logo
#

Latest news with #SugrueSouthDowns

Grape Britain: English wine is having its moment in the sun
Grape Britain: English wine is having its moment in the sun

Spectator

time12 hours ago

  • Business
  • Spectator

Grape Britain: English wine is having its moment in the sun

Our homegrown wine was, until fairly recently, regarded internationally as a bit of a joke. Peter Ustinov could quip that he imagined hell to be 'Italian punctuality, German humour and English wine'. Likewise, Lord Jay, serving as a diplomat in Paris, recalled the British ambassador rubbing up against resistance from the home side – let alone foreigners – as he sought to be an early advocate. The ambassador was hosting Edward Heath, President Giscard d'Estaing and the governor of the Bank of France for lunch: 'I remember [ambassador] Ewen Fergusson saying, 'Sir Edward, wonderful that you're here. I am tempted to serve you a delicious English white wine'. 'I hope, ambassador, that you'll resist that temptation,' was his reply.' But the situation has since been transformed. The 'British wine' of the past – mostly second-rate fortified wines made from imported grapes – has given way to more than 1,000 vineyards across the UK producing some world-class bottles. This week, The Trouble with Dreams 2009 by the winemaker Sugrue South Downs became the first sparkling wine magnum to be named one of the top 50 wines in the world at the Decanter World Wine Awards. The Sussex sparkling white was awarded Best in Show – an accolade champagne has never achieved in the 1.5-litre bottle format. And at a 'Battle of the Bubbles' blind tasting at London Wine Fair last month, the 2010 Nyetimber 1086 was the overall top scoring wine, with Gusbourne's 51 Degrees North 2016 in second place – beating off everything from Dom Pérignon and Ruinart to Krug and Bollinger. Champagne houses are buying up land in southern England to get in on the act. Patrick McGrath, CEO of wine specialists Hatch Mansfield, is the co-founder of one of them, having teamed up with Pierre-Emmanuel Taittinger to plant in England. The estate, in Kent, sells under the name Domaine Evremond. Patrick tells me that there were differences between the continental climate of Champagne and our maritime conditions, but warmer weather has made southern England better suited to winemaking than ever. Taittinger is joined by Pommery whose decade-old partnership with Hampshire producers Hattingley Valley created Louis Pommery England. There have long been rumours that LVMH (owners of Moët & Chandon) is eyeing up investment opportunities. In 2023, California-based Jackson Family Wines bought 65 hectares of land in Essex's Crouch Valley. We have the climate to thank, with the sunnier and warmer weather attributed to climate change having driven the sector's development. This is a success story that would no doubt grate with Greta but refusing to make hay while the sun shines would be asinine. As silver linings go, it's a jolly good one. Though I suspect suggestions that Hull could become 'the new Bordeaux' by 2100 with climate change enabling cabernet sauvignon production to flourish as far north as Yorkshire may be a dream too far. Champagne houses are buying up land in southern England to get in on the act Wine is one of the great success stories of British food and drink in recent years, and viticulture is Britain's fastest-growing agricultural sector. While quantities produced are still relatively small, and the vast majority is therefore consumed in the UK, about 8 per cent is currently exported with the Scandis in particular being great fans. The UK is already a world leader in the luxury sector, and consumers are always on the hunt for the novel and exciting. The potential is obvious. The Establishment has embraced the new tipple. Chapel Down is already the official sparkling wine of England cricket, the Boat Race and Ascot. I am doing my level best to ensure all British embassies around the world are serving English sparkling whenever the occasion demands fizz, and to persuade Wimbledon to replace its long-running partnership with Lanson (the 'official champagne' of the Championships since 2001) with something English. Surely long overdue for the All England Club? It's reaching new heights in the air. BA has started serving prestige cuvée English sparkling in First Class, with offerings from Nyetimber, Gusbourne and Sugrue South Downs also on the list. The airline has been offering English in Business Class since 2023 and while it hasn't abandoned champagne entirely, its growing confidence in our homegrown product is clear. Ditto top restaurants in London where it's increasingly rare to not have at least one English on the wine list. Royal stardust helps: Cornwall's Camel Valley became the first English wine label to secure royal warrants from the King and Queen last year. Indeed, the royals were early champions: rosé brut from Chapel Down in Sussex was served at the Prince and Princess of Wales's wedding in 2011. Sparkling wine from Sugrue South Downs in Sussex has triumphed over champagne in the Decanter World Wine Awards [Sarah Weal] It's not all plain sailing. Production is volatile: last year it was just 6-7 million bottles, largely due to the cool and wet summer, compared with 2023's record harvest of 21.6 million. Cost can also deter some (though there are deals to be found: Aldi has its Winemaster's Lot English sparkling wine at £9.99 throughout English Wine Week, from now until 25 June). Champagne retains cachet and hasn't gone away. But those still snooty about our domestic product may like to know about the Englishman Christopher Merret. In 1662, in a paper presented the Royal Society, Merret became the first person to describe the method of adding sugar and molasses to wine to stimulate a second fermentation in the bottle to make it sparkling – a process we today call méthode champenoise. It's been suggested that British merchants were producing sparkling wine for several decades before Dom Pérignon and the rest of the French Champenois were doing so. Ooh la la. The French won't like that.

