BLASS OFFICIAL WINE PARTNER FOR 2015 ICC CRICKET WORLD CUP Australian wine brand Wolf Blass will be the official wine sponsor of the International Cricket Council Cricket World Cup 2015. The partnership will see Wolf Blass wines exclusively poured at the seven stadiums hosting matches in Australia next year. The 49-match ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 tournament will kick off with Australia going head-tohead with England on 14 February in Melbourne. drinks trade 15 News SYDNEY TO HOST 2015 BACARDÍ LEGACY GLOBAL COCKTAIL COMPETITION For the first time in its history, the BACARDÍ Legacy Global Cocktail Competition will be held in Sydney, in 2015. Caroline Hipperson, BACARDÍ Global Brand Director said: “We are very excited to be bringing the BACARDÍ Legacy to Sydney next year. It is a perfect opportunity to celebrate and showcase a growing and influential Australasian bar culture.” CUB CHIEF MARKETING OFFICER RESIGNS Carlton & United Breweries (CUB) announced that Peter McLoughlin, Chief Marketing Officer, stepped down from his role on September 1 due to personal reasons. CUB’s Chief Operations Officer Mike Walsh said that Peter’s energy, positive approach, broad business acumen, and loyalty are among the many attributes that will be sorely missed by CUB. As the company looks for a replacement, Richard Oppy has taken over the day-to-day management of the marketing team. CELEBRATING 40 YEARS OF HUNTER VALLEY WINEMAKING 2014 is being hailed as the “vintage of the century” in the Hunter Valley, backing onto a standout 2013 vintage. And this was reflected at the recent 2014 Hunter Valley Wine Show. This year 20 trophies were awarded to Hunter Valley wines. Standout awards included the Dry White Wine of the Show, which was awarded to Tyrrell’s 2006 Vat 1 Semillon, while the Innovation Trophy, a new trophy, went to the De luliis Shiraz Touriga Nacional, and Draytons 1978 Tawny Port won the inaugural Silver Bullet award. 16 CONTINUED SUCCESS FOR YEALANDS FAMILY WINES Yealands Family Wines continues to celebrate on the back of more success this year, after receiving four gold medals at this year’s NZ International Wine Show. The company was awarded the gold medals for four of its wines from the recent 2014 vintage, including the Peter Yealands Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Gris, Yealands Estate Land Made Series Pinot Gris and Yealands Estate Single Block L5 Sauvignon Blanc. drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates INTRODUCING A NEW MEMBER OF THE FAMILY Matured in a higher proportion of sherry casks, which are known to deliver richer flavours Chivas Regal Extra uses the rarest malt whiskies in the blend for intense, deep flavours RICHER TASTE, MORE GENEROUS SPIRIT To order Chivas Regal Extra and POS materials, contact your Pernod Ricard Account Manager or call Customer Service on 1300 363 153 News Peter Gago CHINA’S BIGGEST SEARCH ENGINE LAUNCHES IN AUSTRALIA RECORDS SET AT WINEMAKER OF THE YEAR AWARDS Peter Gago, Chief Winemaker at Penfolds, has set records as the first dual recipient of both the Winemaker of the Year Award and the Len Evans Award for leadership at the Gourmet Traveller WINE Winemaker of the Year Awards for 2014 in association with Perpetual. Chairman of Judges Peter Forrestal commented: “Not only is Peter Gago an inspirational winemaker, but his tireless efforts worldwide as a roving brand ambassador have transformed his importance to Penfolds and broadened our perception of the kinds of leadership a winemaker can offer. He has a rare talent as a winemaker that melds an astute and refined palate, an inclusive leadership style and a clear sense of historical perspective, which enables him to draw on Penfolds legacy in fashioning modern-day wines.” At the end of September Baidu (www.baidu.com), the largest search engine in China, was officially launched in Australia. Owning a total 81 per cent of the search engine market in China, Baidu has a reach to over 508 million users – the equivalent to all Google Users in Europe and Asia, and is among the top five websites in the world. Official agent of Baidu in Australia, Bellimark, together with Incremental Marketing, will begin to integrate the search engine in this market over coming months. This launch provides a significant opportunity for the drinks industry to gain access to the Chinese market and widen its audience. “Baidu provides Australian businesses with the opportunity to advertise to the Chinese population through the biggest search engine”, said Michael Robson, Digital Director, Incremental Marketing. The launch is incredibly timely considering current prominent discussions surrounding the Australia-China Free Trade Agreement, with the President of China to visit Australia in November for further negotiations with the Australian government. To find out more about advertising on Baidu contact Michael at michael@incrementalmarketing.com.au or on 0407 914 102. INCREASE TO LIQUOR LICENCE FEES Effective as of September 1, new applicants and existing liquor licence holders are now subject to an increase in the applications fees for liquor licences, approvals, and authorisations to support the processing costs. More information about the liquor licences can be found online at www.olgr.nsw.gov.au OYSTER BAY WINES AUSTRALIA RE-NAMED Oyster Bay Wines Australia PTY Limited has changed its name to Delegat Australia PTY Limited. The change reflects the company’s global initiative to align itself with its parent company Delegat - maker of Oyster Bay and Barossa Valley Estate wines. Asides from its new Australian name, the company confirms that all other contact details remain the same. 18 drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates K6308SUN - ZUBROWKA Trade Presenter - Barfly Ad_230x250mm_FAOL.indd 1 1 News DAN’S CONNECTIONS Dan Murphy’s has recently launched a new initiative, which aims to help its customers find usually difficult to find products. The new initiative named Dan’s Connections works by linking customers to specialist and boutique suppliers across Australia and overseas. This is a fantastic opportunity for boutique suppliers who previously wouldn’t have had access to the market nationally; selling primarily through their cellar doors, restaurants and at local bottle shops. Additionally Dan’s Connections allows suppliers to have virtual consignment, which means they hold the stock, not Dan’s. Moreover, suppliers are able to self-manage their range on the site. HANDPICKED WINES UNVEILS NEW COLLECTION Handpicked Wines launched its new Collection and Vineyard releases through a curated art experience at the prestigious Olsen Irwin Gallery in September. Guests were invited to not only taste these wines, but to experience them through sight, smell, touch and sound. Guests also got the chance to mingle with Gary Baldwin, Chief Winemaker, and Chris Messerle, Senior Vineyard Manager, as they talked through how Handpicked Wines has progressed in a relatively short time since its foundation. Handpicked Wines recently picked up Best Victorian Wine at the VIC100 Wine Awards for its 2013 Collection Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir. Handpicked Wines is distributed by DMG Fine Wine in Australia. Turn to page 76 for tasting notes. TWE REJECTS SHARE PROPOSALS The Board of Treasury Wine Estates (TWE) has rejected the recent proposals from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P., and Rhône Capital L.L.C. TWE shareholders said they felt the offer of $5.20 per share undervalued the company. The Board, management and major shareholders believe instead that the company will drive value through plans such as reducing overhead costs and changing the Penfolds release dates, for example. TWE’s Chairman Paul Rayner said: “The Board’s focus continues to be to act in the best interests of all shareholders. Following the receipt of the initial, indicative proposals from the two parties, we believed it was in shareholders’ best interests to grant those parties the opportunity to conduct non-exclusive due diligence. That process has now concluded and the Board is confident in the strategic plans to grow the company and is looking forward to working with management to deliver value to its shareholders.” SS&S BEST WA ON-PREMISE TEAM Samuel Smith & Sons (SS&S) WA team has been recognised as the best wine supplier to the restaurant and catering industry in the state, receiving the long service provided award from the Restaurant and Catering Institute. “In a competitive market, Samuel Smith & Sons continue to focus on our three tenets of knowledge, service, and friendship to our customers,” SS&S Director of Strategy and Treding, Mr. Waterman said. 20 drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates MAURICE O’SHEA SHIRAZ 2015 OF THE YEAR McWilliam’s Wines 2001 Mount Pleasant Maurice O’Shea Shiraz was named as the 2015 Shiraz of the Year in James Halliday’s most recent Australian Wine Companion. The Maurice O’Shea Shiraz pays tribute to legendary Hunter Valley winemaker Maurice O’Shea, produced from the same vineyards as O’Shea worked on. PETER DRY WINS 2014 MAURICE O’SHEA AWARD DE BORTOLI WINES REFRESHES ITS DEEN VAT SERIES De Bortoli Wines re-released its Deen Vat Series with a new look in September. The label and series pay tribute to Deen De Bortoli – the brands founder – recognising his choice of easy drinking varietals, as well as his tradition of hand chalking the vats, which lends itself to the name Deen Vat Series. The new bottle design is available through De Bortoli Wines. Peter Dry, long-standing wine industry teacher, researcher, viticulturist, editor and writer, has been announced as the 2014 Maurice O’Shea Award winner. The Maurice O’Shea Award is held every two years and awards an individual or group for their outstanding contribution to the wine industry. Peter now joins the most highly regarded group of people in the Australian wine industry. McWilliam’s CEO Robert Blackwell said: “Peter’s contribution to the wine industry, through his research, teaching positions and industry roles, has been significant. There are few winemakers and viticulturists who have not been touched in some way by his work.” CCA 2014 FINANCIAL RESULTS Coca-Cola Amatil (CCA) has released its 2014 financial results for the half year ended 30 June 2014, which reflect difficult trading conditions in the Australian business. The results show that CCA’s overall earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation declined by 10.1 per cent, while net profit after tax declined by 19.0 per cent. Specifically in Australia, difficult trading conditions resulted in a 14.1 per cent decline in Australian beverage earnings. Left to right: CEO Rob Blackwell, Nick Dry (Peter’s son collecting the award on his behalf) and Chairman Jeff McWilliam. CRUSH WINES OFFICIAL WINE PROVIDER FOR POLO IN THE CITY SERIES 2014 Crush Fine Wines has become the Official Wine Partner of the Waterford Crystal Polo in the City. The partnership will see the boutique wine brand provide a selection of its range at all five national polo events, first starting in Sydney on November 15, before heading to Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, and Adelaide. Janek Gazecki, co-founder of Polo in the City, commented on the partnership: “It’s important to work with people that understand the event and we are excited about working with Crush.” drinks trade 21 News NEW COCA-COLA SKUS AUSTRALIAN WINE INDUSTRY’S FIRST LIFE MEMBER Industry Veteran, Phillip Laffer, has been named the first ‘life member’ of the Australian wine industry; an announcement made during the welcome reception at the Winemakers’ Federation of Australia Outlook Conference earlier in October. The accolade honours Laffer’s exceptional leadership and contribution to the wine industry in Australia; a career spanning more than 50 years working within a number of prominent Australian wine companies, including Lindeman’s and Pernod Ricard. Coca-cola South Pacific has added a new 250ml slimline can format for its COCA-COLA, COKE ZERO, DIET COKE, COKE with Vanilla, FANTA, LIFT, and Sprite soft drinks, in order to help address obesity in Australia. The new SKU features the $2 maximum price mark on the pack, which is the first time this visual has appeared on the COCA-COLA formats in Australia. The brand chose to market the new low price-point in this way to appeal to consumers and drive value and growth in the category. The release is being supported by an innovative multimillion-dollar multi-channel marketing campaign. The new SKUs are distributed by Coca-Cola Amatil in Australia. NEW DRINKWISE CAMPAIGN DrinkWise, in a joint initiative with its alcohol industry contributors, has released news of its latest campaign - ‘You won’t miss a moment if you DrinkWise’. The new campaign aims to encourage Australians to moderate their drinking at public events, and at home. The campaign was made public during this year’s AFL Finals Series, after DrinkWise won the backing of the AFL. The message was visible at grounds, in print, television and radio spots. ‘You won’t miss a moment if you DrinkWise’ was initially launched in response to consumer research, which found that this was a desired message to be promoted. DrinkWise Chief Executive John Scott says the response to the new campaign has been positive. CAMPARI 2014 FIRST HALF RESULTS NEW CRAFT DISTRIBUTOR IN AUSTRALIA Campari’s 2014 First Half Results show positive results, with First Half sales at 686.1 million (EUR), representing an organic change of +3.8 per cent and Group net profit of 57.3 million (EUR), representing a -0.5 per cent difference. Bob Kunze-Concewitz, Chief Executive Officer comments: “On the back of a weak first quarter impacted by Easter timing, the expected robust recovery in organic sales in most key brand market combinations led to positive full first half 2014 results.” New Zealand craft spirit distributor Neat Spirits has expanded into Australia via the merger of distributors Local Craft Spirits and Sa’Pere Drinks. Neat Spirits aims to showcase a number of international craft brands with its portfolio, including East Imperial Mixers, The West Winds Gin, 666 Pure Tasmanian Vodka, Plantation Rum Range, Pierre Ferrand Cognac and Liqueurs, Citadelle Gin and Vodka, Little Drippa Cocktail Coffee, and Moa Beer (Melbourne Market Only). 22 drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates WHAT DOES COFFEE AND WINE HAVE IN COMMON? K GOVERNMENT RESPONDS TO LIQUOR ACT REVIEW The NSW Government has released its response to the statutory review of the Liquor Act 2007 and the Gaming and Liquor Administration Act 2007. The review consulted both industry and community, and resulted in 91 recommendations, which aim to improve the regulatory framework for both acts. All 91 recommendations have a focus on increasing transparency to and efficiency of the acts, and to promote a risk based approach to enforcement and compliance. In response to the review several new measures will be actioned: 1. Escalating sanctions for licensed venues caught selling alcohol to a minor; 2. The introduction of a package of 12 late trades a year, which will allow some venues to drop from 2am or 3am closing back to midnight, but still be open later for key community events; 3. The creation of a new licence sub-category that will provide a lower annual licence fee for small wineries, distillers and craft brewers, recognising their lower risk profile; 4. And the development of a tiered training scheme to improve industry competencies and compliance by tailoring training for different industry sectors. arsten Ranitzsch, head of coffee for Nespresso, was recently in Australia launching the latest, and strongest, in the range of professional coffees - Nespresso Ristretto Intenso. Clocking 12 on a scale that had previously only gone to 10, Ristretto Intenso is not for the feint hearted. But ask Karsten about the process behind the coffee blend and similarities across the wine and spirits world are apparent. From fermentation, through to blending, terroir and single origin offerings, many of the same lessons can be learnt when looking to develop quality in the product. “Over the years, coffee has been treated in much the same way largely due to tradition and cultural influences.” “There are a lot of commonalities between the coffee process and what you find in wine and even whisky making. In coffee we’ve found around 1,000 aromas that are developed in the roasting process. Volatile and fragile aromas, that, over time, are over-layered by bitterness and cocoa notes.” In a recent survey commissioned by Nespresso and conducted by Galaxy Research, Australian’s love of coffee was confirmed, and what we hear anecdotally was backed up with statistics from the 1,175 coffee drinkers surveyed. One in three said they would actually refuse to drink an instant coffee if offered, while 80 per cent admitted to viewing and commenting on a host, based on the quality of the coffee. Moreover eighty-seven per cent of Australians admitted to giving specific instructions when ordering their coffees, with everything from strong or double shot (42 per cent) to not too hot (15 per cent). It’s clear that these days it’s not just about the food and alcoholic drinks on offer, but people have high expectations when it comes to their coffee, and rightly so. Nespresso Event- Mark Baulderstone, Shannon Bennett, Karsten Ranitzsch drinks trade 23 Global news GLOBAL NEWS Industry news from global markets AVL EXPANDS INTO CHINA Australian Vintage Limited (AVL) has announced a longterm, strategic Chinawide distribution agreement with COFCO Wine & Spirits Co Ltd. – a division of China’s largest food processing manufacturer and trade, COFCO. The agreement sees AVL function as the Australian strategic partner for the newly established Wine division of COFCO. WILLIAM GRANT & SONS ACQUIRES DRAMBUIE Premium spirits business and independent Scottish family distillers, William Grant & Sons, has acquired Drambuie Liqueur Company Limited – owners of the iconic Drambuie whisky liqueur brand. William Grant & Sons Chief Executive, Stella David, commented: “We have a passion and a reputation for nurturing and building brands. Drambuie is a natural fit for our portfolio, it has a very rich history and a great story to tell, and we are delighted to be in a position to start to re-engage with existing drinkers and to connect the brand with an entirely new generation of consumers”. At the time of print McWilliam’s Wines was still the distributor of Drambuie in Australia. WG & SONS TOASTS TO THE OPENING OF THE TULLAMORE DISTILLERY William Grant & Sons’ $50 million investment in the Tullamore Distillery has come to fruition, as the new distillery opened its doors in September. The opening of the Tullamore Distillery marks the return of whiskey production to Tullamore following a 60 year lapse and is reflective of resurging growth in the Irish whiskey sector. The new distillery features four hand crafted copper stills, six brewhouse fermenters, and will be capable of producing the equivalent of 1.5 million cases of Tullamore D.E.W. annually. 24 RECORD ATTENDANCE AT WINE AUSTRALIA TASTING IN JAPAN Wine Australia hosted its largest ever tasting in Tokyo in September, with a record number of 18 Japanese importers who showcased over 300 wines from 48 various Australian wineries and winemakers. Regional Manager for Asia, Hiro Tejima, commented: “Securing the largest turnout we’ve ever had at our annual tasting demonstrates the renewed excitement and interest in Australian wine in the Japanese market.” TAYLORS WINES CELEBRATES SUCCESS IN CHINESE MARKET At this year’s China Wine and Spirits Awards, Taylors Wines was awarded the Clare Valley Wine of the Year trophy for its 2010 Taylors Winemaker’s Project Barrel Selection Clare Valley Shiraz (yet to be released). In total Taylors won 21 medals. Overall, Australian wineries dominated this year’s awards, taking home 446 medals in total. drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates Enjoy Banrock Station responsibly. Our new look is sweet, and it’s coming soon! Change is good. For more information contact your Accolade Wines Area Manager or 131 492 THANKS! Helping Protect Our Beautiful Planet since 1995 TOGETHER WE’VE GIVEN AU$6 MILLION TO OUR ENVIRONMENT SO FAR Interview THE RETIREMENT OF LONGSTANDING LIQUOR RETAIL LEADER - PETER BRIEN This year, after almost two decades as Chairman of South Australia’s largest independent liquor retailer – SipnSave - Peter Brien retired. drinks trade caught up with Peter to ask him about what trends he’s seen during his time in the industry – what the position of independents was in 1966, in comparison to today. drinks trade: Your family has been the licensee of Alberton Hotel in South Australia since 1940. Did you work anywhere else before taking over the licence? Peter Brien: I’ve virtually worked in the Alberton Hotel since I left school. DT: When you took over the family business in 1987, what was the prospect then of being a licensee? PB: Well it was probably pretty marginal before gaming became big, but then that was a cash boost in which we could use to improve the pub. DT: And you were appointed as Chairman of SipnSave in 1966? PB: Yes. I was appointed to the AHA board in 1988 and then I became Vice President of the AHA in 1994. In those days the AHA were the controlling interest of SipnSave and usually the Vice President became the Chairman of SipnSave. DT: When you began as Chairman, what did your role entail and what was the outlook of the business? PB: Well basically it was to make sure we were competitive against stand-alone bottle shops; they had stolen a bit of the market from us and we needed to catch up. DT: Did AHA breakaway from SipnSave after that? PB: The AHA had to relinquish their controls of SipnSave to maintain their tax-free status. DT: What was the position of independent retailers in comparison to chains when you first started as Chairman, and how has that changed throughout your career? PB: Our biggest opposition then was the stand-alone bottle shops. During that time the chains had just started to buy into bottle shops; not so much hotels, that came later. It was during the mid-90s that they started to purchase bottleshops and that was when we began to see the beginning of the involvement of the chains in a serious way. 26 drinks trade DT: What have been the main challenges in your career as Chairman of an independent retailer? PB: Our biggest asset was having our own wholesaler, well an interest in our own wholesaler. We had a fairly big interest. Having that helped us remain competitive. DT: You were instrumental in creating the joint venture between SipnSave and the Liquor Marketing Group (LMG) in 2005. What were you hoping to achieve through the joint venture? PB: To be quite blunt, the only thing we needed out of joining LMG was critical mass. I think we lead LMG in our marketing and sales organisations and I think we probably still do. DT: What do you think will be the position of independent liquor retailers over the next 10 years? What challenges do you foresee? PB: I think there will be probably less independents, but better