Laura Heywood
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23-mai-2012 19:15:21
The top three gold medal-winning nations in the 2012 International Wine Challenge are reigning champions France with 120, Australia with 69 and Portugal with 55.
France topped the medal board overall with a total of 1,136 medals, while Australia came second with 673 and Portugal third with 444.
Read the full article and get more details about the winning wines at Hapers.co.uk .
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Dave McIntyre
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03-mai-2012 23:51:26
Along with a sense of humor, wine should have integrity. Bonny Doon has both. On the back label of its 2011 Vin Gris de Cigare, right under the winery’s address — “Santa Cruz, CA, USA, EARTH” — I found this description: “Ingredients: 73% Grenache, 10% Mourvedre, 8% Grenache Blanc, 5% Roussanne, 4% Cinsault grapes, tartaric acid, and sulfur dioxide. In the winemaking process, the following were utilized: Indigenous yeast, yeast nutrients, and bentonite.”
Many wine bottles tell us their grape blends, but this one — unlike most others — tells us what else has been added to create the final product.
Wine’s dirty little secret is that it isn’t just fermented grape juice. It might include added sugar, tartaric acid, various yeasts and yeast nutrients, color enhancers, gum arabic, gelatin, egg whites, fish bladders (isinglass) and any of a long list of other additives allowed by the federal government but not required to be listed on the wine label. That color and mouth feel you love, even the flavor, might come not from grapes, but from a jar.
As Americans drink more wine, cheap wine has increased in quality, but that improvement has come through chemistry as much as through viticulture. Great wine may be made in the vineyard, but good wine increasingly is made in the laboratory. Today’s winemakers are as likely to wear white lab coats as they are tattered overalls and muddy boots.
Read the full article on washingtonpost
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The Wine Curmudgeon
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25-avr.-2012 17:59:47
There are two wine communities in the U.S. -- the regular, ordinary wine drinker, who buys almost all of the wine sold in the U.S., and the elite wine drinker, who represents a tiny, tiny fraction of the wine drinking community but who is catered to by the wine business and, especially, by its allies in the Winestream Media.
Read the latter, and one would assume that wine has to cost a lot of money, that one needs a PhD in wine geek to appreciate wine, and that anyone who dares to argue with them is a crude boor.
We know where the Wine Curmudgeon fits, no?
Nothing demonstrates this better than sales figures. I have a copy of a report from an important U.S. distributor, detailing sales from March 2011 to March 2012 in the Dallas market. It was given to me by someone who asked to remain anonymous; hence, I can’t reproduce it or link to it. And, though, it’s not a perfect fit for what’s going on nationally, it’s still a revealing look at what the real wine market -- and not the Winestream Media’s wine market -- is like.
Read the full article on The Wine Curmudgeon blog .
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Magdalena Rahn
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19-avr.-2012 19:32:11
World Wine Meetings America in Chicago has become a premier buying event in the USA and UBIFRANCE is delighted and honored to be one of the organizers. UBIFRANCE plays a strategic role in ensuring that the highest quality possible of both buyers and producers attend the event. This year’s meetings have several new and exciting elements as well as the uniquely-styled meetings people have come to respect and appreciate.
This year, each day of the event (May 28th - May 30th) there are the unique , private BtoB meetings that are based on mutual interest and scheduled so that the participants are spending quality time only with the producers and buyers that they choose to meet.
List of Producers and Buyers can be found here .
The event kicks off with Rosé Hour with AOC Bordeaux producers – a walk around tasting where participants can meet each other in a relaxed setting over a delicious glass of rosé before the opening lunch where everyone will have wines from various producers with lunch.
The afternoon is spent in the first round of business meetings.
That evening there is a special Gala Dinner Cruise for all participants on beautiful Lake Michigan aboard the Odyssey Ship. – NEW this year!
Don’t miss the Côtes de Bordeaux Master Class on Sunday the 29th at 12 :30pm – Learn more about this AOC and taste the wines from the region.
After your business meetings on Sunday there is some serious FUN in store at the Planet Bordeaux Rocks Party ! - Come rock out at Planet Bordeaux’s festive Wine Tasting/Apéritif! Rub elbows with the winemakers and discover firsthand their high-quality, food-friendly wines from Bordeaux & Bordeaux Supérieur, the regional appellations of the world’s wine capital. With DJ & buffet.
Monday the business meetings continue, but new this year is a Tasting Exhibition where over 150 producers from all over France, Spain & Italy will feature their wines at this walk-around grand tasting.
If you are a USA buyer, it isn’t too late! DON’T MISS OUT! Be part of the wine experience in just 3 steps. Decide today.
• Fill in the registration application
• Once your participation is validated, make the online payment of 70 Euros, having access to the whole package: convention, features, meals, including your accommodation for April 28th and 29th at the Embassy Suites Lakefront Hotel -Downtown Chicago. $400 Travel Reimbursement!
• Select online the producers you want to meet and RSVP for the features of your choice.
Follow us on twitter and join our French / North American Wine and Spirits Business Group on LinkedIn.