English sparkling wine magnum beats champagne in global award
English sparkling wine magnum beats champagne in global award

Times

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Times

English sparkling wine magnum beats champagne in global award

Champagne has long been the choice to mark life's greatest moments, but connoisseurs believe English sparkling wine is in prime position to compete after it beat the French fizz to a prestigious international award. Sugrue South Downs' The Trouble with Dreams 2009 has become the first sparkling wine magnum to be crowned as one of the top 50 wines in the world at the Decanter World Wine Awards 2025. The white sparkling wine from Sussex took home a Best in Show medal, something champagne has never achieved in the 1.5L bottle format (the equivalent of two standard 750ml bottles). Amongst the other sparkling wine magnums in the running was a £598 per bottle champagne, Henriot's Cuvé 38 Edition 6 Blanc De Blancs Brut, which received a Platinum medal, one down from Best in Show. The judges said: 'Our competition has been open to champagne magnums for the last three years, while this year we opened the competition to sparkling wine magnums from all origins. And guess what? It's an English sparkling wine that's the first to find its way in magnum to our Best in Show selection, not a champagne.' Dermot Sugrue, founder and winemaker at Sugrue, told The Times: 'It's no longer what has become a slightly outdated narrative of England versus champagne when it comes to sparkling wine. Now it's England and champagne, because we really are on the world stage, beside champagne and the other best sparkling wines in the world.' His wineis made from a blend of chardonnay, pinot noir and pinot meunier grapes. The 2009 vintage's 600 bottles are sold out, but were selling for £185 with sales limited to one magnum per customer. Sugrue, who has been making wine at the highest level for 23 years and has spent time in Champagne, said: 'Bottling sparkling wine in magnums is almost like the zenith of what you can achieve quality wise, because magnums have got the ability to age in a wonderful way.' He said the win demonstrates the 'ageability' of their wines. It's a matter of being 'very, very patient and having confidence that we're using the correct vintage to age for a long time', he said. What sets The Trouble With Dreams apart is Sugrue's 'attention to detail', he added. The magnum is from Sugrue's first vintage of The Trouble With Dreams. The previous year should have been the first but the grapes were devoured by birds, prompting the name. Sugrue said the name also resonates with the challenges of making wine in the UK, a 'marginal climate for winemaking' where global warming in recent decades has allowed these types of wines to flourish. Ronan Sayburn, a master sommelier and one of the five co-chairs of the awards, said the magnum is 'generally regarded as a better format for sparkling wine'. The UK broke its record for total medals awarded, with 188 medals including two Platinum, six Gold, 80 Silver and 99 Bronze. This was up from 186 medals last year, when Chapel Down's Rose Brut was the first UK sparkling rose to achieve a Best in Show, and 143 in 2023. The awards saw wines from 57 countries evaluated by 248 top international wine experts. France took home the most Best in Show awards with 14, followed by Italy with six and Portugal and Spain with five. The UK was on a level with New Zealand, South Africa and Slovenia with one Best in Show. China was amongst those to pip us to two of the top accolade. Sayburn said a mixture of time, allowing the vines to age, global warming, and the increasing skill and experience of UK winemakers has led to the production of 'world-class wines'. 'Maybe 15 years ago English wine was a bit of a joke, but people take it very seriously now,' he said. 'In places like America they are absolutely going desperate to get English sparkling wine. It jumped in there as a category above Cava and Prosecco and just under Champagne.' Sayburn cites the wedding of the Prince and Princess of Wales in 2011, the late Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee in 2012, and the 2012 London Olympics for giving English sparkling wine 'a big boost'. Looking to the future, 'the only way for English sparkling wine to go is up', he said. He pointed out that some Champagne vineyards were established a thousand years ago while it's only in the last 50 years that they are emerging in the UK. 'So it may take a hundred years to really get the best sites,' he said. The south of England is well-established as the most successful area in the UK for wine growing, but this year the first medals for North Yorkshire came from Dunesforde with a bronze for their Queen of the North Brut 2020, a sparkling white, and their Pinot Gris 2022, a still white. Ian Townsend, owner of Dunesforde, said they planted Pinot Gris in 2016 'as a bit of an experiment' encouraged by records of the Romans producing wine in northern England 2,000 years ago. 'We're testing the boundaries,' he said. 'It gets riskier and riskier the further north you go.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store