independents. I think independents will have to do things differently, like supporting wineries and suppliers who can’t get a look-in in the chains. DT: Tony Hurley has now been elected to take over your role as Chairman. How is Tony positioned to help continue to grow the business? PB: I think he’s an excellent choice and his family has interest in about ten or 11 hotels. They’ve already got a pretty large footprint in the industry so I think he’ll be excellent. DT: What do you have planned for your retirement? PB: A little bit more golf, a few more lunches, and just generally relaxing and enjoying life. I still have a keen interest in the Alberton; my son from England, he’s still running it and my daughter’s still involved. Enjoy Banrock Station responsibly. …and a new year, new look for our table wines Change is good. For more information contact your Accolade Wines Area Manager or 131 492 THANKS! Helping Protect Our Beautiful Planet since 1995 TOGETHER WE’VE GIVEN AU$6 MILLION TO OUR ENVIRONMENT SO FAR AFFW Australia’s FIRST FAMILIES of WINE In 2009, 12 of Australia’s leading family owned Australian wineries came together to form Australia’s First Families of Wine (AFFW). Together, the 12 represent generations of winemaking, which have not only upheld the Australian wine industry, but have driven it to where it is today. The group formed to celebrate and share their story. Spanning 16 of Australia’s infamous wine regions and four states, here, and in coming issues, drinks trade helps these families’ stories to be heard, speaking of their heritage, history, the custodians of their lands and the future of these family businesses – the next generation. Katherine Brown BROWN BROTHERS (VICTORIA) By Ross Brown I t was in 1885, at just 18 years of age, that John Francis Brown convinced his father to plant vines on their Milawa property in north east Victoria, forming the first ten acres of the family vineyard. However, it was not plain sailing from here, and the early days of the business and vineyard saw difficult times including a collapse in industry prices, phylloxera insect, the Great Depression and the First World War. Yet John Francis persevered and the vineyard continued. In 1935 John Francis Brown’s son, John Charles Brown, joined the family business. John Charles’ determination to focus and grow the wine business, as well as his inquisitive and scientific mind, saw him experiment with new grape varieties, cold fermentation and focus on table wine, when the rest of the area was still dominated by fortified production. Later, during a time of steady growth for the industry, in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s, a new generation became ready to join John Charles, their father, in the business. John Graham chose winemaking; Peter – developing the vineyards; Ross – sales and marketing; and Roger – viticulture/ vine propagation. And this created a generation of enormous growth, focus and development. Joining the family business is not a right and the Brown family knows they must work outside the business for at least four years, ensuring they gain external skills. Today, two daughters of Ross Brown - Katherine and Caroline, having worked externally - have put their hands up to join the company. Graduating with a Masters in Wine Business and a Masters of Viticulture and Oenology, Katherine’s challenge today involves refreshing the family’s range through innovative packaging and pushing the envelope in new wine styles. Caroline is the creative one, who also studied marketing. Caroline writes and communicates beautifully, and heads up the company’s Public Relations, both domestically and overseas. Her critical eye and custody of our brand values keeps us all on our toes. It’s exciting times celebrating 125 years of winemaking at Milawa and knowing the business is in good hands for a long time into the future. Caroline Brown 28 drinks trade INSPIRED BY CIDER, GROWN ON VINES. 100% Pure Grape Refreshment, New Innovation from Brown Brothers. Contact your Brown Brothers or MGM Distributors Area Manager, or call 1800 032 248. Australian made, Australian owned 407211_Grape_Tree_220x270_DrinksTrade Ad.indd 1 25/09/2014 11:39 am AFFW TYRRELL’S WINES (NEW SOUTH WALES) By Jane Tyrrell T yrrell’s Vineyards was founded by Edward Tyrrell in 1858 when he took up a concessional allotment of 320 acres at Pokolbin. The first vintage at Tyrrell’s was in 1864 and since Tyrrell’s has been steadfast in both the Hunter Valley and Australian wine industries. The motto Edward brought with him from England was “nothing is great unless it is good”, which has been and continues to be the guiding beacon for the family. The past 50 years have seen the greatest era of growth and innovation for Tyrrell’s. The company has purchased or leased many of the great vineyard blocks of the Hunter, introduced chardonnay to the modern Australian wine industry, and championed Hunter Semillon. Tyrrell’s has been passed down from generation to generation and is now headed by fourth generation family member Bruce Tyrrell. And his three children - Jane, John and Christopher - are all involved in the family business. Fifth generation family member, Jane Tyrrell, has grown up in the winery, just as her father Bruce and grandfather Murray did. From childhood days earning pocket money working in the cellar door and office, Jane always knew she wanted to join the family business. Jane officially joined the family business in 2001 as a rep and has 30 drinks trade been a part of the sales team ever since. “Taking our wine to the people who buy it is the most rewarding experience,” Jane says. “What I learn from the trade and consumers, I pass on directly to my father Bruce and my brother Christopher who are both based at the winery. The closeness of our operation, and the family nature of it, means we can consistently make wines that are relevant to the drinking public.” It is the wish of this fifth generation that the business remain family owned and operated, and continues on for another 150 years. Interview THE WHISKY GIRL Laura Hay Laura Hay may not have actually been born in a distillery, but her life has always revolved around the classic Scottish spirit. She sat down with drinks trade to discuss her journey from whisky novice to her current role as Chivas Brothers Whisky Ambassador for Australia. drinks trade: You grew up three doors away from The Glenlivet distillery, has whisky always been a part of your life? Laura Hay: Growing up in Scotland, whiskies have always been around. It’s a celebratory drink. I used to get it for New Year – before the bells went at midnight we’d have a whisky in hand. But growing up next to the distillery, I got to know about what was going on in there, and became more appreciative of what they were making. So I do feel like I’ve been around whisky all my life. DT: Is it true that you were born in a distillery? LH: I wasn’t born in a distillery. I would love to say I was, but I was born in Sterling, in central Scotland and I grew up in Alloa - a brewing town. So I’ve always been around brewing and distilling. But I never got to know about single malt Scotch whisky until my mum met my step-dad. He absolutely loved it and worked with Chivas Brothers for about 30 years. He was a major influence in why I got into the industry and he taught me a lot. 32 drinks trade DT: Your career in whisky began when you joined The Glenlivet distillery in 2002 as a tour-guide. What has been your career journey between then to today? LH: So, I left school at sixteen, went to college and studied acting, communication and so on. After college, it was a case of ‘well, I have to move back home’, but home was then Glenlivet. I tried to get a job in advertising or marketing but the only thing around was, literally, the distillery next door. I’ll always remember, my stepfather took me across the distillery and introduced me to the manager. I got interviewed the next week – I knew little bits about whisky, but I didn’t know much - and I started working there in April. DT: Was it there that you really developed your knowledge of whisky? LH: Yes, it took me the first month of working there to really get into it and then I just fell in love with what I was doing, and I ended up working there for the next three seasons. I never grew up thinking I was going to work in whisky; I was going to be a movie star. DT: Where did your career go from there? LH: I basically wanted to get out and have a life; I was going on 23 and living in the middle of nowhere. I was offered a job as a tour guide at the Whisky Heritage Centre, near Edinburgh Castle. It was there that I learned about all the single malt whiskies made in Scotland. I really, really enjoyed it, but I wasn’t going to progress. After about a year, I got a phone call from the Scotch Malt Whisky Society, who had somehow managed to get my C.V. They asked me to interview and took me on as a bar worker at Queen Street, which had just opened a few months prior. I was in the bar for a few months before I started to do the in-house tastings. In total I ended up working for the Society for about eight years. From there I became their UK ambassador, doing in-house tastings for members, then doing member tastings around Scotland. Because Glenmorangie owned the Society, it meant I could also work with Glenmorangie Ardbeg. I was trained up and became a panellist for the nosing team. It was a dream come true. I never thought that I would be sitting in a room full of people whose books I had read, with them listening to me and asking what I thought. DT: What’s the story behind how you ended up in Australia, as the Chivas Brothers Whisky Ambassador? LH: I bought a one-way ticket to Sydney and arrived in March 2011. I was working shifts at World of Whisky, and then went and did some backpacking; I moved back to Sydney because I had no money. I became a cleaner for seven months at the hostel I had originally stayed at for free accommodation. My second year visa came through, but I didn’t know what was going to happen. Then, out of the blue, I got a phone call from Mike Edkins. He said: “I’ve got your C.V in front of me, I got it from Larry at World of Whisky. It looks like you know a lot about whisky, but do you know anything about Chivas Brothers, Chivas Regal, Glenlivet?” Of course I said! I went in and met them and within three months I was the Ambassador for Chivas Regal for Chivas Brothers Australia. DT: Why do you love whisky so much? LH: It’s my passion. The first thing I fell in love with was the production. I used to tag along with my step-dad when he would go to distilleries. But it was also living in Glenlivet, which is so rich in history. Whisky plays a huge part in our heritage, and I feel strongly about that. I’m passionate about the history, the knowledge, the production, and continuing the legacy of whisky all over the world. DT: If you can choose one, what’s the most amazing dram you’ve ever tried? LH: Probably the most special whisky I’ve tried is the 70-Year-Old Glenlivet. Chris Hobin, founder of Edinburgh Whisky Blog, invited me to the launch at Edinburgh Castle, on my last day before leaving for Australia. He came in with this wee bottle, and I cried. It was the most vibrant – and only – 70-year-old whisky I’ve tried. That will stick in my mind forever. DT: Is there a growing younger audience in the category? LH: Definitely. People freaked out when first walked into tasting rooms because I was a 20-something girl in a room full of businessmen. But around Scotland all the whisky shows were becoming younger. Here in Australia, people assume it’s going to be mostly old people, but that’s not the case. It’s 20-somethings, male and female, who come to learn and enjoy – not just for drinking, but for what it is as well. DT: Is there a bond between women in whisky? LH: There’s a bond between all the ‘old’ women in whisky. It’s something that’s always brought up, even when I started as a tour guide. To me, it’s never been a huge deal. At Glenlivet we’ve got our first-ever female distiller and there’s so many females now in the industry. It’s the norm. drinks trade 33 Insight CHAMPAGNE SALON Champagne Salon is not only an unusual maison, but intriguing in its style and rarity. There is only one cuvée on offer, so you’re either a fan or, potentially, not. That being said, the popularity of Champagne Salon means its limited production run never fails to sellout, creating a demand that helps to promote Salon’s sister house - Champagne Delamotte. T he first vintage of Champagne Salon was in 1905, which became the private Champagne for Monsur Aimé Salon who, originally a poor farm boy, had found success as a fur trader in Paris. Aimé Salon made a very good living, travelling Europe and creating a flourishing business. His first parcel of land in the Champagne region was only a single hectare, called Jardin de Salon, and this became his home, in the Côte des Blancs, just south of Epernay. Champagne Salon takes a single vintage approach, from a single cru and made only from chardonnay. Arguably the first-ever single vintage, single cru, blanc de blanc. The Champagne was produced only for Monsur Aimé Salon and his guests, traditionally dining at Maxim’s in Paris, until the 1921 vintage when it was made only slightly more available for purchase (as long as you were a personal friend of Monsur Salon of course). The vineyards of the grand cru Le Mesnil-sur-Oger were granted their status in 1995, proposed by the Institut National des Appellations d’Origine in France. Aimé Salon passed away in 1943 and the house was taken over by his nephew who looked after the business until 1988. Champagne Salon is now in the hands of Champagne Laurent-Perrier, and run by Chef de Cave Didier Depond. Today only 60,000 bottles are made each vintage. On average there is only one vintage every three years (there were only 37 releases in the entire 20th century), and some bottles are put down for extra aging, leaving only 18,000 bottles each year for the global market. 34 drinks trade “There is no Salon rosé, no non-vintage, no pinot noir or meunier – just Salon made from chardonnay, from a single year. We also have no half bottles, only full bottles and magnums. You could say we like to keep things simple”, said Vianney Gravereaux, Export Director for both Salon and Delamotte Champagnes. “We’ve just launched the ’02 and there is strong interest from importers looking towards markets that may not be taking their allocation for the year for obvious reasons, such as Russia and possibly Ukraine. They are hoping to secure an extra allocation for themselves. It’s a weapon of mass seduction, winning over markets across the world.” Champagne Delamotte, founded in 1760, is sited literally next door and is also owned by Laurent-Perrier. Many of the staff are allocated between houses, which is significantly beneficial when you consider that Salon may not have a vintage for a number of years concurrently. Additionally the Champagnes of these houses display similar styles; Delamotte is also a house driven by chardonnay, sourcing grapes from the grand cru villages of Le Mesnil-surOger, Avize and Oger. The 2002 vintage has been keenly anticipated and expectations have been met – this is an exceptionally good Champagne. Champagne Salon, Cuvée ‘S’ 2002 Tasting Note: Even though this wine has spent ten years on lees it is still youthful and displaying lemon and lime intensity. The fruit is all about purity, and with the malolactic fermentation closed off, the wine has just five grams of dosage. A trend of lowering the dosage over the years has seen the Champagne reach a beautifully balanced level allowing the fruit to shine. A rich mouthfeel and a fine a lively mousse. Plenty of cellaring potential, this wine is still young one at 12 years old. There to be enjoyed, but plenty more to come. Interview Making Life Sparkle As the trend towards spontaneous celebration surges, premium brands like Henkell are responding. The launch of an elegant new bottle design will create relevancy for consumers, who increasingly enjoy sparkling beyond the traditional special occasion. drinks trade spoke with Henkell Export Director Klaus Kürten to learn more about this development. drinks trade: Why did the change come about now? Is this linked to consumer trends? Klaus Kürten: The Henkell package has always been linked to the development of printing. As a brand, you have to follow trends without losing your identity and we have done this now. I’m proud to say, it was the first time in the life of Henkell, that we conducted international consumer research. What we’re launching now in Australia was developed together with Australian consumers, with European consumers and consumers in North America. This package is a global package, because we have to think global nowadays; the product has to fit into the globalised world. I believe that there’s no other imported sparkling wine in Australia where there has been such research with Australian consumers. DT: How is it being received? Was it first launched in Germany? KK: Yes, the domestic market there is the most important market for us. The feedback I have got so far, and Australia is now the last country where we are launching this brand, is that it’s phenomenal and people love it. They say it is very champagne-like. We’re looking very premium with the new package and that’s the trend at the moment. DT: What was the aim of the new design and how did you want the bottle to come across? KK: The question was asked to the consumer because they have decided how it is now. We had some different designs and this was the best-rated design. We were also asking non-Henkell users, because we wanted to capture those who are not Henkell drinkers at the moment but are hopefully in the future. The target was to go more premium and I think marketing has achieved this. Just recently, we had a large party and even competitors were coming to us and saying great job, this is a new level of printing, and of producing. Really it’s not easy to put out such quality, and in Germany you have a responsibility to produce quality product, because product of Germany is recognised for its quality worldwide. DT: Is this reflected in the brand’s plan for the rest of the year? Is there a new marketing approach? KK: Yes, there’s always a considerable period of time between getting the old packages off the shelves and the new packages onto the shelves. Nowadays, occasions to drink sparkling wine are becoming more popular. The main usage of sparkling wine is Christmas, New Years Eve and January in Australia, and we want to be, with the new package, very well distributed in Australia before the season peak. Robert Blackwell, CEO of McWilliam’s Wines Group & Klaus Kuerten, Henkell Export Director DT: Do you think that Sparkling is a category that will continue to grow in Australia? KK: I definitely do. If you look at the figures, bottled sparkling wine is growing very nicely. For our product, we have a two-digit growth at the moment. People are becoming more educated, matured, experienced, know more about the category, like more [than one] beverage categories, and like quality. I think people can recognise what is quality and what is not quality and I’m looking forward to the continuation of this growth. DT: The new packaging also covers the 200ml bottle. Do you think this format contributes to the celebratory occasion? KK: The 200ml format is the perfect format. If you have only a two-person dinner, [and] the piccolo, then you have two glasses. You can start with a glass of sparkling wine and then continue with your menu. The piccolo has some very good advantages; it never has a corky taste and is always fresh because it has a screw cap. drinks trade 37 Insight SPECIALTY RETAIL STORES The majority of retailers in Australia today stock extended ranges of products across categories, to be able to offer something for everyone. Differentiating themselves on the market however are specialty retail stores. These retailers have found success by focusing on just one category. Stocking only one category not only allows these retailers to offer exceptional product knowledge, which has proven to increase sales, but also to stock limited or hard to find products, which attracts an audience in search of collectable or special gifts, as well as aficionados. fridge doors bursting at the seams with craft beer. Manager Mark Mead says that the key to delivering such a large and highly specialised inventory at the lowest possible price is maintaining good relationships with a large base of suppliers. As particular brews are not always available through wholesalers, going directly to the source is often the only option. Warners at the Bay Bottle Shop will sell product in any amount or format, in-store and online; the challenge is to keep the range turning over and to keep it fresh. Tastings are held by the retailer most Fridays to ensure that stock moves through consistently. Liquor Barons - Carlilse, WA Warners at the Bay - Newcastle, NSW Boasting over 1000 beers from more than 40 global regions, Newcastle’s Warners at the Bay Bottle Shop is one of the largest specialty craft beer retailers in the state. Alongside the beer range, this retailer stocks more than 100 ciders, as well as a comprehensive selection of wine. As well as a fantastic store layout, 100-space car park, and passionate, personalised customer service, the driving force behind the success of Warners at the Bay Bottle Shop can be whittled down to 26 38 drinks trade As the only independently owned and operated retail liquor co-operative in Australia, Liquor Barons is doing something right, providing a very healthy and competitive edge to an industry dominated by highly successful chains. While the collective’s combined buying power ensures the retailer is able to deliver a wide range of products at competitive price points, independence has allowed Liquor Barons Carlilse to tailor its product range to the tastes and preferences of the local community for more than sixty years; a community in which they have made a name for themselves, actively supporting local sporting clubs, aged care facilities, schools, RSLs and charities. As a specialist across categories, Liquor Barons Carlilse supports smaller boutique and more obscure brands alongside the traditional favourites. Owner Lou Spagnolo says that specialising in a wide range of categories places Liqour Barons just above those with only a singular or more niche focus, and if the customer can’t find what they’re looking for, they pride themselves on being able to source the product immediately. With such a broad appeal, Liquor Barons Carlilse possesses a real cross-section of customers, and with well-educated staff, allocated to categories based on their interests and class-specific knowledge, the retailer excels at meeting various taste, budget and occasion requirements. These might include private, business or corporate functions; and the retailer is happy to deliver for free locally and right across the Perth metropolitan area. Armadale Cellars - Melbourne, VIC When Phil Hude took over Armadale Cellars in 1997, it was dead on its feet. With an inventory