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Jeff Quackenbush
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17-avr.-2012 01:46:25
Wine consumption is growing worldwide and particularly in the world’s new largest wine market, the U.S. Trouble is, shocks to the global economy and to the wine business in particular over the past several years along with tough growing seasons have dramatically limited the supply of grapes and wine sold in bulk to supply the thirst.
Hugh Reimers, executive vice president and chief operating officer at Jackson Family Wines with a background in winemaking in Australia, cautioned a recent gathering of wine industry professionals recently not to expect significant relief from shortages internationally.
“The grape supply is in balance globally,” he said at a Wine Industry Financial Roundtable hosted in Napa by accounting firm Moss Adams LLP in February . Jackson owns wineries and vineyards in coastal California and owns producers and imports wines from Italy, France, Chile and Australia.
But he noted that plantings worldwide have been minimal. Twenty percent of vines were nonbearing in 1999, compared to only 4 percent today, he said. Exacerbating the need for more supply, wine consumption is expected to grow from today’s 2.5 gallons per capita to 3.8 gallons in 2025, requiring more wine and grapes.
The Business Journal asked members of the 2012 Wine Industry Conference panel on grape and wine supply panel at the about some of the hotly discussed topics in the wine business in California. Panel members at the April 18 conference include Joe Ciatti of Zepponi & Company; Mark Couchman of Silverado Premium Properties; Jeffrey O’Neill of O’Neill Vintners & Distillers; Bill Pauli of Pauli Ranch Winery, Yakayo Wine Co. and current president of the California Association of Winegrape Growers; and Steve Smit of Constellation Wines U.S.
Read the full article on the North Bay Business Journal
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Suzanne Mustacich and Kim Marcus
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03-avr.-2012 21:42:32
The French are trying to conquer America, and that doesn’t mean they want to buy Louisiana back. Americans are purchasing French wine in record amounts, helping propel the Gallic wine industry to new highs. French wine and spirits exports hit $13 billion in 2011, and America was the dominant trading partner, providing 18 percent of that figure. Despite the intense focus on China in recent years, the United States is importing more French wines from almost every region. That’s spurring the French to invest more marketing and sales efforts in America.
The U.S. imported $2.3 billion worth of wine and spirits last year, according to France’s Federation of Wine and Spirits Exporters (FEVS). Closer to home, 10 of France’s traditional European clients bought a combined $5.4 billion. But that’s a modest 3 percent growth, and the European financial crisis has industry members worried. The volume of exports to Germany and the United Kingdom are down 13 percent and 38 percent respectively compared to a decade ago.
Which is why the French are naturally relieved to see 29 percent growth and $3.3 billion in sales from five key Asian nations—China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan—with China leading the way. But the Chinese rarely shop beyond the cellars of Cognac and Bordeaux—those two regions account for a whopping 80 percent of the value of exports to China. That helped make those two regions the fastest growing sectors in the wine and spirits industry.
What differentiates the Chinese and American markets is variety. “What we see is that all the products are present in the U.S. market,” said Benoit Stenne, a spokesperson for FEVS. “We were really worried about America, and there has been a real strategy, a real determination by Burgundy, Bordeaux, Champagne, Cognac and the other regions to reconquer America.”
This is good news for American consumers, because when the French say they want to reconquer America, they mean getting their products onto wine lists and store shelves, bringing even more choices to consumers. The data has convinced the French that American consumers are more daring than they thought. “There is definitely a growing sophistication in the American market,” said Chris Adams, CEO of Sherry Lehmann, who observed that both he and importers actively scour France for new wines. “Americans are looking for discoveries.”
read the full article at winespectator.com
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Wines of Provence
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29-mars-2012 19:38:06
With double-digit growth recorded each of the last eight years, export volumes of Provence rosé to the United States are at an all-time high.
Exports of rosé wine from the Provence region of France to the United States grew 62% in volume last year as compared to 2010. On value, rosé exports for the 2010–2011 period increased at a rate of 49%, reaching a record high of 9.9 million euros. This is according to statistics reported by the French customs agency via Ubifrance, the French agency for export promotion.
These numbers confirm the continuation of an upward trend that began in 2003 and that has seen double-digit growth rates in each of the intervening years. Last year’s jump of 62% was the largest single increase in Provence rosé export volumes in that eight-year period.
Read more on the Wines of Provence website
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Fabrice Mauge – Director of the Food Industry department at Ubifrance in the USA and his team assists French companies in their search for potential partners, in the US, in the following sectors:
Food : large expertise about the food industry on both sides of the Atlantic
Wines and Spirits : real collaboration with French wines producers and Americain distributors
Industrial equipment : specialized in industrial farming equipments
In order to help French companies have a better understanding of the Food Industry market in the US, the Food Industry department organizes individualized missions (market research, list of contacts, B to B meetings) as well as collective missions.
Learn more about our actions by watching the following videos:
For more information about the products and services, check out the About Us – Ubifrance or click here to download our e-catalog (in french)
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