comprising of just $30,000, the business was in desperate need of renewal and a longterm strategic focus. Despite coming up against a number of adverse challenges, including surviving the GFC and operating within a considerably rigid regulatory framework, directing all business activities to align with Hude’s crystal clear vision has seen Armadale Cellars develop into a now flourishing independent liquor retailer; and one with a particular penchant for premium fine wine. As a merchant specialising in boutique wine, as well as wine appreciation courses and events, education forms a central component in what Armadale Cellars offers to both their corporate and consumer customer bases. Not only do they source, supply and deliver wines nationally and from all across the globe, the business has implemented innovative ways in which their customers can experience the product. Services tailored to suit the needs of corporate clients include lectures and speaking arrangements, palate trainers, masterclasses and wine challenges, and additionally for consumers, wine education and courses. Alternatively, Hude encourages customers to taste and experience the five to six wines that the retailer always has on-premise. This might be accompanied by a cellar dinner or a courtyard tasting, allowing customers to meet with the winemakers and broaden their experience of the product. All wines on offer have been personally tasted, and have passed the test for quality, complexity and value. Now in its 18th year of operation, and under the skillful direction of Hude, Armadale Cellars is a retailer that continues to thrive, offering consumers not only a means to obtain exceptional wine, but an avenue to experience it. World of Whisky Sydney, NSW Synonymous with the name, specialist whisky retailer World of Whisky has a lot more to offer than just a bottle of this well loved drop. Combine a range comprising of over 400 expressions from regions including Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Australia, Taiwan, USA, Canada, India, and Japan, with tastings, whisky degustation dinners, foodmatching, auctions, shows and events, and you have what World of Whisky like to term the total whisky experience and one they continually endeavor to provide. Dispelling the myth that whisky solely appeals to the more mature age categories, owner David Ligoff says approximately 70 per cent of its customer base are aged between 25 and 40, due to the fact that this audience is keen to try and experience something new. Therefore the business employs the tactic of displaying well-known products so as not to alienate or intimidate new customers and encourage them to explore further in store. The majority of World of Whisky’s product range encompasses single malts, but there are also a number of blends, grain whiskies, bourbons and rye. For keen enthusiasts and whisky connoisseurs, the challenge is to keep the range fresh, new and interesting. Additionally, customers can join in on any one of the 90 minute sit-down events held in-store each week; these may be tailored to introducing new customers to whisky, or providing a means by which enthusiasts can enhance their spirit knowledge. drinks trade 39 THE NEW MAGNUM. WHEN YOU JUST FEEL LIKE ONE GLASS... …MAGNUM PROMISES YOU GREAT WINE, A GLASS AT A TIME. Magnum offers popular premium wines in an alternative format. Designed to complement the bottled product, Magnum’s unique features open up additional consumption occasions i.e. those times when you just want one glass without compromising on quality. Magnum’s unique features: • Established wine brands with history and credibility • Aspirational wine regions - New Zealand and Western Australia • Vintage specific wines • On-trend varietals • Wine stays fresh for six weeks once opened For your customers who value the wine more than the cork or the bottle. ACC0015_MAGNUM_DRINKS TRADE 440x270 DPS AD 4.indd All Pages Enjoy wine responsibly. For more information contact your Accolade Wines Area Manager or call 131 492. 19/09/2014 9:30 am Aussies abroad Nathan Forde Ever wanted to know what it’s like to be an Australian working and living abroad? Well look no further. Here drinks trade talks to Australian drinks industry professionals who are currently working and living around the world to tell you what inspired them to move, challenges they’ve faced, advice for those considering a change of climate and an insight into what their international careers involve. Nathan Forde, Trade Marketing Manager, African+Eastern – Beer, Dubai, United Arab Emirates drinks trade: What does your role entail and which regions do you cover? Nathan Forde: My role as Trade Marketing Manager focuses on developing brand strategy and BTL activation plans for our strategic brands within the Middle East; mainly the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Bahrain. ATL advertising for alcohol is prohibited, therefore our focus is on customer activation, and while this can seem limiting it does encourage some remarkable large-scale BTL brand activations. DT: Is there a particular project you can tell us about that you’re working on? NF: We are currently involved in the launch of the first drinks trade magazine for the region Drinks World Middle East. This will be a great 42 drinks trade tool for asserting the company’s profile in the region and enables us to accelerate the growth of some of our training programs across all categories, including Stella Draught Master and World Class. DT: What attracted you to working overseas? Why did you accept the role? NF: I was attracted to Dubai because of its fantastic location; the rest of the world (excluding Australia) is less than an eight-hour flight away. It is a global city with expats making up more than 85 per cent of the population, with a great cultural mix and any cuisine you can imagine. I was also excited about the broad portfolio of brands that African+Eastern manages within the region. DT: What challenges did you face when moving and settling in to your new home and lifestyle? NF: Moving can be a stressful experience regardless of the destination. However, when every aspect from medicals to identity cards has to happen before you can set up a bank account and ultimately secure an apartment to rent, you are bound to feel a little overwhelmed. Luckily for me everyone at African+Eastern has been through this elongated process before so I received plenty of advice and support. DT: Are there cultural and social differences that affect the way you market and sell in your region? NF: The working week is Sunday – Thursday, which initially requires a bit of adjustment, mostly when organising meetings! Dubai has a fairly relaxed culture, however living in a Muslim country you need to be respectful of local beliefs and customs, particularly during Ramadan. Appropriate dress is a must, and as expected there are cultural sensitivities for alcohol in the region - some markets are dry and most are heavily controlled, until you enter the on-trade, where RSA is relatively non-existent and the Friday brunch in Dubai is legendary. DT: What do you enjoy most? NF: Being located in the middle of the world with proximity to so many countries that aren’t really accessible from Australia, plus nine months of ‘perfect weather’ each year in Dubai is pretty hard to resist. DT: Any advice for those considering an overseas posting? NF: As with any job, ensure the company and their values are consistent with your own; this can vary significantly due to cultural differences. Work becomes an even bigger part of your life when working abroad; at first, often your only friends and network is through work and if you don’t thoroughly enjoy your job it can make the transition difficult. I would recommend visiting both the country and company before you accept the role to get a better feel for the living and working environment, but my advice, jump in and you never know where it might take you. Paul Schaafsma General Manager, UK & Ireland, Accolade Wines the UK, we wanted to re-engage the British consumer with the 160 years of Hardy’s heritage and the wine quality Hardy’s delivers. Additionally, to further support Hardy’s, we have signed a three-year sponsorship deal with English Cricket (ECB) and have drinks trade: What does your role entail and which regions do you cover? Paul Schaafsma: My current role is General Manager of Accolade Wines, U.K and Republic of Ireland. The business I manage sells over 20 million nine-litre cases of wine sourced from our various wineries in Australia, the U.S.A, South Africa and New Zealand. We are the U.K’s number one wine company with 12 per cent market share and three of Britain’s top ten wine brands. I lead a team of roughly one hundred people who handle the sales, marketing, legal, finance and category development within the business. th Paul Schaafsma wi I left Australia nine his son and Shane years ago for the UK and Warne at Lords at that time I was General Manager of Australian Vintage’s commercial operations. teamed with Sky Sports to sponsor the cricket coverage for the next three years. DT: Is there a particular project you can tell us about that you’re working on? DT: What attracted you to working PS: Over the past 18 months I have managed overseas? Why did you accept the role? the restructure of the Accolade UK commercial PS: I felt it was a great opportunity to live and operations. It was important coming into the work in another country, to learn about the business to right size the organisation and set a culture, the ways of working and the lifestyle. new vision for success moving forward. While I accepted the role because I saw it as a great this was a tough challenge, it has now enabled learning opportunity and one that does not the business to develop a more customer come up too often. centric culture with greater commercial intensity. DT: What challenges did you face when From a brand point of view we have moving and settling in to your new home overseen the revitalisation of Hardy’s and lifestyle? packaging across all ranges. Even though PS:Moving my family was always going to be Hardy’s is the number one wine brand in a challenge but I am lucky enough to have a wife who is amazingly supportive and loves a challenge. The children were young enough to adapt, in fact our youngest two were born here; they are now more British than Australian. The rest just flowed on from there. DT: Are there cultural and societal differences that affect the way you market and sell in your region? PS:There are very strong links between the UK and Australia so really there are not that many differences between the way Australians and the British live. Clearly it is easier to live here when Australia has won the ashes or the Wallabies have just beaten England in Rugby. DT: What do you enjoy most? PS: I love the buzz of closing a deal, I love the challenge of innovation in a mature market, and I love the vibrancy and professionalism of the trade in the UK. I have made some fantastic friends here in the wine trade that I know will be friends for life. You can’t beat sitting around a dinner table with a great meal, great wine and fantastic company. DT: Any advice for those considering an overseas posting? PS: Do your homework, make sure you have all of the right paperwork in terms of visas, work permits etc. but most of all enjoy it; working in another market is a wonderful experience. drinks trade 43 Reporting 2014 ALSA CONFERENCE Terry Mott Announces Restructure This year was the Australian Liquor Stores Association’s (ALSA) twenty-first annual National Conference, which in keeping with previous years received a solid turn out. U nique from many other industry conferences, the ALSA Conference centres itself around learning opportunities. The conference is primarily a learning opportunity for retailers, however there is a part focus on suppliers too, and one of the main aims of the conference is to provide an opportunity for retailers to interact with suppliers directly, in a non-transactional environment. Spanning over six days, this year’s conference focused on a number of key topics, covered in panel discussions, presentations, and workshops, by key body voices. Topics covered had a strong focus on regulatory issues surrounding leadership, alcohol policy, and public and government perceptions. Topics concerning consumer trends and behaviour, as well as product development and markets were also a focus of the conference. In the second half of the conference, ALSA reported on its recent Retail Study Tour of the UK and France, which was followed by an Expo and Trade Day to provide retailers with the opportunity to taste suppliers’ latest product offerings. The discussions on regulatory issues, which involved the whole of the industry, generated a key message this year – that the industry needs to collectivise and be more proactive in standing up for itself, taking a positive step forward towards redefining the negative reputation and messages this industry often receives from media and government. Stressing this message was John Scott, CEO of social change organisation DrinkWise, who presented research findings that showed the reality of perceptions surrounding issues such as alcoholism and underage drinking. “The findings showed that the community doesn’t see alcohol as a major issue, contrary to what you read in the media. Things like the economy, employment, and employment opportunities for young people were all of much greater importance. In fact, alcohol didn’t even rate as an unprompted issue”,Terry said, reflecting on John Scott’s presentation. 44 drinks trade “Governments really have been operating on the premise that regulation is good and the industry hasn’t really pushed back hard enough to say not all regulation is either good nor useful. But we’re hoping to start doing just that”,Terry added. Reporting on the ALSA Retail Study Tour, participants of the tour held workshops to discuss their findings and how they could be implemented back to how retailers in Australia do business. Key findings were that premiumisation is also driving growth in the UK and France, while so is innovation and new product development, particularly pack and container size differentiation, which the tour participants said was proving key to engaging new and existing consumers in those markets. Aside from the presentations, panels and workshops, Terry also announced at the conference details of a restructure at ALSA. After discussions and a review of ALSA, Terry said it was evident that a national representative body was needed. The restructure therefore has moved ALSA from working as a board that originally worked at state level, to a national body. The restructure also now sees Terry appointed as CEO of ALSA, from his original role, which was previously divided between ALSA and LSA NSW. CEO Terry Mott Two more individuals have been appointed to provide resources for research and media policy. Plans are underway for ALSA’s 2015 conference, which is expected to be held between 23-26 of August. Terry sees the next year for retailers as a challenging one, with more regulation, but from the outcome of this year’s conference Terry has no doubt that the industry will collectively push forward. ISLAND2ISLAND FORMS PARTNERSHIP WITH SAN MIGUEL NEW REKORDERLIG INNOVATION TO ENGAGE A NEW CONSUMER Distributed by: Island2Island RRP: $15.99 per six pack Distributed by: Coca-Cola Amatil RRP: $8 per bottle, $18.99 per six-pack island2island Beverage Company has secured a long-term partnership with San Miguel Beer International Ltd., to distribute the company’s flagship beer brand, Pale Pilsen, with others soon to follow. Mr. Carlos Berba, Managing Director for San Miguel Beer International Ltd., expressed: “Australia is an important and developing market for us and we are confident our partnership will deliver the opportunity many Australian beer drinkers have been asking for – to have easy access to San Miguel beer.” Premium cider brand Rekorderlig has announced the launch of a new entry to the cider category – Rekorderlig Dry Äpple Cider. This modern twist on the much-loved classic aims to engage a new male consumer – the traditional beer drinker who is looking for something new, as well as existing cider drinkers. “We have always pioneered the flavoured sub-category of cider, but with Rekorderlig Dry Äpple we have produced a cider which we feel can excite new and existing cider drinkers”, John Logue, Chilli Marketing Customer Marketing Manager said. While aiming to reward existing flavour fans and offering the cider consumer “a fresh twist on the classic apple cider”, John Logue adds, Chilli Marketing also believes the new variant will help add value to the category. “For the first time since flavoured cider was introduced into Australia and cider saw an explosion of new consumers discovering the category, we are seeing that value growth has been overtaken by volume growth”, John Logue explains. “Every category aspires to be premium and we believe that Rekorderlig Dry Äpple Cider can add value back into the market”, John continued. “By offering consumers a premium brand in the most popular subcategory - apple - we can together drive value back into cider and put more dollars through our retail partners’ tills, as we give consumers a truly premium cider.” Moreover John explains how the new release will be supported in the on- and off-premise, as well as via Facebook. John adds: “Our launch will be across three main platforms. In the offpremise we have gone to market in our beautiful 6x330ml pack format, offering a truly exciting looking pack to match the delicious taste. “To help consumers find the product and retailers promote it, we also have a full POS suite with CCA sales staff offering sample sessions to get that all important liquid on lips. “In the on-premise we are going to market with the hero 330ml bottle, but what is also hugely exciting for us, is that we are also simultaneously launching on draught. Apple cider dominates the onpremise at the moment. “Finally, we will be recruiting new male consumers through digital platforms including Spotify, Vice, Faster Louder & In The Mix. “Not forgetting our existing highly engaged fans across Facebook and Instagram, we’ll be seeding and sampling with our enormous 320,000 fans” John concluded. PRESSMAN’S CIDER Distributed by: The Australian Beer Company RRP: Mid-Strength $14.99 per six-pack, Original $16.99 per six-pack CIDER TO JOIN VALE CRAFT BEER RANGE In September, McLaren Vale Beer Company introduced Vale Cider into its range. Head Brewer Jeff Wright’s choice of sourcing locally grown apples to produce the traditional-style cider has resulted in a cloudy brew, with a crisp and full-bodied flavour. “We wanted to create an apple cider that actually tasted like apples – it might sound obvious, but there are a lot of options on the market that don’t properly show that characteristic,” Jeff explained. Vale Cider is available on draught in the on-premise. Pressman’s all-Australian cider has relaunched with a new look and new product offering. The new offering includes a mid-strength apple cider, the first of its kind available on the Australian market. The dry, crisp cider, has been made in collaboration with SPC, Australia’s largest producer of premium fruit, using local apples sourced from the Goulburn Valley, and is bottled at the Australian Beer Company Brewery in Yenda, NSW. drinks trade BEER & CIDER New releases 45 kwp!CPR12479 World of beer The World of BEER Business consolidation and globalisation has had many benefits for the consumer, not least of which has been the price and availability of many goods and services. However, one area where the creation of global brands has arguably had a cost, is in the ideas of regionality and local flavour. And this is particularly so in the world of beer. By Matt Kirkegaard. O nce upon a time beer much more clearly reflected local conditions and produce, with native yeasts, hop varieties, water and malting techniques all ensuring the beer bore the mark of its home. Unlike wine, however, which tends to be produced close to where the grapes are grown, barley, hops and yeast are easily transportable. Water chemistry is also easily manipulated to mirror the water conditions of any region so brewers can easily replicate styles anywhere in the world, which has seen a rise in generic beers that fit a wide global net. Today we are seeing a resurgence of craft brewing and an explosion in the number of beer styles, both through styles being resurrected and also popularised further afield. While there is a huge selection of styles, the modern brewing renaissance reflects less the local conditions than trends, culture and tastes. The modern beer tourist now has a wealth of options, both from countries with very traditional brewing cultures, such as Germany, the Czech Republic, Belgium and the United Kingdom, through to brewers who are putting a much more modern spin on the humble brew. drinks drinks trade trade 47 47 World of beer The United States It would be easy to dismiss the beers of the United States, but the US is actually the powerhouse in interesting and flavoursome beer. The US can lay claim to being the catalyst to the current global beer renaissance, which traces its origins back to the birth of the Sierra Nevada brewery in 1979. At that stage there were fewer than 100 breweries in the whole of the country and, like Australia, the country had faced several generations of consolidation and brewery closures. Sierra Nevada pioneered the hoppy pale ale - big citrus notes and assertive bitterness - now referred to as the American Pale Ale. It sparked three decades of brewery growth that continue today and has ignited a global trend that has spread to Australia in earnest a decade and a half ago and continues to be the case today. Michael Lonard, State Sales Manager of bidbeer – one of the largest importers of international brews to Australia – says pale ales and India pale ales are the styles most in demand in Australia. “These styles are not particularly new, however, they have been reinvented by the North American brewers, producing hop driven beers. The consumer is craving a different experience and is open to enjoying beers with far more complex flavour profiles”, Michael explains. Today there are more than 2,800 breweries across the United States, with estimates of more than 500 in planning. The spread and diversity of beer in the country makes it high on the ‘must visit’ list for those looking to combine beer and travel. US brewers have been the great innovators in modern brewing, reviving, inventing and reinventing beer styles and creating excitement for beer and experimentation, not to mention inspiring the global craft beer movement – today almost 50 per cent of US beer sales are through its exports of craft beer. US Hotspots Denver, Colorado Home to the US’ largest beer festival - the annual Great American Beer Festival - which represents the greatest concentration of breweries and beer diversity in the world. The city itself, with a population of 630,000, boasts more than thirty breweries within a half hour drive of the city centre, and the state of Colorado has more than 150. Names include Wynkoop Brewpub, Great Divide, and the Coors-owned Blue Moon Brewing Co., which sits under the stands at the Coors baseball stadium. 48 drinks trade West Coast style, with big names such as Stone Brewing, Green Flash, Ballast Point and AleSmith. Germany Portland, Oregon Often regarded as Beervana in the US, Portland supports almost seventy independent craft breweries and locals estimate that approaching 40 per cent of beer consumed in the city is craft, compared to three per cent in Australia. Portland is also home to the Oregon Brewer’s Festival, the Portland International Beer Festival and Portland Beer Week. Names include Deschutes Brewery, The Commons Brewery and Bridgeport. San Diego, California The US deserves its own article to fully cover the intricacies of the local beer scene, particularly when many consider East Coast and West Coast breweries to have their own distinct signatures for styles such as India Pale Ale. San Diego is the heartland of the One of the most inventive and exciting brewing countries, yet one of the most rigid and traditional, but in the world of beer that’s by no means a bad thing. Beer is so embedded in German culture that when a US brewer recently set up his brewery in Berlin he asked about obtaining a licence to sell his beer. The local officials looked at him quizzically and said, “You sell beer…Why would you need a license to sell beer?” Travel through Germany and drinking local is to sample history and beer styles as you go. The Germans have a deep respect for brewing tradition, but its enjoyment is a casual ritual. Beers such as kölsch of Cologne - the world’s only appellation control beer that can only be so-called if brewed in the city limits - has a long tradition. explore BEER Contact us to get involved! Eoghan Hennessy - National Sales Manager eoghan@hipmedia.com.au 02 9492 7999 or 0416 886 133 LAST CHANCE TO INCLUDE YOUR BRAND/S Available for purchase through Dan Murphy’s, Liquor Barons, Newsagents nationally, all major Australian airports and bookshops, Watersons, Icon and Amazon. exploredrinks exploredrinks.com World of beer Britain When golden lagers gained popularity following the birth of the pilsner style in Bohemia in 1842, breweries that were unable to produce lager beer made their ales lighter flavoured and paler than the darker beers they had formerly made, while still brewing them as ales. In Cologne, this resulted in the golden kölsch style, which was formalised following the First World War and its name protected by the European Union in 1997. Cities such as Dusseldorf on the other hand continued to hold onto the older, darker styles, even naming them altbier (old beer), compared to the newer lager style. Despite holding onto their ale traditions, the Germans are no slouches when it comes to lagers either. The name ‘lager’ itself is derived from the German word ‘to store’ and harkens back to the practice of storing beer made in March in cool caves to preserve it through the coming hot summer months when brewing was not possible. In doing so, brewers inadvertently were favouring the colder fermenting yeasts and the beers changed in character, becoming crisper, as they were lagered. When brewing could recommence with the cooler weather of late September and early October, the leftover March – or märzen – beers were consumed. The traditional beer of Munich’s Oktoberfest is the amber-coloured märzenbier for this reason. Munich, and the rest of Bavaria, are also famous for the fruity and refreshing weizenbier, or wheat beer. These top fermenting ales, made with 50 per cent wheat malt in addition to barley malt, are very distinctive due to the fruity esters and clove-like phenolic compounds thrown off by the yeast during fermentation. Perhaps the most distinctive beers of Germany are those of Franconia, made in Bamberg, with their distinctive smoked character. Highly traditional, these are beers that link back to a time when all malts would have been dried over fires. Just as many Scotch whiskies derive their distinctiveness from the peat-smoked malts used, the rauchbiers (smoked beers) of Bamberg are made with malts dried over beechwood fires and take on a character reminiscent of smoked ham. It’s a style that – no pun intended – has reignited a move towards adding a hint of smoke to many craft beer styles. 50 drinks trade With its reputation for warm and flat beer, Britain may be seen as a place to avoid for beer lovers. But, as is always the case with beer, context is everything. For Australians who have embraced bitterly cold and highly carbonated lagers with a passion, largely due to our climate, the traditional cask-conditioned British ale is something of an anathema. But it’s all about what you are used to. In the context of their history and development, caskconditioned ales – beers that undergo a secondary fermentation in the keg to provide a natural carbonation – are a beauty. Comparatively low in carbonation due to the conditioning process and ‘warm’ at 8-10 degrees, as they are cellar cooled rather than refrigerated, their gradual decline sparked one of the largest consumer movements in the world - The Campaign for Real Ale - to preserve their treasured ales. Despite its traditions, and the competing move towards the convenience and security of international lagers, Britain has embraced the modern craft beer movement eagerly. The UK is abound with traditional ale breweries and modern craft breweries, with Meantime, Brew Dog and Camden Brewery – the latter owned by Australian Jasper Cuppaidge – among the best of the new breed. Belgium If the United States is worth its own article on its regions and the possibilities it offers the beer traveller, Belgium is worth a book; a long one. Despite its size, Belgium is arguably the spiritual home of good beer. Beer styles and regionality are problematic for Belgian beers as, unlike the ever precise Germans, brewing in Belgium is very idiosyncratic and only the vaguest groupings can be offered for their styles. While microbrewing is the buzz in the New World, microbrewing is the way of life in Belgium. Wherever you go in the country, you can’t help but stumble upon a brewery making something interesting and flavoursome. Though brewing traditions are ancient here, beer styles themselves constantly evolve. A great example is the Belgian witbier (white beer), lately popularised by Hoegaarden. The style had died out in the 1950s as drinking fashions changed, only to be revived a decade later by local milkman Pierre Celis who fondly remembered the beer style. It has become a craft staple around the world. Australia It may seem hard to believe for any readers under 30, but it really wasn’t that long ago that the relationship between beer and travel meant that if you left your home state, you also found your state’s beer unavailable at your destination. While XXXX was available in Cairns 1800 kilometres north of its Brisbane base - you would have been flat out finding it in Grafton - three hours drive south. If you were a ‘New South Welshman’ visiting Melbourne, you had best be willing to drink a Melbourne bitter or a VB as Tooheys was rarer than a rugby league football. So much has changed in the last two decades, following the amalgamation of the regional breweries into the big two brewing companies during the ‘80s and ‘90s, and their push for national markets. The seeds of the current craft beer movement were sown even before the 1984 birth of the Sail & Anchor in Fremantle, that spawned the Matilda Bay Brewing Company, now part of CUB. However, it was the launch of Little Creatures in 1999 – by Phil Sexton, who also started Matilda Bay – that really sparked the current beer wave. Today we have a broad selection of breweries and beers, and craft beer continues to grow – up by AU$53,842 in the last year (Aztec July 2014). And the craft beer explosion has changed the scene of brewing in Australia as demand continues for “more complex and flavoursome beers”, Cam Pearce, Sales and Marketing Director of Coopers Brewery says. “Recent growth in the premium and craft beer segments has helped boost Coopers’ popularity. Coopers has a unique range of ales that are distinctively different to mainstream lagers and most premium imported beers”, Cam added. While craft is helping to grow businesses of those already producing craft beer, it has meant that brands sitting outside the category are having to compete either by changing style more progressively towards that of craft, or, as the statistics are suggesting, importing those flavoursome and more original styles that the rest of the world has to offer. This has seen a huge growth in premium international beers and the category is now the second largest in Australia (Aztec July 2014). “International premium and pale ales are definitely continuing their domination of the growth figures. And styles such as IPA, sours, saisons and session ales are in great growth”, says Ben Kooyman, Founder of ENDEAVOUR Vintage Beer Co. This has also greatly impacted sales of the can format. Not only have craft producers embraced the can format, but so have importers of international brews, making the importation a much easier process, while also helping to protect the brew inside. “The beer can has experienced a resurgence thanks to the new can designs embraced by many craft brewers. In fact many brewers prefer the can as a vessel to the bottle, amongst other things the can blocks all light to the beer, making the beer tasted as close to as the brewer intended. The can has been on a steady increase for a few years now and I believe will continue to grow as the consumers perception of canned beer evolves”, Michael Lonard comments. So what of the regions behind Australia’s booming craft scene? Western Australia continues to power ahead, with Fremantle, Margaret River and Swan Valley all hosting concentrations of breweries. It may invite fierce argument, but while WA is the home of craft beer, Victoria seems to be the centre of gravity for beer endeavours. The garden state is the complete package with great breweries matched to a huge range of venues supporting and promoting craft beer. New South Wales has seen a rapid growth in brewery numbers, though beer-centric venues have been a little slower coming. Conversely, Brisbane has seen a rapid expansion in the number of beer-focused venues, with only a handful of metropolitan breweries following. South Australia and Tasmania both have a scattering of great breweries, with the former blessed with one of the best beer pubs in Australia - The Wheatsheaf in Thebarton. Perhaps the best advice for the wandering beer drinker is wherever you go, take your sense of adventure. As you front up to the bar anywhere on your travels, go on a beer journey as well. Ask, “what’s local”, “what’s new” or “what’s interesting”, and you never know what sort of taste adventure you will have. drinks trade 51 New releases SUNTORY LAUNCHES PREMIUM JAPANESE WHISKY PRODUCT SPIRITS & LIQUEURS Distributed by: Suntory Australia RRP: $48 As Japanese whisky grows in popularity in Australia, Suntory has released another whisky from the Japanese market, Suntory Whisky Kakubin, to its Australian whisky portfolio. “Japanese whisky has taken Australia by storm and the response to our portfolio of luxury whiskies – Yamazaki, Hibiki and Hakushu – has been incredibly positive. Suntory Whisky Kakubin is an additional way Australian consumers can enjoy the unique flavours of Japanese whisky”, Yosuke Minato, GM of Trade Marketing & Corporate Planning for Suntory Australia said. Suntory Kakubin was first launched in 1937 and not only has this whisky become incredibly popular across Japan, it has also played a significant role in starting the recent highball craze there. “I envisage Kaku Highballs being very popular here in Australia especially as we head into the warmer months and people look for a refreshing drink”, Yosuke added. CHIVAS REGAL EXTRA Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia RRP: $73 Chivas Regal Extra is the new expression from Chivas Regal and the first in almost ten years. The new expression is a blend of rare whiskies, which have been matured in a higher proportion of sherry casks. The result is an expression that has managed to retain the original Chivas Regal house style, while adding a new level of richness, depth and complexity, and most notably, layers of spice. 52 ABSOLUT WARHOL Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia RRP: $37.99 The second limited edition release to come from the partnership between Absolut and Andy Warhol is now available to market. The new release, Absolut Warhol, features Absolut Vodka in a new bottle that has been designed to resemble Andy Warhol’s original Absolut Warhol painting. In 1986, Andy Warhol was the first artist to create an original piece of artwork for Absolut and since Absolut has collaborated with a number of other renowned, cutting-edge artists. Absolut Warhol is the first black bottle in the range and also features blue, pink and yellow colourings, similar to those on Absolut Warhol painting. KNOB CREEK RYE BOURBON Distributed by: Coca-Cola Amatil RRP: $87.99 The latest addition to join the Knob Creek family here in Australia is the Rye (50% ABV). The Knob Creek Rye joins the rye whiskey category, which Aztec data puts as being in 60 per cent growth (MAT to April 2014). The distillery is known for what it terms as big flavour and being bottled at 100 per cent proof helps to carry that flavour forward. The rye is aged in charred oak barrels for a minimum of two years, and the 51 per cent rye base mash provides a spicy flavour profile. Rye bourbon has traditionally been the domain of bartenders keen to mix its unique spice flavours into traditional drinks, such as the old fashioned. Knob Creek Rye comes to the market highly acclaimed so we expect it to do well on-premise in the lead up to Christmas. Falling in to the Beam Suntory portfolio, speak to your CCA representative for supply. drinks trade visit www.drinksguide.com.au to find the latest products BROKEN HEART GIN THE GLENLIVET SINGLE CASK EDITIONS Distributed by: HMH Beverages RRP: $65.99 Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia New Australian distribution company HMH Beverages has revealed the first spirit to join its portfolio – Broken Heart Gin. Broken Heart Gin is a long and dry gin and comprises of 90 per cent juniper and coriander, and 10 per cent fresh, organic botanicals . Additionally Broken Heart Gin is produced with untreated spring water, which adds to the fresh quality of the spirit. Although only a relatively new product to market, Broken Heart Gin is already growing in popularity and won a silver medal at the International Wine and Spirits Competition in London last year. Broken Heart Gin is available to both the on- and off-premise and HMH Beverages says its expecting 16 other products to join its portfolio before Christmas. GREEN FAIRY Distributed by: SouthTrade International RRP: $59.90 Green Fairy is a popular and iconic spirit in the month of October because of its strong association with Halloween; its unique thujone ingredient said to have been used in witchcraft. This Halloween, Green Fairy are promoting the APPLESINTH cocktail (30ml Green Fairy Absinth, 45ml Apple Juice, 45ml Fever-Tree, juice of a lemon wedge and ice), a great cocktail for themed celebrations this month. Green Fairy absinthe has strong herbal notes and distinct flavours of star anise and liquorice, while the thujone ingredient renders a slight bitterness on the palate. Keep an eye out for the Halloween edition of drinks weekly later this month. SAUZA 901 SUPER PREMIUM TEQUILA Distributed by: Beam Suntory RRP: $59.90 Sauza Tequila partnered with Justin Timberlake this September to launch Sauza 901 Super Premium Tequila in Australia - a smooth and versatile spirit that has had a very successful and highly visible launch in the U.S. this year. Founded by the internationally acclaimed pop star himself, this partnership blends the creativity and personality of Timberlake with the quality and history of the brand, as it debuts alongside Timberlake’s The 20/20 Experience World Tour. This tripledistilled, 100 per cent agave tequila is available exclusively at Dan Murphy’s. Over the last month The Glenlivet has added two new releases to its Single Cask Edition range, which features a number of hand-selected craft whiskies that promote The Glenlivet’s legacy, origin and production methods. The first of the two latest limited releases to join the range is The Glenlivet Morinsh (RRP $249.99), which joined the range earlier in September. This expression is named after the Battle of Glenlivet, which took place near Morinsh in the Scottish Highlands in 1594. The Glenlivet Morinsh is a rich whisky with sweeter treacle notes and honey flavours, combined with a slight spice. (Available exclusively at Vintage Cellars) The second release, and the last for the range, was launched this month. The Glenlivet Corryhabbie Hill, has been released in conjunction with award-winning bar Eau de Vie at cask strength and is available in 500ml or 1000ml drams at Eau de Vie’s venues in either Melbourne or Sydney. This expression takes its name from the Glenlivet valley’s Corryhabbie Hill, which was a vantage point for illicit distillers and whisky smugglers in the early 1800s. This expression has sweet barley sugar and ripe pear flavours on the palate, with a nuttiness that permeates through. GLENFIDDICH’S EXCELLENCE Distributed by: William Grant & Sons RRP: $590 Glenfiddich’s latest expression, the Excellence 26 Year Old, is now available to the Australian market. Excellence is distinctive from the other expressions in the Glenfiddich range, as it is the first expression to have been matured in American oak bourbon casks. “By maturing this expression exclusively in bourbon casks we’ve created a beautifully intense flavour. We believe it to be one of our most desirable expressions yet”, Glenfiddich Malt Master Brian Kindman said. The new expression retains Glenfiddich’s original style and is a fruity, floral and deep flavoured whisky, but with added vanilla, light oak and spice. This Scotch whisky is surprisingly not too dark in colour, but is rich golden, reflecting the slow and gentle maturation this dram has undergone. The presentation box and bottle have both been designed to represent the oak used in its production and together make a great collectable item for any whisky aficionado. drinks trade 53 Mixers Premium MIXERS Premiumisation has been one of the biggest focuses and drivers across categories of late and this trend is at large, so much so that in July 2012, The Drinks Business labeled premiumisation as one of the top ten trends of the last ten years. And I am guessing that over the past few years you have expanded your gin, vodka and rum offerings to meet the demands premiumisation calls for. But this trend doesn’t stop at alcohol and the next trend we’re expecting to hit your outlets (if it hasn’t already), is the premiumisation of mixers. By Nigel Weisbaum. 54 drinks trade Mixers A lthough it sounds obvious when discussing mixers, most would think of only a few cola, lemonade, tonic and cordials, and of its basic premise – to make a spirit easier to drink, or to enhance the flavour of the spirit. But look further and not only are bartenders proving that mixers are incredibly versatile, so much more than their basic function, but the category is also bursting outside of the original mixers found behind the bar, and today mixers range from juices to energy drinks, pre-mixers to flavoured syrups, dairy products such as milk and cream, as well as coffee and iced teas, and even plain water, to name only a few. Additionally the dollar sales of this category amounted to approximately $1,165 billion worldwide last year. If you think about it for a few minutes, these statistics add up; the average drink consists of 1/4 spirit, and 3/4 mixer, so why wouldn’t the mixer category be in growth? For the majority of every spirit sale, a mixer is also sold. Additionally then when looking at the volume of mixer to spirit ratio in an average drink, it also makes sense that the quality of mixers and offering 56 drinks trade has become increasingly important. Why would any consumer want a mixer full of fake flavours, sugars and chemical additives with their spirit of choice? This is how one of the first premium mixers to hit the market started out, and why it is one of the next biggest trends to hit the on- and off-premises. In the late 90s Charles Rolls had been at the forefront of premiumising the gin market. A small, dedicated investment group had bought Plymouth Gin - an old brand that had long been neglected from Allied Domecq in 1996, and Rolls and his team focused on returning it to its former glory. With a full packaging and branding change, including the recreation of the original bottle and restoring Plymouth to its original strength of 41.2% ABV, they took the brand from 3,000 cases a year to an incredible 80,000. During this experience, Charles noticed that there was a total disregard for a good tonic water as the majority of bars were using soda guns, which comprised of filtered tap water, mixed with a flavoured syrup or packaged offerings. In these were preservatives like potassium sorbate or sodium benzoate, and sweeteners like saccharin or high fructose corn syrup, which just eradicated the balanced botanical flavours of the gins. So when Charles and CoFounder Tim Warrillow started to develop their tonic water in 2003, they spent 2 years sourcing the best ingredients they could; real quinine from the Cinchona tree grown on the Rwanda Congo border; marigold extracts and a bitter orange from Tanzania; spring water from Buxton; and natural cane sugar, which left no room for artificial sweeteners, preservatives or flavourings. This created today’s world renowned mixer Fever Tree, which launched in 2005 and has not only significantly contributed to the huge growth of premium gins, but has made people sit up and take notice of the mixer. Most drinking trends start in bars, where guests are able to STO0016_Stoli_Martini_DrinkTrade ad_220x270.indd 1 18/07/2014 9:05 am Mixers try new brands and then search for them elsewhere. James Connolly from ‘Enrique’s School for to Bullfighting’ in Perth stocks four different tonics, and pairs them with different gins. “We get a lot of people brand calling and willing to try different tonics. Our house is Capi, but we also offer Fever Tree, Quina Fina, Bottle Green Elderflower Tonic and Fentimans tonics. Fever Tree is the best selling tonic by far and the Bottle Green Elderflower tonic is also very popular.” Dave Green from Sydney’s Victoria Room has recently changed their mixer offering to the fermented Fentimans range and noticed an increase in the spirit and mixer sales, with a noticeable uplift in reorders to 2-3 serves per person, due to curiosity in flavours available and the packaging presentation. He also echoes James’ findings: “The gin followers that return to the venue are requesting specific tonics, so the generic brands are never asked for again after their first taste.” And of course it’s not just tonic that is a mixer. “We use freshly pressed juices; the only other mixer we use is Fever Tree tonic. Like everything, we try and use the best. It can be tricky with so many brands claiming to be premium”, Lewis Jaffery from Sydney’s Baxter Inn said. “We believe that if the majority of your drink is a mixer, then it should be the best money can buy”, Lewis adds. Lewis has also noticed more positive reactions: “People definitely pay a bit more attention when they take a sip and are expecting their usual drink, but then have this realisation that it’s probably the best version of their favourite drink. We get quite a lot of people asking us where they can source them from themselves.” A stylish way of communicating your offering is by serving the 58 drinks trade measure of spirit in the glass with ice and the chosen mixer in its can or bottle on the side. Although rare in Australia, this emphasises that you are providing a great drink, with a premium mixer, which communicates that you’re adding value to a consumer’s purchase. This also allows the guest to mix the drink to their desired dilution. Brands like Fever Tree and V Energy are on board with this packaging in 200ml serves to reduce wastage and encourage this style of service. Similarly, product placement on the back bar, just as it serves at purchase, which inevitably increases brand sales. “Affordable luxury and premiumisation have been talked about for some time, but now we are seeing these trends in hard numbers. Our sales of Quina Fina tonic have exceeded expectations so much so that the plant is being expanded to cope with the local demand”, says James France from Vanguard Luxury Brands, distributor of Quina Fina. With influential venues leading the charge in offering more choice in mixers and educating The gin followers that return to the venue are requesting specific tonics, so the generic brands are never asked for again after their first taste. - Dave Green to increase visibility of alcoholic products, can work in the same way for mixers. Energy drink brand Red Bull uses top bar fridges, which have lent to the brand being one of the most recognised among others. Its visibility at the bar leads consumers to ask for the brand their guest on the benefits of mixers with no artificial sweeteners, preservatives or flavourings, it will not be long until customers are insisting on a choice of mixers to complement their favourite hooch. It may be time to review your offering and its positioning in your venue. Feature MIXING IT WITH VODKA Is consumer demand for new products (or variants) the key to driving value in the vodka category? drinks trade spoke to suppliers and consumers to ask what’s motivating their decisions and what excites them about vodka. Vodka remains a popular choice among drinkers of all ages and is still the number three spirit in Australia, and contrary to some sentiment in the market, vodka has shown growth in value (2 per cent) over the last 12 months (Aztec Australia data July 2014). When you consider the 9L equivalent growth over the same period shows a decline of 1 per cent, Australians’ current willingness to trade up in value over volume is alive and well in the vodka category. As to how consumers are drinking vodka, much depends on the venue and whether it’s a high 60 drinks trade turnover, quick-service venue or an independent cocktail bar that prides itself on creating a unique experience for drinkers. According to Stolichnaya Vodka Brand Manager, Lara Gardiner: “Vodka cocktails will always be popular in most bars and as much as bartenders hate to admit it, the most common vodka drink ordered over the bar is a vodka, lime and soda. When consumers want to try something different, they are led by the bartender, and bartenders are favouring classic, unpretentious cocktails these days, where the skill of balancing flavours and aromas is key”. Supporting this comment, Smirnoff Brand Manager at Diageo, Joanna Gibson, said: “Smirnoff, lime and soda is the most popular way for consumers to enjoy vodka here in Australia. Other popular long mixed serves may include Smirnoff and tonic, Smirnoff and fruit juice or Smirnoff, lemon, lime and bitters. The great thing Feature And when asked if they felt it was healthier, the overwhelming response was “yes”. about vodka is its versatility; for simple serves, consumers could explore flavoured vodka with a simple mixer or they can get creative and make some really exciting cocktails.” drinks trade asked consumers what they felt was the motivation behind ordering vodka, lime and soda and responses varied between: “it’s refreshing”, “feels cleaner”, “less sugary”, “really nice in the summer/sun” and “I can have a few of these and I don’t feel bad the next day” as primary answers. And when asked if they felt it was healthier, the overwhelming response was “yes”. So, when it comes to premiumisation in the category and the subsequent value growth, how are consumers changing their consumption patterns? “Probably the biggest shift we’ve noticed at island2island with our Stolichnaya range of premium vodkas is that many more consumers are drinking super-premium and ultra-luxury vodkas, like elit by 62 drinks trade Stolichnaya, neat on the rocks,” said Lara Gardiner. “666 Vodka fits into the premium space and more than ever, consumers are drinking super-premium spirits and they are wanting more from their vodka than the ‘flavourless’ sameness that has been mass produced in the past. We identified the beginnings of this trend more than six years ago when we were still in the developmental stage”, Dean Lucas from Pure Distillery Company added. “The response to our newest member of the family – 666 St Ali Coffee Vodka – has been fantastic. We have doubled our initial production forecasts. Bartenders, as intended, have been substituting it for the vodka base in espresso martinis. They are also swapping it for a coffee liquor when they want to avoid an overly sweet taste in their cocktail, while giving the drink an extra kick,” Lucas continues. As well as flavoured vodka, the Australian craft spirit market also gets more focus as venues are looking for that point of difference and consumers become more interested in a brand story that they can relate to. How consumers are interacting with vodka brands continues to change, and a new category grows alongside the established international brands that people are drawn to – the niche brands, which are gaining footholds in the vodka segment. John McDonnall, who has partnered with SouthTrade International to help with the recent launch of Tito’s Handmade Vodka in Australia, said of the international relevance of the product: “In the States, this is the hottest brand in the onpremise. It’s one of the top five brands of vodka in bars in the States and the other four brands are all declining – Titos is stealing share.” Made from 100 per cent corn, Titos has a considerably sweeter and smoother flavour. “Bartenders are using Tito’s in signature cocktails and a lot of people are drinking it on the rocks or with tonic water. You don’t have to add any sugary mixers with Titos because of its sweeter, smoother flavour.” Brands such as the Hunter Valley distilled ISOS Organic Vodka and Sydney based Small Mouth Vodka are offering the bespoke experience, but the opportunity on a broader level would seem to fit with the more established brands and their line extensions and flavoured offerings. One company offering the broader distribution of Australian spirits is ASM Liquor, whose managing director Chris Flaherty explains Vodka O’s success in the Australian market, including the recent launch of their pre-mix cocktails: “since our Co-Founders sold the first batch of Vodka O in Bondi Beach back in 2004, the brand has always committed to innovative and passionate ideas. The Vodka O RTDs are the result of real ingredients, natural processes, and flavor combinations that we know consumers will love. We believe Vodka O craft RTDs will inject life back into the light RTD category in a similar way as craft beer reignited the beer category.” Another vodka brand pioneering in the flavoured vodka category, but with a slightly different approach when it comes to engaging with the consumer is Absolut vodka. Absolut vodka prides itself on reaching experience-driven consumers and to do this it has a philosophy of encouraging products that “break boundaries and raise the bar on what to expect from a night out”, The Absolut Company told drink trade. This has continued through the brand’s creative approach, which has developed the Absolut bottle to become a “visual statement at point of sale”. And packaging for each of Absolut’s flavoured SKUs has been “redesigned to create artistic interpretations of each individual flavour”, Absolut continued. The brand says this is what has kept itself at the forefront of the flavoured vodka category. “While most flavoured vodkas look more or less the same, we are bringing a full range of innovative designs to market. Artistic, modern and unlike anything else around, we believe they will reinforce our position as creative leader”, The Absolut Company adds. On the other hand, Suntory brands, Zubrowka Vodka and Russian Standard, speak to the origins of vodka, and carry the heritage and credibility of distilling in Poland and Russia. Suntory promotes these brands’ histories and origins, pure water sources, traditional grains, and high end distilling methods, which is in turn helping to draw consumers to the category. Traditional distilling methods and use of ‘grains’ dates back to 1405, when the word ‘wodka’ first appeared in Polish court documents. The Russians were said to have worked out how to distil spirit from grain around the same time, making it impossible to know who was first to create the product; but does it really matter when they’ve both had over 600 years to work on getting the process just right? The distilled spirit often promotes itself on its filtration, clean and refreshing taste, and balance in cocktails. The balance across the on- and offpremise offering also continues to drive the category forward as traditional drinks such as the vodka lime and soda drive volume and the consumer’s desire to explore the category drives value and premiumisation. drinks trade 63 Insight ESCAPE TO THE GRAPE You often read about bartending competitions and what it’s like to take part in them, but what is it like to win them and the experience, and what’s the benefit back behind the bar? E arlier in the year, G’Vine Gin challenged bartenders across the globe to submit an image or video of an ‘escape’ that inspired them, accompanied by a G’Vine & Tonic twist that it inspired. Winning bartenders would be sent on a tour of France, including Cognac, to explore the production of grapes (G’Vine’s unique base) in the region, from vine to bottle, hosted by Jean-Sébastien Robicquet – G’Vine’s founder and Master Distiller. Australia’s very own Nick Selvadurai from Cookie bar impressed judges with his La Mer et Le Soleil (The Sea and The Sun), which earned him a ticket to France, alongside Lin Da Niu from Taiwan, Kate Jackson from the UK, Jagoba Santesteban from Spain, and Yasuhiro Kawakubo from Japan. Here Nick journals his voyage, from entering the competition, to winning, from Bordeaux to Paris, and all that was learnt, acquired and experienced along the way. Day 1 - Bordeaux We all arrived in Bordeaux, however I was one of the last to arrive and wasn’t able to attend the welcome dinner, but after a brief wander around the city with Yasuhiro, we met up with the group for a nightcap at Mama Shelter hotel bar. Day 2 – Saint-Émilion After a short drive through the gorgeous countryside of the Bordeaux region, we arrived at the tiny picturesque, medieval city of Saint-Émillion. Here we were given a tour and learnt about the origins of grape growing and the early concepts of appellation control. Saint-Émillion 64 drinks trade Day 3- Cognac We arrived in Cognac and I was immediately overcome with excitement. This is the place where Cognac is made, aged and brought to the rest of the world. After having a geek moment, we got into the comprehensive tasting session at Bache-Gabrielsen. Picnic at G’Vine vineyard Bache-Gabrielson Master Blenders office Later, following our fill of incredible Cognac (including a limited release for the 50th Birthday of the Master Blender, which incidentally was the day that we were there) we headed out to a gourmet ‘picnic’ lunch among the vines owned by G’Vine. That afternoon we also headed to Rémy Martin’s Cognac house to see how large-scale Cognac production works, where we also created our own Cognac blends drinks trade: What did you think of the Bache-Gabrielsen tasting? Had you ever had the opportunity to try the brand before? Nick Selvadurai: No, it was the first time. If I remember correctly, I think they were saying they were in the top five in terms of production, but are still very small and still sort of family-oriented. So that was exceedingly interesting to see - that sort of scale of production. DT: And what did you take away from Rémy Martin’s? NS: One of the major things I didn’t realise about Cognac was that they originally started as blenders. Now a lot of them are merely buying the distillate, which is in barrels, or barreling it themselves to get it for their own purposes. Consequently it means that a lot of the Cognac houses work very closely together. Day 4 - Villevert After an intimate cooking workshop with Michelin Star chef Thierry Verrat, we were joined by Jean-Sébastien for a lunch that we ourselves helped prepare. We then headed to Villevert - G’Vine’s HQ - where we were taken through a discovery of G’Vine. After a quick little ride in a hot air balloon (as terrifying as it was exhilarating), we joined all the industry luminaries for dinner, cocktails and a great chat by the pool. I had the opportunity to meet Gary Regan, Dave Broome and Phil Duff, and pick their brains on how they got to where they are in the industry and what sort of things are on their horizons - truly inspiring. Blending our own Cognac at Rémy Martin “It strengthens your knowledge and abilities, and moves you into a network, which will help you further on in your career.” G’Vine hot air balloon DT: What did you learn from talking with Jean-Sébastien, Gary, Dave and Phil? NS: To use your network, not be afraid to ask other people for their opinions on things, and that more heads are better than one in the industry. And by meeting Jean-Sébastien it gave the brand more of a personal feel. DT: Do you find understanding the background and history of a product helps when serving behind the bar? NS: Of course, you become connected on a more personal level which means that I don’t feel obliged to sell it as a product, I feel obliged to sell it because these are people that I personally know and appreciate the work that has gone into it. Day 5 - Paris Before everyone started their journeys home, we all had lunch and talked of the incredible things that we’d seen and done. The tour was without a doubt one of the most insightful and inspiring things that I have ever done. It was incredibly refreshing to have a competition that had no focus on creating a singular winner. There was no pressure to ‘perform’ and I was able to really enjoy everything that G’Vine is and represents. DT: Would you recommend entering into bartending competitions to other bartenders? NS: Absolutely, it strengthens your knowledge and abilities, and moves you into a network, which will help you further on in your career. drinks trade 65 2515A_DrinksTrade_ArtNSoul_OctNov_2014_270x220_FA_pth.indd 1 23/09/2014 12:17 pm New releases CHAMPAGNE VOLLEREAUX Distributed by: The Wine Company RRP: Brut Reserve $79; Blanc de Blancs $79; Rosé $99; Cuvée $120 As of October 1, The Wine Company became the new Australian distributor for Vollereaux Champagne across the Eastern Seaboard. CV was established in 1805 and continues today as a sixth generation family owned Champagne house in the Pierry region. The family vineyard consists of 40 hectars, which ensures the house has a constant and regular supply of grapes. This is the first time the range has been made available in Australia in the house’s history. The Wine Company will be distributing the Vollereaux Brut Réserve, Blanc de Blancs, Rosé de Saignée Brut, and Cuvée Marguerite Brut Millésime. MCGUIGAN WINES BIN SERIES Distributed by: Australian Vintage Limited RRP: $12.99 each D’ARENBERG ICONS VINTAGE AND LABEL RELEASE Distributed by: Young & Rashleigh Wine Merchants (ACT); Empire Liquor (SA); NT Wine Sales (NT); The Wine Company (VIC); The Wine Tradition (QLD); Inglewood Wine Merchants (NSW); On The Vine (WA); David Johnstone & Associates (TAS). RRP: $65 Timed with the release of the 2010 vintage, d’Arenberg has also revealed a new label design for its internationally acclaimed Icons range. The Icons, produced from very old and low yielding vines, are made with age old winemaking techniques from only the finest parcels of their respective varieties. “Each of these Icons has its own distinct personality that flows through each vintage, which is a result of the meticulous attention I give to each of them”, said d’Arenberg Chief Winemaker Chester Osborn. “It was important that the same amount of detail and consideration was given to what’s on the outside of the bottle.” WINE Australian winery McGuigan Wines revealed its award-winning BIN Series with a new look. The series has undergone a makeover in recent months as the brand wanted a new design that would communicate the BIN Series wine styles. The series features seven fresh, fruit driven varietal wines (verdelho, sauvignon blanc, chardonnay, semillon, shiraz, merlot and cabernet sauvignon), sourced from premium vineyard sites in the Hunter Valley, and broader New South Wales and South Australian viticultural regions. “Put simply, we’ve made the McGuigan lion roar, and we believe that with the support of our independent retailers and a solid marketing and promotional program that the new BIN Series will over-deliver upon our strategic objective of growing the McGuigan brand in this price segment”, Chief Winemaker for McGuigan Wines, Neil McGuigan, explained. MUD HOUSE WINERY 2014 VINTAGE RELEASES Distributed by: Accolade Wines RRP: $18.99 Off the back of a fairly tough vintage, New Zealand Winery Mud House is set to release two award-winning varietals into the Australian market this year. The 2014 Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc is all about juicy acidity and freshness. “Rather than just slip down the hatch, the sauvignon blanc has a grainy feel to the palate. It’s all about giving that fruit a little bit of interest and pulling it right through to the finish”, said Mud House Chief Winemaker Ben Glover. The 2014 Marlborough Pinot Gris, comprises of fruit predominantly grown on the fertile soils of the Waipara Region, delivering a wine that evokes rich notes of apple strudel, pear and spice, and a palate that is full, spicy and unctuous. drinks trade 67 New releases TYRRELL’S VINTAGE SEMILLONS THE VISIONARY CABERNET SAUVIGNON 2010 Distributed by: Tyrrell’s Wines RRP: Vat 1 Hunter Semillon 2009 $80.00; HVD Semillon 2009 $36.00; Stevens Semillon 2009 $35.00; Belford Semillon 2009 $35.00. Distributed by: Taylors Wines RRP: $180 WINE All four of Tyrrell’s Wines’ 2009 Hunter Semillons are now available for purchase. This range offers a set of easy drinking wines, from “an almost perfect vintage”, as described by Tyrrell’s, with something for consumers pitched at either the higher or lower price brackets. The Vat 1 Hunter Semillon 2009 is a classic Hunter Valley semillon, with a tightly structured palate, considerable length and breadth of citrus fruit flavours, and a hint of toasty bottle aged complexity. HVD Semillon 2009 offers a softer bodied palate and moves towards biscuity characters with age, while the Stevens Semillon 2009 possesses a youthful green hue, a hint of toasty bottle age development beyond its prominent citrus fruit profile, and acids just beginning to soften into what is a seamlessly structured wine. Finally, the Belford Semillon 2009, the last of the semillon picked, has a fuller palate, good fruit characters and a soft, clean acidic finish. Following its inaugural success, Taylors Wines has announced the second release of The Visionary Cabernet Sauvignon. Following on from the first release of this wine from 2009, the latest release is from the 2010 vintage. The Visionary Cabernet Sauvignon is an important release for the Taylors family, who say this release reflects the family’s generational journey to crafting world class refined and distinctive cabernet. Reaffirming the family’s ability to produce outstanding cabernet is its most recent accolade at the London International Wine and Spirit Competition, which awarded its 2010 St Andrews Cabernet Sauvignon, as the Best Cabernet Sauvignon. If the 2010 St Andrews is anything to go by, then there are high expectations for this latest Visionary release from the same vintage. COLDSTREAM HILLS VINTAGE RELEASES Distributed by: Treasury Wine Estates RRP: Rising Vineyard Chardonnay $44.99; Deer Farm Vineyard Chardonnay $44.99; Deer Farm Vineyard Pinot Noir $49.99; The Esplanade Pinot Noir $49.99; Reserve Chardonnay $59.99; Reserve Pinot Noir $84.99; Reserve Shiraz $49.99. Coldstream Hills has released its new Single Vineyard and Reserve collection vintages. In total there are seven new additions, including three different 2013 expressions of chardonnay and pinot noir, and a shiraz from 2012 – the only wine to have been released from this year. The new releases all originate from the Yarra Valley – a region from which Coldstream Hills is renowned for pioneering wines of elegance, finesse and length of flavour. The chardonnay vintage releases are the Rising Vineyard Chardonnay, Deer Farm Vineyard Chardonnay and Reserve Range Chardonnay, which Chief Winemaker Andrew Fleming says represent contrasting expressions of Yarra Valley chardonnay. The pinot noirs include the Deer Farm Vineyard Pinot Noir, The Esplanade Pinot Noir and the Reserve Pinot Noir. “Even though 2013 was a warm vintage, these wines really express the versatility of pinot noir, and display the hallmark elegance, perfume, texture and silkiness that Coldstream Hills pinot is known for,” Andrew says. Finally the Coldstream Hills Reserve Shiraz from the 2012 vintage is silky and concentrated, and displays the best characteristics of cool climate shiraz. Andrew says this is a shiraz that will age well, with a good twenty years of cellaring age ahead of it. New releases JACOB’S CREEK SPARKLING LIGHTLY RANGE Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia RRP: $14.99 EILEEN AND THOMAS HARDY VINTAGES WINE Distributed by: Accolade Wines RRP: 2012 Cabernet Sauvignon $129.99; 2010 Shiraz $124.99; 2013 Pinot Noir and Chardonnay $94.99. September saw media join Hardys family members, including Brand Ambassador Bill Hardy and fourth generation Jim Hardy (Sir James Hardy), Chief Winemaker Paul Lapsley and Accolades Wines for an exclusive tasting in Sydney of the latest vintage releases. The new releases to join the Eileen Hardy range include the 2013 chardonnay and pinot noir, as well as the 2010 shiraz, while the 2012 cabernet sauvignon joins the Thomas Hardy range. The 2012 Thomas Hardy Cabernet Sauvignon is a base of Coonawarra and Margaret River cabernet, combining the mint and austerity of tannins from Coonawarra with the Bordeaux-like complexity of Margaret River. Speaking of the 2010 Eileen Hardy Shiraz Paul Lapsley said the wine is one of the best the brand has ever made. This wine has intense fruit cake aromas, which are skilfully replicated on the palate. The Eileen Hardy 2013 Pinot Noir is a medium bodied wine with silky tannins, comprised of fruit from both Hoddles Creek and the Coal River Valley, lending to a rich and complex wine. The 2013 chardonnay similarly, is a blend of two regions – Tasmania and the Yarra Valley. Hardys say the 2013 chardonnay exemplifies Hardys’ commitment to quality and provides a benchmark for their chardonnay winemaking. DE BORTOLI WINES LAUNCHES PREMIUM CUVÉE Distributed by: De Bortoli Wines RRP: $21.60 De Bortoli Wines has released a new Rococo sparkling, Rococo Premium Cuvée, to replace the Rococo Blanc de Blancs in the portfolio. Chief Winemaker, Steve Webber said: “We decided to tweak the style of Rococo, so whilst still predominantly a chardonnay cuvée, we introduced small quantities of pinot noir and pinot meunier to the blend. This adds for a bit more breadiness and complexity”. “A lot of consumers enjoy the blanc de blancs style, but don’t generally understand the term. This has been simplified with the new Rococo Premium NV Cuvée,” Steve added. 70 drinks trade JACOB’S CREEK has launched a new péntillant-style wine range, named Sparkling Lightly. The new range offers a delicately bubbly drinking experience, launched in response to consumer research, which revealed a demand for a lighter sparkling wine style as some consumers said they experience a full feeling when drinking sparkling beverages. Rebekah Richardson, JACOB’S CREEK Sparkling and White Winemaker, said the range’s delicate sparkling character has been achieved by limiting the sugar in the second fermentation. The Sparkling Lightly range is available in white and rosé variants. JACOB’S CREEK ‘Sparkling Lightly’ White NV is a fresh and delicate wine with aromas of peach and lychee, while the palate is soft and approachable with a creamy finish and a light tingle of bubbles. The JACOB’S CREEK ‘Sparkling Lightly’ Rose NV has hints of raspberry and strawberry on the nose and on the palate berry notes are lifted slightly by the effervescence ahead of a soft creamy finish. A DIFFERENT MARLBOROUGH SAUVIGNON BLANC FOR ADVENTUROUS WINE LOVERS Distributed by: Chace Agencies (SA), Off the Vine Merchants (WA), The Wine Company (VIC & QLD), Young & Rashleigh Wine Merchants (NSW & ACT) RRP: $19.95 Over the last few decades, the world has developed a love of Marlborough sauvignon blanc from New Zealand, and will be excited to hear that a specific part of Marlborough – a relative latecomer called the Awatere Valley – has the ability to take that wine style another step further. Validation of this is The Crossings Sauvignon Blanc 2013 from this region, which recently won the trophy for Best Sauvignon Blanc at the UK based International Wine and Spirits Competition. According to The Crossings winemaker Jeff Fyfe, the award is testament to the quality of the fruit from their vineyards. “We grow these vines in the harsh conditions of the upper Awatere Valley in Marlborough, some distance from the main Wairau Valley. This gives our wines, and particularly our Sauvignon Blanc, a fine mineral acidity you just don’t get in milder climates.” The Crossings Sauvignon Blanc has intense fruit flavours, minerality and fresh, crisp acidity. PROUD CATEGORY WINNER GREEN COMPANY OF THE YEAR The Drinks Business Green Awards 2014 PROUD CATEGORY WINNER GOLD MEDAL MOST SOCIALLY OR ENVIRONMENTALLY RESPONSIBLE COMPANY OF THE YEAR Best in Biz Awards 2014 International Thinking differently is what we do at Yealands. Crafting award-winning wines in harmony with nature has seen us lead the world in sustainable winegrowing. But most importantly, it means great tasting wines which don’t cost the earth. Contact your Yealands Business Development Manager or your local Yealands State Distributor; Off The Vine - Western Australia: (08) 9418 8210, Chace Agencies - South Australia: (08) 8363 7881, The Wine Company - Victoria: (03) 9562 3900, Queensland: 1800 855 577, Young & Rashleigh – New South Wales/ACT: (02) 9967 5900 WINE Victoria Victoria Victoria as a wine region and destination should be the envy of many of Australia’s other wine producing areas. Spread in a protractor like pattern from the hub that is Melbourne, this southern mainland state boasts variety in climate, geology and geography, from which an homage to virtually every wine region and style Europe and the vinous Old World has, over the last 150 years, been impressively paid. By Ben Canaider. “ The Yarra Valley has been for some time a region of high quality wines. The continental climate, with warm, dry summers and cool nights, lend to wines of elegance, finesse and length of flavour”, says Andrew Fleming, Coldstream Hills Winemaker. Fortifieds from the north east rival those of the Iberian Peninsula; shiraz from across central and western Victoria can be positively Rhône-like; cabernets grown a little closer to the southern coast retain a distinctive and defining Bordeaux blackcurrant mintiness; and pinots and chardonnays from within Melbourne’s 100 kilometre or so “dress circle” regions continue to evolve towards a Burgundian model - some with both regard to elegance, and price… Given Melbourne’s international attraction as a food and wine destination, it is unsurprising that so much emphasis is often placed on those above mentioned dress circle regions within the Port Phillip zone, namely the Yarra Valley and the Mornington Peninsula. Only an hour or so by car from the capital, the easy proximity attracts tourists, investors, and winemakers alike. Both regions have a little bit of the wine Disneyland 72 drinks trade about them - with strong tourism infrastructure and what seems like a restaurant attached to every vineyard. Yet the wine investment money and the meetings of winemaking minds have seriously sped up these regions’ wine evolution, to the point where some commentators think that the wines don’t taste ‘Australian’ anymore, but are more like true internationals. Yarra Valley With regard to wine’s stylistic evolution, Yarra Valley chardonnay is almost post-Darwinian. A constant re-evaluation and refining of the style, and the process, seems to be this region’s chardonnay mission statement. A move to almost too-elegant examples devoid of any oak or battonage has seen wines emerge from the coolest micro-climatic sites (to the higher altitudes and slopes of the valley’s east) that make chablis from a cold year taste fruity and ripe by comparison. The trend towards acidity and tension in the region’s chardonnay can Harvesting wine grapes Mornington Peninsula perhaps be seen as a natural progression away from chardonnay’s other polar extreme - that being the Neville Wran preferred pineapple and vanilla bean flavoured examples of the 1980s. Current wines that let vineyard sites express themselves more than the winemaker’s artefact are to be applauded, and such examples as Oakridge 864 lead the way, but at a price. Value can be found however in such relatively new brands such as Ingram Rd (made by Helen’s Hill Estate) and Hoddles Creek. Whether the style is an homage to chablis or white Burgundy, the take-home message is that Yarra Valley chardonnays are nowadays, and undoubtedly, world class. “Previously full and rich whites and reds were being produced, but with knowledge and age, the best wines are the ones that minimise the inputs, allowing the site to speak”, McWilliam’s Senior White Winemaker Adrian Sparks, says of the region. Similarly, Paul Lapsley, Hardys Chief Winemaker, says there has been a trend towards wines of lower alcohol and a pursuit of finer, more elegant styles in Victoria in recent years. “We’ve been sourcing grapes from areas that produce these styles for a prolonged period, so for us we’re focussed on fine tuning our styles”, Paul added. “Our Upper Yarra Valley vineyard at Hoddles Creek is a great cool climate region for sparkling and table wine varieties – the climate helps retain natural acid in grapes and allows picking of fruit with complex flavours at lower sugar levels and lower alcohol in the final wine.” Pinot is not far behind (although keen eyes are now on Tasmania for the best and most elusive examples of this red wine). Hand-picking and partial whole-bunch fermentation with wild yeasts is increasingly the methodology du jour. And now with some good vine age more common around the Valley, pinots are being produced with the sort of tannins that separate proper pinots from, well, ‘fauxjolais’. An emerging brand with a brilliant winemaking pedigree is Goodman Wines; Tarrawarra - part of the Valley’s older establishment, which is also producing exceptional pinot at the moment (and pinot rosé, too - which is another Yarra Valley point of pride, and rightly so). Other brands to look out for, for pinot and chardonnay (and other varieties besides) include Soumah, Innocent Bystander, Thick as Thieves, and the ever dependable De Bortoli, whose Yarra Valley wines represent remarkable QPR quality/price rapport. The Yarra Valley produces many surprises, however, it is not just pinot and chardonnay. The quilt-like pattern of micro-climates and undulating topography ensure that there’s a place in the Yarra Valley for more wine varieties and styles than you might imagine. Cabernet blends shouldn’t be overlooked (Yeringberg), or tempranillo, which is now being produced to good effect by boutique and happily offthe-radar vineyard Atika. It is the warmer vineyard sites of the Lower Yarra Valley flats that have attracted the fabled St Huberts winery. Here St Huberts grows cabernet, chardonnay, roussanne, viognier, pinot noir and merlot in the area, which it says the areas topography is best for achieving its desired style. “St Huberts wines are intended to be a little riper, more generous and structured than many of our Yarra brethren producers. And the lower flats are generally warmer vineyard sites that induce these characters”, St Huberts winemaker Greg Jarratt explained. Mornington Peninsula With its handiness to the state’s CBD, combined with the Peninsula’s bayside aspect, it is no wonder the Mornington Peninsula has been a vineyard and wine playground for the wealthy professional looking not so much drinks trade 73 Victoria WINE Yarra Valley Vines Family Winemaking M for a sea or tree change, but a vine change. A certain coming of age has also occurred here, however, with more and more of the region’s vineyards and wineries building up vintage experience - some going back now more than 30 years. This has seen the peninsula’s weekend brigade of winemakers become something much more professional and established. Pinot noir and chardonnay dominate the plantings here, with the maritime climatic effects helping cool vines in the afternoons and evenings, and some not insignificant elevation in the southern part of the peninsula (shy of 1000 feet) also assuaging heat. To the north good shiraz has been produced, however, and pinot gris is also making a name for itself. Understanding the peninsula’s varying micro-climates and topographical aspects has been as important to the region’s development as vine age. An increasing commitment to single vineyard wines underscores this approach, whereby winemakers are recognising - in an almost Burgundianlike manner - the beauty and uniqueness of wines that come from just one small patch of earth. As small (by Australian standards) as this region is, it still boasts about 200 vineyards; yet new wine brands still emerge, although volumetric growth of Mornington Peninsula wine will be limited. Which isn’t a bad thing. Make better and less, not more and worse... Moorooduc Estate in the peninsula’s north is now over 30 years old. An early adopter of wild yeasts, the pinots and chardonnays are among the region’s best. But the secret weapon is its shiraz, which makes a lot of Crozes-Hermitage look dumb. A relative newcomer, Garagiste’s focus is on the peninsula’s sub-regions; its small and distinctive pinot and chardonnay vineyards, and small batch winemaking. Volume is low (1500 dozen), but 74 drinks trade any of Victoria’s wineries are not only small, but are also family-owned, and have been for centuries. Today’s family-owned wineries are thus benefited with knowledge of the region’s best sites and styles, discovered by their preceding generations. The Seppelt family is one such example of a family that has pioneered new viticultural regions throughout Victoria. Today Seppelt has three main vineyards across three regions in Victoria – Great Western, Heathcote and Drumborg. “We’ve had lots of time to trial and error different varieties within specific regions. The varieties express themselves differently in each region – Great Western is about fragrance, spice and purity in shiraz, yet Heathcote shiraz has more earthy and grainy tannins, while Drumborg lends itself to rieslings and chardonnay of finesse and elegance”, Melanie Chester, Seppelt Winemaker explains. Although this has seen refinement of style in the region, it has meant newer winemakers to the region have been left with the timely challenge of finding remaining sites to work with. And third Generation Brown Brothers family member, Ross Brown says: “there is no doubt that family wine businesses will continue to grow and thrive.” “Decisions in this industry are long-term with a minimum five to ten year lead time, which is incompatible with public companies that have much shorter-term vision”, Ross adds. “The wine industry is too demanding to see it as daily work. There has to be an enormous personal passion and love for the industry. Without this passion a family business will not survive.” Redbank Wines however has found a solution to this problem and saved itself a lot of time. Recognising the quality of fruit from family-owned vineyards, Redbank Wines has built close relationships with a group of family wineries, to be able to use fruit from these sites in its own production. Redbank Wines Vigneron Nick Dry, says that by doing so, enables himself and Winemaker Teresa Heuzenroeder to create distinctive wines that best reflect the region’s finest attributes. “Teresa and I work closely with a dedicated group of carefully selected independent growers. These small family-run vineyards offer unique and subtle soil and altitude differences”, Nick explains. personality and quality are high. Two other small, yet serious operations producing outstanding wine are Paradigm Hill and Hurley Vineyard - the latter making the region’s most exceptional single-vineyard pinots. T’Gallant is one such winery that has built itself upon Mornington Peninsula pinot grigio, with a history stemming 26 years. Predominantly T’Gallant sources pinot grigio from southern Victoria and Tasmania, also growing its pinot noir and chardonnay in the Mornington Peninsula. “The Mornington Peninsula has a profound maritime climate, which is absolutely brilliant for pinot noir and grigio”, Kevin McCarthy, T’Gallant Winemaker says. “When we started making pinot grigio 26 years ago there weren’t any other producers in Australia, but now it’s really taken off and there’s been a huge evolution in style. T’Gallant has explored the variety in great depth.” A Snapshot - Other Victorian Wine Zones Central Victoria: Bendigo and Heathcote (where the shiraz can have more powerful, diving bell-like depth) are the dark horses and international stars in this zone for medium-bodied shiraz. Yet whilst every sommelier is crazy about Heathcote, Bendigo’s Bress (who also make outstanding Heathcote wines), Turner’s Crossing Vineyard, and Pondalowie Vineyards, are making stunning, finely textured red wines at great value. North East Victoria: The fortifieds of Rutherglen and Glenrowan hold the limelight, but an increasingly more reflective and studious approach to table wine production has seen wineries like All Saints, Campbells and Stanton & Killeen draw more attention. Beechworth - home of the iconic Giaconda - has Rodda Wines, Castagna, and Savaterre making supremely individualistic wines, and Pennyweight make Australia’s best fino sherry. Throw in the King and Alpine Valleys with their developed Italian varietals and the zone is a one-stop wine destination. “Pinot gris lends itself to the King Valley, where long sunny autumn days combined with cool nights, produce balanced fruit. The vinification is cool, quick and precise to maximise fruit purity”, says Adrian Sparks of McWilliam’s Wines. One producer making the most of Glenrowan’s ability to produce bright and concentrated fruit, and fortifieds, is Baileys of Glenrowan, which grows muscat, muscadelle, nero d’avola, touriga nacional, tinta baroca, tinta cao and shiraz in the region. “Over the years our style has become more focused and principally driven to capture the essence of Glenrowan. The Baileys of Glenrowan vineyard is now fully certified organic with the aim to consistently and sustainably deliver a source of expressive, aromatic, bright and balanced fruit”, Paul Dahlenburg, Baileys of Glenrowan Senior Winemaker said. Port Phillip: The quiet siblings of the Yarra and Mornington - the regions of Sunbury, Geelong, and Mount Macedon, are the sorts of places sommeliers and beverage managers often find gems. Shadowfax in the Geelong region, and now in its fourteenth year, continues to refine chardonnays and pinots from both Geelong and from Mount Macedon to Melbourne’s immediate north, where grapes have long been used for quality sparkling wine production (Macedon Ridge Wines excel at this, and table wine too). Also just to the CBD’s north is Craiglee in Sunbury, whose shiraz is a cool-climate Victoria classic, and whose chardonnay is one of Australia’s great underrated wines, in the white Burgundy mould. WINE Western Victoria: Henty, nestled on the south western coast at Portland, 300kms west of Melbourne, is Australia’s climatically coolest wine region. As such its grapes retain great natural acidity, yet achieve ripeness thanks in part to the continental climate effects that drive down from the north. Riesling and cabernet can shine here, and Crawford River is the standout producer, releasing cabernet with some bottle age. Further north, in the Grampians and the Pyrenees regions, shiraz is arguably king, particularly from Mount Langi Ghiran (the Cliff Edge range is a relative bargain). A sign depicts a row of vines in a vineyard are of the Muscat variety. In Rutherglen, Victoria, Australia. Winemaker profile drinks trade recently spent time with Gary Baldwin, looking at his new releases from the Handpicked Wines range and discussing the future for the Mornington Peninsula multiregional wine producer. Gary Baldwin Handpicked Wines – Chief Winemaker Gary Baldwin is one of Australia’s most distinguished winemakers with over 40 years of winemaking and wine judging experience. Baldwin’s career in the wine industry began at Arrowfield in the Hunter Valley, where shortly after he became Chief Winemaker and General Manager. Thereafter, with invaluable experience and a background in biochemistry and wine science behind him, Baldwin traveled around the wine world in a number of esteemed roles. Baldwin joined Handpicked Wines last year in a full-time capacity, though he’d been working with the company since 2011. Travelling throughout vineyards in Australia and New Zealand, Gary works with grape growers and vignerons to ensure Handpicked Wines’ quality. With more purchases on the horizon for Handpicked Wines, Baldwin’s time looks to be well spent negotiating new vineyards, sourcing quality fruit and driving the Handpicked Wines winemaking strategy forward. 76 drinks trade Wine Review 2013 Handpicked Collection Yarra Valley Pinot Noir Good dark red colour. Complex dark spicy fruit, oak and nutty characters on the nose. The palate is full with both ripe and perhaps slightly under-ripe savoury fruit, as well as hints of olive and good texture and weight. 2013 Handpicked Collection Mornington Peninsula Chardonnay Very good pale olive green straw colour. Fresh stone fruit and citrus oil aromas, which are quite lifted with a slight floral character. Fresh fruity palate with good acidity and length, which is fine and persistent. 2013 Handpicked Collection Yarra Valley Chardonnay Good pale straw green colour. A lightly forward aroma of spicy citrus fruit and hints of lanoline. Medium-weight palate, with spicy lemon butter fruit flavours, good structure and texture; oak is also obvious, adding to structure. Handpicked Collection 2013 Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir Good dark red colour. Complex aromas of spice and oak, and lots of fresh berry primary fruit, with floral hints - so typical of the region. The palate is quite rich, with plenty of cherries and spice in the midpalate, and excellent fine grain tannin on the finish. 18 73 107 293 gold TroPHies medals silver medals bronze medals WINE Champagne, Prosecco and Sparkling CHAMPAGNE, PROSECCO & SPARKLING In this issue of drinks trade we’re taking a look at Champagne, prosecco and sparkling. As racing season begins and with Christmas and New Year steadily approaching, it’s these wines’ season, and there is no better time for the on- and off-premise alike to gather stocks, which raises two important questions - what produce is available and what’s going to sell? 78 drinks trade VINTAGE CHAMPAGNE Australians love vintage Champagne; we have always had a special spot in our hearts, and our cellars, for the vintage stuff. But are things changing? By Ken Gargett. L ast year the world’s devotion to Champagne wobbled a little. Globally, shipments dipped by 14.2 million bottles, representing a 4.4 per cent decline. Sales in France fell by 5.6 per cent and in the EU by 7.1 per cent, which is significant given that these two markets represent around 80 per cent of the overall Champagne sales. Australia however has been a shining light, bucking the trend with an increase of over 11 per cent to 5.4 million bottles; we are now the seventh largest Champagne importing market in the world, and eighth by volume. Frederic Panaiotis, the Chef de Cave at Ruinart, has been quoted as saying that Australia is now “one of the world’s most advanced markets for Champagne, thanks to such initiatives as the Vin de Champagne Awards. Australian people are very receptive to vintage Champagne, which very few markets understand.” Australia has also always been devoted to vintage Champagne. Quite why has often been discussed. There seems no definitive answer, rather, there may have been many reasons for this. It is likely that Australians have long seen vintage as equating to quality. Why it should now sit below 7 per cent might seem as equally puzzling until one considers a few other facts. In 2007, the average price of a bottle of Champagne in Australia was A$70. That has now fallen to between A$45 and A$55; so more Champagne than ever is being brought, but at an ever-decreasing price. The only Champagne that realistically fits this bill is non-vintage. Our strong dollar has meant that well priced non-vintage Champagne is often cheaper than good local fizz. In addition, quality has picked up. Consider the two very large Houses of Mumm and Moët et Chandon, whose non-vintage Champagne is better than ever with better value. Why wouldn’t sales blossom? Wherever vintage sits in the scheme of Champagne imports, it will always have a solid and devoted following. Unlike most wine regions, every producer doesn’t release a vintage every year; the decision is up to each house. It is not uncommon for one house to release a vintage wine, whereas their neighbour will not. The decision to release a vintage or not is made on a number of factors, such as the quality (it can vary considerably across the region); vineyard access (houses with a higher percentage of their own vineyards seem to release more vintages); commercial factors; needs of the house (it may be that a producer needs all the grapes they can source for their non-vintage wines and/or reserve stocks for future years); and stocks. Houses are however releasing vintage wine far more often than ever before and there is a feeling that many houses are keen to release as many vintages as possible. There is nothing wrong with that, though it may mean that occasionally a release doesn’t match their usual high standards. Veuve Clicquot has, admirably, taken a different tactic, although possibly one that may prove too rigid. Chef de Cave, Dominique Demarville, has taken some flack for the house, which has been in great form for many years now, not releasing a 2002 La Grand Dame. They moved from 1998 to 2004 – both wonderful Champagnes. Dominique has suggested that the conditions that year did not suit the style of LGD. This is a house, quite unlike most, that is actually moving to reduce the number of vintages released each decade. Dominique intends that there shall only be three vintages per decade. This is designed to further improve the Yellow Label NV, as well as maintaining the credibility and quality of the vintage. It will be most interesting when a decade has a string of truly great years. Will climate change prove a boon to Champagne? Benoit Gouez from Moët will not be releasing either the 2005 or the 2007, noting botrytis and a lack of finesse, but suggests the 2006 could almost be a clone of 2002. 2008, a high acid year, has Champagne aficionados in a lather but Benoit actually prefers the “more accomplished” 2009. There will be no 2010 (rot again, though a better year than either ‘05 or ‘07, a year that they could have released) or 2011 (lack of maturity). He is very happy with 2012, suggesting it has “amazing potential”. Olivier Krug also offered some thoughts on recent vintages (which I have paraphrased). 1997 – acidity; 1998 – intense; 1999 – dull; 2000 – warm and rich; 2001 – poor; 2002 – beautiful; 2003 – rich; 2004 – good; 2005 – okay; 2006 – very good; 2007 – fair; 2008 – brilliant. Whilst Krug, like most houses, is not keen to provide too much information on future releases, this provides a few clues. Personally, the vintage Champagnes that have most excited me have been the lovely 1982’s; the intense 1985’s, though a very small vintage and rarely seen; the amazing 1988’s – a year that was largely unheralded in its early days but continues to scale new heights; the superb 1990’s; the underrated 1995’s; the glorious 1996’s and the powerful 1998’s. More recently, 2002 and 2004 were the highlights. drinks trade 79 Champagne, Prosecco and Sparkling WINE THE RISE OF PROSECCO Similar to Champagne vintage, prosecco adds a little bit of Italian style on a budget for Australian drinkers. By Winsor Dobbin. P rosecco is the Italian sparkling white wine that has captured the imagination of drinkers across the world over the past four or five years – and there is no sign of the phenomenon running out of steam. By the end of 2013, prosecco had out-sold Champagne by 307 million bottles to 304 million for the year - the Italian Sparkling Wine Observatory (OVSE) reported – with sales in Germany, Britain and the US soaring. Despite all this, it is remarkable how little most people know about its origins. The appeal of prosecco is easy to understand; whether made fully sparkling (spumante) or lightly sparkling (frizzante), prosecco is refreshing, low in alcohol and relatively affordable. It is all about freshness and immediate drinkability, and is often enjoyed as an aperitif. Prosecco is generally lighter and less yeasty than Champagne or Australian sparkling wines. Michael Trembath from Italian import specialists Trembath and Taylor says he’s seen sales of prosecco in Australia rise by 15 per cent each year for the past three. “It is a good everyday drink – you don’t need a special occasion,” Michael says. Prosecco is usually made from the indigenous glera grape (itself sometimes known as prosecco), although other varieties are allowed and while the name Prosecco derives from a village near Trieste, DOC prosecco is now produced in the Veneto and Friuli Venezia Giulia regions of north-east Italy. The majority of vines are grown around the towns of Conegliano and Valdobbiadene in the dramatically beautiful rolling hills north of Treviso, around 50km inland from Venice. Unlike Champagne and Tasmanian sparkling wines, prosecco is largely produced using the Charmat method, in which secondary fermentation takes place in stainless steel tanks. This makes the wine cheaper to produce and has resulted in an international explosion of interest with 65 per cent of production now exported. American wine bible Wine Spectator points out that the prosecco boom coincided with the Global Financial Crisis, which sparked interest in cheap wines that still offered quality. And with prosecco wines ranging from brut (the driest styles) to extra dry, to dry (which are actually, and very confusingly, the sweetest) there is something for most consumers. Mark Singarella from Vino Bambino in Melbourne imports wines from Alessandro and Lorena Salatin at Salatin winery in Treviso. And Mark says he’s enjoyed success with their wines: “they tend to be on the slightly drier side of prosecco, which I think Australian drinkers really enjoy.” Many vines in the Veneto cling precariously to the steep slopes, which makes handpicking the only possible farming method. The area has over 20,000 hectares of glera under vine and European Union regulations state that only wine produced here can be called prosecco. Australian producers remain defiant about this; saying prosecco is the name of the grape and cannot be appropriated by a region. Either way, Australia is a major target for Italian prosecco producers, and many more are queuing up to find distribution here. One problem, Prosecco glera gra pes 80 drinks trade AUSTRALIAN SPARKLING J Wine shop in Valdobbiadene however, is the distance between Italy and Australia, given prosecco is best consumed within a year of bottling: two or three years maximum. Consumers should look for wines labelled as DOC (controlled designation of origin), DOCG (a guarantee the wine is from Valdobbiadene and Conegliano), and the ‘premium’ wines from the Cartizze commune. Woolworths reported that sales of imported prosecco in Dan Murphy’s and BWS stores rose by over 40 per cent in the four years to the end of 2013. Dan Murphy’s has a deal with Zonin - one of the biggest prosecco producers - as well as selling Tenuta Ca’ Bolani, Nicoletta, Borgo San Leo and the more expensive Carpenè Malvolti DOCG. All retail for under $20. Vintage Cellars also offers several Italian proseccos including Sensi, Revino and Ombra, alongside local labels like Dal Zotto, Brown Brothers and Jacob’s Creek. “We see interest in prosecco continuing to increase,” says Luca Giavi, director of the Consorzio di Tutela Prosecco DOC - the industry umbrella body. “We believe it is a style of wine that is prefect for today’s lifestyle – enjoyable and undemanding.” La Tordera - a third-generation family company with a newly built sustainable winery - is one producer with its eye on the Australian market. Its wines are currently only imported by sommelier Matthew Dunn of Aria restaurants in Sydney and Brisbane, but the company’s brand manager Elisa Villanova says: “We are like everyone else, and keen to increase our market in Australia.” Francesca Ceotto from Le Contesse - another family winery - has searched without success for an importer in Australia despite currently exporting 85 per cent of production to other countries. “Ideally we are looking for an importer who is willing to take small quantities to Australia. That way everything gets consumed quickly – which is important when you have maybe only a two-year drinking window. That’s better for the client and better for the distributor”, Francesca explains. Alessandro Salatin is delighted with the response to his wines in Australia since they launched in June 2013, however warns: “It is a complex market, but it seems people easily identify with prosecco and the Italian way of life.” Alessandra Zambonin from Zonin and Tenuta Ca’ Bolani – two producers under the same ownership - agree, saying: “Australia is now a very important market for us, working with Woolworths. People are adventurous about what they drink and see prosecco as being cool and representing the Italian way of life. But it is an affordable luxury; it doesn’t cost a lot of money. “We know all about the Australian wines branded as prosecco, too, but we prefer to underline the authenticity of the Italian product.” ust as vintage Champagne has become the benchmark for quality Champagne in Australia, the same can be said of sparkling, which has quickly and recently grown to become the premium wine option, particularly against still wine. Moreover, sparkling provides an affordable alternative to Champagne, which measures well when considering value for money. The quality of Australian sparkling has only really been taken seriously in recent years, but the world has been quick to realise and the category is now in steady growth. In the last year (MAT 03/08/14 July 2014 Aztec Data), sparkling has experienced a growth of +A$12,504, with the majority of this growth taking place at the end of the year – those celebratory months. If this is anything to go by, the industry can expect sales of sparkling to go well again this year. To really put these figures into perspective, as reported this year by Gourmet Traveller, over 8 million Australian consumers (over half of the number of Australians who consume alcohol), consume a glass of sparkling at least once a month, with just under 2 million consumers expected to join the category in the near future. Driving growth to the category and what can really be labeled as the epitome of and benchmark for Australian sparkling is our country’s cool climate regions - the Yarra Valley, Macedon Ranges and Adelaide Hills – and above all drinks trade 81 WINE Champagne, Prosecco and Sparkling Tasmania, which has taken the industry by storm. And we only have to look as far as The 2014 Champagne and Sparkling Wine World Championships – dubbed the ‘Oscars’ of the sparkling wine world, which saw Australia’s cool climate sparkling wine producers take away ten gold medals - to see which producers are at the forefront of the category in Australia, and globally (Australia ships 41.4 per cent of sparkling production overseas). Commenting at the recent drinks trade Champagne, prosecco and sparkling wine tasting, Travis Fuller, Hardys Marketing Manager at Accolade Wines said: “Australian sparkling producers are building great complexity and concentration. There are a lot of wines that demonstrate what good cool climate Australian wine can represent.” Winning producers included Blue Pyrenees Estate, House of Arras, De Bortoli Wines, Dominique Portet (rosé), Grant Burge (shiraz), Clover Hill, Coldstream Hills, Château Tanunda, Claudio Radenti, Deviation Road, Heemskerk, Jacob’s Creek and Taltarni Vineyards – all familiar names and ones to continue to keep an eye out for. Standing out on top at the awards was Blue Pyrenees’ Midnight Cuvée (RRP $35), which was the inaugural winner of the World Champion Australian Sparkling Wine trophy. This sparkling is a blanc de blanc, made from fruit harvested at midnight “for optimal fruit conditions”, Blue Pyrenees Winemaker Andrew Koerner says, lending to its name, and is rested on lees for at least three years. Blue Pyrenees was interestingly, founded by Rémy Martin in 1963, the force behind Champagne Houses Krug and Charles Heidsieck, and was in fact originally named Chateau Rémy. Champagne houses investing in Australian sparkling and sparkling around the world, is not new. In fact Champagne houses drove much of the initial development in the sparkling category, explaining the number of similar styles shared between the two. Moët is another example, establishing its own sparkling brand, Domaine Chandon, in the Yarra Valley in 1987 and Champagne House Louis Roederer, which initially owned Jansz in Tasmania (owned by Yalumba today). The most recognised sparkling in Australia and also a gold medal winner at the recent awards is House of Arras. Produced in Tasmania, this house has successfully created a Champagne-like quality sparkling, and it’s a real bang for buck. Its style – a blend of pinot noir and chardonnay, usually with a higher percentage of pinot noir, is behind the success. Its most recent release moves the brand only closer towards a Champagne-like style – A by Arras NV Premium Cuvee, which adds pinot meunier to the blend. Chief Sparkling Winemaker of the house and Australia’s most awarded sparkling winemaker, Ed Carr, talks about the new release, as well as his view of the Australian sparkling wine industry and its future on page 84. De Bortoli Wines is following, and recently changed the style of its sparkling with the release of Rococo Premium Cuvée in August (RRP $21.60), made from the Yarra Valley; a blend of 86 per cent chardonnay, 11 per cent pinot noir and 3 per cent pinot meunier. 82 drinks trade “We decided to tweak the style of Rococo, so whilst still predominantly a chardonnay cuvée, we introduced small quantities of pinot noir and pinot meunier to the blend. This adds for a bit more breadiness and complexity”, Steve Webber, De Bortoli Wines Chief Winemaker explains. “A lot of consumers enjoy the blanc de blancs style, but don’t generally understand the term. This has been simplified with the new Rococo Premium NV Cuvée”, Steve adds. Commenting on Australian sparkling product and styles, judges were extremely positive about the quality of sparkling wine tasted in drinks trade’s recent panel, but noted considerable changes in style. On the panel was Benjamin Scarfe, Senior Buyer from the Independent Liquor Group, who said: “My view on the whole category is that there’s been a movement away from the very yeasty esters, towards a very fruit driven style of wine.” One brand really shaking up sparkling style is Jacob’s Creek with its new ‘Sparkling Lightly’ range. The new range has been developed to offer a delicate drinking experience, achieved by limiting the sugar levels during the second fermentation. The release is a blend of a number of varietals including fiano, pinot gris, sauvignon blanc and white frontignac, among others. This blend and style not only offers a lighter sparkling wine but one that is fruity and fresh. “Talking to consumers revealed significant interest in wines that are less bubbly, as some people said they experience a full feeling when drinking sparkling beverages”, JACOB’S CREEK Sparkling and White Winemaker, Rebekah Richardson explains. Travis Fuller also recognises a change in style in the category, adding: “There’s quite a lot of variation in the category. The better wines are showing two stylistic trends. One is that style of richer more complex, yeasty, toasty development characters, while the other is that more precise, finer style, with citrus lemon and chalky flavours, midpalate, but long and delicate.” A full set of the winning wines from drinks trade’s Champagne, prosecco and sparkling tasting can be found on pages 86-92. Insight The House that ED CARR Built The Tasmania-based House of Arras has made a play for a whole new section of the sparkling wine market this year, releasing A by Arras NV Premium Cuvee under its flagship brand. A by Arras is consistent with the House’s style and is a blend of 58.8 per cent pinot noir, 33.6 per cent chardonnay and 7.5 per cent pinot meunier, but priced at just $24.99 – the first release by the House at this price point. the place for sparkling, but back then I think people were skeptical, particularly over ten years ago. But the place has earned its credibility by producing good wine. drinks trade: House of Arras is well known as Australia’s most expensive sparkling wine. The recent release by the House – A by Arras NV Premium Cuvee – has moved the House’s offering into the $20-$25 price bracket. What is the aim behind releasing this wine at such a low price point? Ed Carr: What it does is open up the whole category for us. We’ve been pitched at the top end, and although we still see a lot of growth in that end, this just opens up a different group of people for the brand; such that it should become more well-known and grow a more prominent market place presence. DT: What plans does the brand have in store for the rest of the year? EC: We’ve got some vintage roll-outs happening, but really our total effort this year is to get the A by Arras release off the ground and support our other products. DT: In 1995 when the House of Arras brand was born in Tasmania what was the outlook of the region and the impact it could have on winemaking? EC: I’ve always thought that Tasmania was going to be 84 drinks trade DT: Demand for Tasmanian wine continues to grow. Does the house have any concerns surrounding long-term supply in the region? EC: I guess the answer’s yes. Demand is growing very strongly so you’ve got to make sure you lock in supplies and have a future plan to build extra vineyard supply. DT: Part of House of Arras’ philosophy is allowing the wine to mature at its own pace. Does this also create challenges when it comes to meeting demand? EC: We can build our future stocks reasonably quickly, we hope, and we’re very fortunate to have a big scrag of reserve, very old wine actually, that we can use to offset what we do. DT: What changes and trends in sparkling have you seen during your career as a sparkling winemaker? EC: I think there’s been a continual push into the premium areas - the cold climate regions. What I think has happened, and you can see it in Tasmania, is that the better producers have locked in their house styles, which means there’s a selection of really good sparkling wines but all of them have very different characters. DT: What do you think we will see from the sparkling category over the next few years, do you think it will continue to flourish? EC: I think it will. I think the premium category is still very strong within Australia; Australia is such a high importer of international produce (i.e. Champagne), which to me indicates there is a strong market for premium sparkling here. DT: Which winemakers do you think will drive the future direction of sparkling winemaking? EC: I come back to those key brands who are doing very well, like Jansz, Clover Hill, Arras, and Brown Brothers who will do well with Pirie, and there are other producers outside of Tassie like Deviation Road in the Adelaide Hills. So there’s bound to be someone to come along to pick up the baton. As a company we have to make sure we have people with enough experience to continue the tradition. The best brands in the world to me aren’t about single people; they’re about building a culture that supports that long term. Wine list TASTING PANEL WINE CHAMPAGNE, PROSECCO & SPARKLING The market for sparkling, Champagne and Prosecco in Australia has never been bigger and the best news for Australia is that its sparkling produce is dominating that of other countries, reflected just in the sheer volume of accolades received in the past year, and in this tasting. This was drinks trade’s biggest tasting panel to date, with by far the largest number of entries the panel has ever received. Australia’s leading sommeliers, retailers, winemakers and educators joined drinks trade in September to narrow down entries to the standout products per category. ED CARR House of Arras Chief Sparkling Winemaker AMANDA YALLOP Head Sommelier at Quay SCOTT COSGRIFF Winemaker 86 drinks trade ANDREA PRITZKER Fine Wine Content Manager at Langton’s BENJAMIN SCARFE Senior Buyer at Independent Liquor Group GABRIELLE FITTLER Market Development Officer at Wine Australia ROB GEDDES MW TONY COSGRIFF Winemaker at Centennial Vineyards TRAVIS FULLER Hardys Marketing Manager at Accolade Wines Wine list Champagne WINE H.Blin 2004 Vintage Champagne RRP: $69.99 Distributed by: Kollaras Trading Company Notes: A dense and complex wine with intense fresh, earthy flavours. Strong acid and good length. Champagne Jacquart 2006 Blanc de Blancs RRP: $100 Distributed by: Single Vineyard Sellers Notes: Straw golden in colour. A full-bodied Champagne. Rich in structure, with earthy and toasty notes on the palate. Veuve Fourny Blanc de Blancs Brut Vertus Premier Cru RRP: $65 Distributed by: De Bortoli Wines Notes: A fine and elegant Champagne. Toasty, mushroom notes. Flavours of nougat and truffle. Excellent structure, acid length and complexity. 2006 Champagne Taittinger Brut Millésimé RRP: $145.50 Distributed by: McWilliams’s Wines Notes: Lemon yellow hues. Good, balanced presence on the palate. Toasty, truffle and mushroom flavours. A round and rich Champagne Pol Roger 2004 Brut Vintage RRP: $130 Distributed by: Samuel Smith & Sons Notes: Hints of yeast on the nose. Threads of good acidity. This Champagne will develop well with age. Pol Roger 2002 Blanc de Blancs Vintage RRP: $130 Distributed by: Samuel Smith & Sons Notes: Floral notes. Fresh and vibrant on the palate. Drinking well now. 88 drinks trade 2004 Dom Pérignon RRP: $249.99 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Simple, dense and weightless. Fresh, herby, fennel flavours. A full round-bodied finish. Billecart-Salmon Blanc de Blancs NV RRP: $120-$140 Distributed by: Domaine Wine Shippers Notes: A lifted, balanced Champagne. Buttered brioche notes. Fresh, elegant sweetness. Vibrant, with a persistent finish. Good acid. Jacques Picard NV Brut RRP: $86 Distributed by: Empire Liquor Notes: Taut with floral aromas. Medium straw gold hues. Truffle flavours. Long, clean finish. Besserat De Bellefon Blanc de Blanc RRP: $120 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Fresh aromatics. Elegance and finesse. Toasty truffle flavours. Mineral, tangy finish. Besserat De Bellefon Brut NV RRP: $95 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Bright, medium straw gold hues. Aromatic palate. Toast, truffle and nougat flavours. Complex and good acid length. Besserat De Bellefon Brut Millésimé 2002 RRP: $120 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Bright straw in colour with golden hues. With aeration, toasty notes appear before leading to menthol and spicy flavours of ginger, cinnamon and anise. Besserat De Bellefon Extra Brut RRP: $99.95 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Light straw in appearance. Toasty, truffle flavours. Great acid and length. Champagne Jacquart Rosé NV RRP: $85 Distributed by: Single Vineyard Sellers Notes: Red berry-fruit aromas - ripe redcurrants, cherries, wild strawberries. Peach and apricot flavours. Fresh and full. Fine finish. Champagne Delamotte Brut NV RRP: $79 Distributed by: Luxury Beverage Group Notes: Light golden in colour. Citrus, floral notes. Yeasty, savoury bread flavours. Vibrant and agile Billecart-Salmon Brut Rosé NV RRP: $120-140 Distributed by: Domaine Wine Shippers Notes: Soft, mellow, nutty and straw-like bouquet notes. Soft, round and easy-going palate. Superbly harmonious. Champagne Henriot Brut Souverain RRP: $85 Distributed by: Luxury Beverage Group Notes: Golden hues. Floral, citrus fruit notes. Balanced, harmonious palate. Jacques Picard NV Brut Rosé RRP: $86 Distributed by: Empire Liquor Notes: Noticeable aromas of white flowers. Abundant red fruit and citrus flavours. A lovely, creamy finish. Ruinart Blanc de Blancs RRP: $112.49 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Delicate citrus, peach, buttered toast and dairy aromas. Elegant, crisp, dry palate, with lemon and honey flavours. Fine bubbles. Creamy, talcy finish. Champagne Rosé Perrier Jouet Blason Rosé NV RRP: $79.99 Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia Notes: Smooth and finely chiselled. Subtle and rich. A myriad of floral notes and a long finish. Veuve Clicquot Vintage Rosé 2004 RRP: $137.49 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Raspberry, wild strawberry and cherry notes. Dried fruit, savoury flavours. Harmonious fruit flavours linger on the finish. Prosecco Riccadonna Prosecco D.O.C RRP: $14.99 Distributed by: Campari Australia Notes: Straw yellow in colour. Fruity, citrus palate, with distinct flavours of melon and apple nuances. Nutty notes. Full-bodied. drinks trade 89 Wine list WINE Bottega Prosecco Poeti D.O.C RRP: $24.95 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Light straw in colour. Fruit driven nose, with peach, pear, green apple and lime notes. Fine minerality. Dry palate. Medium acid, medium length. Bottega Gold RRP: $65 Distributed by: Festival City Food & Liquor Notes: Pale straw yellow hues. Golden apple, Williams pear, acacia flower aromas. Harmonious, elegant and fresh in taste.Red Sparkling Sparkling Shiraz Merlot RRP: $18 Distributed by: Biodynamic Marketing (VIC), United Organics (QLD), Australian Organic Network (NSW) Notes: An amalgam of warm, spicy, toasty, rich and peppery components. Excellent balance between developed fruit flavours and fine tannins. Harmonious acidity, alcohol and residual sugar levels. Sparkling Rosé Chandon Brut Rosé NV RRP: $31.99 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Strawberry and raspberry flavours are present in a creamy, complex palate. Long crisp finish. Trilogy Rosé NV RRP: $16.99 Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia Notes: Lively raspberry, strawberry and red apple fruit flavours, supported by fresh citrus notes. Long well-balanced finish. 2010 Jansz Vintage Rosé RRP: $52.95 Distributed by: Samuel Smith & Sons Notes: Well-balanced palate. Layers of strawberry fruit and creamy fine mousse. Crisp and dry finish. Lingering flavours of nougat, rose petal and citrus. Sparkling Chandon Sparkling Pinot Shiraz NV RRP: $31.99 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Spice, walnut and coconut aromas. Very sweet palate, with an alcohol level that is high considering the depth of flavour. NV Andrew Garrett Sparkling Shiraz RRP: $10.80 Distributed by: Vok Beverages Notes: Bouquets of violet, cherry and spiced, peppery plum. Fine textural mouth feel. Soft and elegant. Solid tannins. Controlled background of oak and refreshing acidity. A long, lingering finish. 90 drinks trade House of Arras Brut Elite Cuvée RRP: $49.99 Distributed by: Accolade Wines Notes: Elegant palate structure. Flavours of lycee, truffle, cinnamon and lanolin evolve in the glass. Backbone of natural acidity and subtle oak tannins. Fantastic persistence of flavour. House of Arras Grand Vintage 2004 RRP: $69.99 Distributed by: Accolade Wines Notes: Very clean yeast. Aged aromas and flavours. Full palate. Generous weight and volume. House of Arras EJ Carr Late Disgorged 2002 RRP: $149.99 Distributed by: Accolade Wines Notes: Glowing green-gold in colour. Fine mousse. A rich, complex and toasty bouquet. The palate has all of the foregoing, plus mesmerising balance and length. Ninth9Island NV Sparkling RRP: $30 Distributed by: Red + White and Kreglife (Tasmania) Notes: Straw in colour. Light toast aromas, good bouquet. Tight and lean palate, with good flavour and length. High acid, low alcohol. 2012 Gardners Ground Sparkling RRP: $30 Distributed by: Single Vineyard Sellers Notes: Crisp granny smith apple and peach aromas. Delicate creaminess. Fine spiralling beads for a fragile lift. Brown Brothers Patricia Sparkling RRP: $47.15 Distributed by: Brown Brothers Notes: Full-bodied, complex and rich palate. Prominent lemon and lime flavours. Lingering, bready character. Dry, crisp finish and refreshing acidity. Chateau Tanunda Blanc de Blancs Brut 2012 RRP: $35 Distributed by: Australian Food & Beverage Group Notes: Green apple, lemon and citrus fruit aromas and flavours, combined with hints of toast, lemon curd, nougat and spice. Crisp, clean finish. Blue Pyrenees Midnight Cuvee RRP: $35 Distributed by: Prime Wines (VIC), Veraison Wines (NSW) and Nelson Wines (QLD) Notes: Crisp and lively palate. Lemon and lime spectrum flavours. Attractive minerality and acidity. Coldstream Hills Pinot Noir Chardonnay 2011 RRP: $34.99 Distributed by: Treasury Wine Estates Notes: Cranberry, wood smoke and crushed, dry spice notes. Nice, dry finish. Deutz Marlborough Cuvee NV RRP: $19.99 Distributed by: Pernod Ricard Australia Notes: Delicate and harmonious style. Intense citrus and macaroon flavours. Lingering finish. Brown Brothers Pinot Noir Chardonnay & Pinot Meunier NV RRP: $25 Distributed by: Brown Brothers Notes: Light straw-green in colour. Complex wine. Toasty and yeasty characters. Plenty of fresh fruit and minerality. Borambola VIII Blanc de Blancs NV RRP: $25 Distributed by: Inglewood Wine Merchants Notes: Vibrant fruit aromas. Citrusy palate, with lemon and lime flavours, and some sweetness. Clean, light and fresh taste. Complex creamy and autolysis characters. Pirie NV Sparkling RRP: $30 Distributed by: Brown Brothers Notes: A vibrant wine. Citrus flavours. Good acidity. Full and rich mid-palate. Mineral finish. AZAHARA Sparkling Chardonnay Pinot Noir RRP: $15 Distributed by: red + white Notes: Excellent creaminess. Cleansing citrus flavours with good definition. Rich, attractive mouth feel. drinks trade 91 Wine list WINE 2009 Heemskerk Coal River Valley Chardonnay Pinot Noir RRP: $59.99 Distributed by: Treasury Wine Estates Notes: Light yellow in colour. Fruity and yeasty characters. Well combined and fresh. Tremendous balance, flavour and character. Clean and dry, but soft on the finish. Yarra Burn Premium Cuvée Brut RRP: $18.99 Distributed by: Accolade Wines Notes: Citrus and stone fruit aromas. Nuances of toast and mushroom. Great structured palate, with elegance and persistence of flavour. 2011 Abel’s Tempest by Heemskerk RRP: $31.99 Distributed by: Treasury Wine Estates Notes: Bright cherry red. Highly aromatic wine; fresh, floral nose. Soft and supple palate, with delicate French oak character. Tempus Two Pewter Pinot Chardonnay RRP: $31.99 Distributed by: Australian Vintage. Notes: Complex blend of stone and citrus fruit. Warm biscuity, creamy character. Vibrant apple and white peach flavours. Supple creaminess from yeast autolysis. 2010 Chandon Vintage Brut RRP: $40.99 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Exceptionally fine bead. Delicate, citrusy flavours with bread and sweet doughy notes. Delicate restraint and powerful presence all in one. Excellent length. 2010 Chandon Blanc de Blancs RRP: $40.99 Distributed by: Moët Hennessy Australia Notes: Delicate and floral to start. Cascades with varietal stone fruit chardonnay character. Creamy mid-palate. The result of extended yeast ageing tapers to a fine and lingering finish of fresh, zesty acidity. 2010 Hungerford Hill Dalliance RRP: $35 Distributed by: The Wine Company Notes: A highly aromatic fresh bouquet that is vibrant and shows hints of sweet buttery brioche. Complex and lively palate with honeydew melon flavours, followed by rapier like acidity that cleanses the palate. 2011 Karribindi Chardonnay Pinot RRP: $29.99 Distributed by: Put A Cork In It (VIC), Decante This (NSW), KarriBindi Wines Notes: Fine mousse, with creamy texture and good stone fruit flavours. Elegant finish. 92 drinks trade Insight drinks Library An innovative new alternative for distributing drinks images and product content for online and print. I n the drinks industry, sharing content such as bottle images or product information is a task most, particularly brands and retailers, face on a regular basis. For many this task is often arduous and timeconsuming as they find content stored in a number of locations, taking the search off in many directions and adding to the possibility of incorrect or out-ofdate content being shared. Product content sharing platforms provide a solution to the above task, creating one location for product content, which can be shared with a number of parties. However, until now, hosts of these platforms have often provided the service at a sizeable cost, which has dissuaded many suppliers. Additionally 94 drinks trade this cost has tended to increase with the size and the amount of content shared on the platform, also seeing suppliers put off sharing their whole range. In turn this has affected the content available to retailer digital platforms for example. This problem is what led the drinks association, in collaboration with SKUvantage (Australia’s leading full service product photography and product content agency), to develop a cost efficient platform. The result was drinks Library, which launched last November. And since launching in November 2013 over half of drinks association, members have started using drinks Library. drinks Library was developed from SKUlibrary – a service of SKUvantage – to create a platform that hosts and distributes product images, as well as product attributes and other digital content, such as product data or videos. There are no download fees with drinks Library and content can be accessed online or offline. drinks trade spoke with founder and CEO of SKUvantage, Daniel Roberts, to find out how drinks Library works and the benefits for retailers and brands alike. drinks trade: Why was drinks Library developed? Daniel Roberts: It was an opportunity that the drinks association spotted to help their members get good digital product content in front of their consumers in a much easier, cost effective way than current providers offer. The proposition we developed with the drinks association saves their members time, effort and money when sharing all digital assets with their retail partners. These assets include images and tasting notes, to product specifications and marketing copy. The solution also has the benefit of making members’ products look better online in the rapidly growing digital channels of their retailer partners. DT: How does drinks Library work? DR: Basically you log in and from there it’s a bit like shopping in an enormous wine store, except that you’re shopping for product images, rather than the product itself. DT: What’s the benefit of drinks Library for retailers? DR: For retailers it’s very easy to use and we have had a lot of positive feedback on the platform’s functionality. Retailers can get all the product content they need in one place – product imagery and product rotations, which enable a product to have a 360 rotation view; product and how to videos; product specification data and descriptions; and marketing copy, and at the minute retailers can get that across 2,500 products. Retailers can also get all of that content in a way that suits their business - they can download it straight to their desktop, upload it to their website, and they can also have what’s called an API feed, which means content flows straight from drinks Library into their ecommerce system. Retailers can also have an iframe to get extended product content on their sites with minimal effort. An iframe allows retailers to put product content straight onto websites through a single line of code; the single line then creates a unique presentation of Having full product content comprehensively stored on one platform makes it easier to share content internally, externally, and reduces the number of samples being requested. the content, which can be customised in any way the retailer requires. All of this means that retailers can make our clients products look better in their digital channels. DT: And how is it a useful tool for brands? DR: Brands can use drinks Library in a number of ways to reduce cost and drive sales. They can use it as an internal cataloguing tool, which means that everybody in their business has access to all of the assets and ensures team members and partners use up-to-date and accurate images and content. With the same iframe technology, product information can be displayed on field sales tools, giving sales teams all the information they need when discussing products with customers. This also ensures any changes made to the product in the library are immediately reflected on the device. The platform will also enable the generation and emailing of trade presenters as PDF’s, avoiding the need to create and manage expensive marketing collateral. The other advantage is that drinks Library allows brands to store all of their extended product information in one place including logos, brand guidelines and point of sale material. These can all individually be set as public or private. drinks Library means there’s a single place for everybody to go to get all of those assets. Beyond these business costs and process improvements, the platform is significantly cheaper than the incumbent systems and the SKUvantage services are aligned to help brands make their products look good online. DT: So does each person have a username and login, which controls access? DR: Correct. Every attribute or product is fully controllable for view, read or write access. DT: And retailers can only access the sections of drinks Library that have been made public? DR: Yes correct. Brands have full control over who sees what assets, both by organisation and timing. DT: How do you ensure all the content is up-to-date? DR: Whenever a vendor has a new product released they simply send us the new product, and we photograph it and capture all the content to their requirements. Alternatively a brand can provide us with an image captured by their existing agency and we load this into the platform. DT: What feedback have you had on drinks Library? DR: All our clients love it. We get very positive feedback from all our clients about the photography and users are saving about 50 per cent from what they were previously spending, with some choose to re-invest this in product content, further driving sales and business process cost savings. For more information and to sign up to drinks Library visit the drinks association’s website (www.drinkscentral.com.au). drinks trade 95 Trade activity TRADE ACTIVITY The business behind the brands NSW SWEEPS VIN DE CHAMPAGNE AWARDS The winners of the Vin de Champagne Awards in both the Professional and Amateur categories were announced at the end of September. Presented every two years by the Champagne Bureau Australia, past winners of this prestigious award include some of the country’s most knowledgeable wine industry personnel, winemakers, journalists, restaurateurs, commentators and educators. Annette Lacey from NSW won the Professional category and Tom Warrell, also from NSW, won the Amateur category. Winners receive a two-week educational tour to the Champagne district in France, where they are awarded their medal from Le Comité Champagne and enjoy the legendary Champenois hospitality. FUTURE INFLUENCERS OF THE DRINKS INDUSTRY This winter future influencers of the drinks industry gathered at the Print Room in Paddington, Sydney, to listen to Senior Group Manager for the Keystone Group, Joe Rossi, discuss how to get brands noticed by venues. Joe discussed how though the difficulty of tender in venues is high now; with a growing number of smaller bars on the market larger venues must compete with the smaller venue’s offerings, thus creating more space for brands. “It’s about finding the right space for your brand and somewhere it will sell,” Joe concluded. 96 drinks trade HAHN JUMPSTART LAUNCH August saw the launch of the Hahn Jumpstart program with Jack Delosa announced as the campaign ambassador. Hahn Jumpstart was founded on the principle of encouraging people to turn their ideas into reality, much like the founding of Hahn beer. Hahn beer, distributed by Lion in Australia, was the result of passion and a dream shared between four guys to brew high quality beer. Submissions for the program were non-industry specific with all ideas welcome, and were made at the www.hahnjumpstart.com.au website. The submissions closed on September 12 2014 and the final winner will be selected on December 3 2014. BARBER SHOP FIRST BIRTHDAY 2014 SUNTORY CUP On September 8, Club Suntory held its 27th annual Suntory Cup at the Loft in Sydney. Winning the competition was Yoshi Onishi with his drink ‘Repeat After Me’. Jonothan Carr came in second with his drink ‘Turning Japanese #3’, and Marco Oshiro Giron came in third with ‘A Japanese Artisan, a Carthusian Monk, & a Sommelier Walk into a Bar…’ Yoshi will now go on to contest at Suntory’s national final consumer event – Cocktail Connoisseur. CARLTON MID RACE DAY Carlton & United Breweries (CUB) recently announced a new five year agreement with the Wyong Race Club, which will see the Carlton Mid Wyong Gold Cup in September maintained as the club’s flagship event through to 2018. The announcement came just a few short months prior to the 2014 Carlton Mid Wyong Gold Cup, which took place on Friday 5 September. On this day, the Carlton Mid team treated over 150 Sydney-metro pub and club customers to an “out of the box” experience at Wyong Race Club, which kicked off with a ride in a vintage steam train from Central to Wyong. Customers were spoiled with perfect weather, generous hospitality (plenty of Carlton Mid) and a phenomenal view of the track which ensured an exciting and memorable day. The Carlton Mid Wyong Gold Cup aims to become the #1 regional racing carnival in Australia. As the carnival’s major partner, CUB are certainly keen to assist by spreading the carnival’s reach to their Sydney customers and bringing it to life over the next five years. On September 2, The Barber Shop celebrated its first birthday with a party featuring cocktails and shaves at its barber-and-barin-one location in Sydney. Around 150 of Sydney’s finest attended, including media and trade, who were entertained with performances by singer Michael Falzon, tap dancers, and an eightkilogram cake. Leone Cruden-Bonić and Allan Brassil from CUB LEFT: Ray Nobel from Transfusions Ltd. drinks trade 97 Drinks eye EYE TRADE VICTORIOUS IN VOTE AGAINST INDEPENDENCE Scotland’s decision to remain as part of the UK in September was met with support from trade, with a number of trade representatives expressing their happiness as a result of the decision. Up to the vote, concerns had been expressed around the negative impact that independence would have on trade, surrounding issues such as free trade, access to EU export markets, and import tariffs. Chief Executive of The Scotch Whisky Association, which represents 90 per cent of Scotland’s whisky production, David Frost, said of the vote: “We welcome the stability that this choice brings and now urge politicians of all parties to work to bring our country together. “The Scotch Whisky industry is determined to play a leading role in shaping discussions that are fundamental to the future success of our industry and our nation.” Moreover Miles Beale, Chief Executive of the Wine and Spirits Trade Association said: “Scottish voters have made a historic choice. Further devolution is certain and the WSTA will be working closely with its members to ensure that any barriers to the way they do business in Scotland – or the rest of the UK – are minimised. “Scotland is, and always will be, an important player in the UK wine and spirit sector. JUMPING GENES COULD LEAD TO NEW GRAPES At the University of Lincoln near Christchurch, senior lecturer Dr. Chris Winefield has been studying transposons, or ‘jumping genes’, to see if he can create new clones of sauvignon blanc and pinot noir. Transposons – DNA sequences that move from one genome location to another – are small, mobile, and normally silent genetic elements, but Winefield is studying whether they can be woken up and reinserted into different locations in a grape’s genome. The goal is to create new examples of New Zealand’s two key grape varieties. The research, initially aimed at better understanding different genes that strengthen the key characteristics of grape vines, developed when the new opportunities became apparent. 98 GIN & TONIC - CHRISTMAS TIPPLE OF CHOICE Findings from a study in the UK suggest that spirit and mixers are expected to see growth in sales this Christmas. Out of a pool of 1,000 participants, research conducted by UK drinks suppliers Ben Shaws found that 52 percent of people will be more likely to chose a spirit or mixer this party season over traditional seasonal beverages such as Champagne. Specifically participants rated the gin and tonic as their most popular mixer and spirit combination of choice. The research additionally found 47 per cent of those answers to be reflective of growing health trends, in which participants linked their choice of spirit and mixer over traditional party classics to being more health conscious. BEER LABELS SHOW THEIR TRUE COLOUR Spanish designer Txaber has come up with an innovative way to package beer - having the labels simply depict the colour of the brew inside. Txaber’s designs are posted on his website and showcase a range of beers that have labels with their corresponding ‘Pantone’ colour, which is a standardised colour re-production system to ensure colour matching. The designs indicate packaging with a range of hues, from pale ale in bright yellow to charcoal looking imperial stout. As innovative as it seems, this is not the first time that colour has accompanied beer packaging, for designers Alexander Michelbach and Daniel Eugster launched colour swatches that gave the exact colour value of a beer in RGB, CMYK, and HTML code called ‘Beertone’ last year. drinks trade visit www.drinkstrade.com.au for daily updates