Greetings,
Mostly an update, and an article on Fr. wine.
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2005 15:11:05 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Brian's Brdx Bash at Bobino (CORRECTION)
Greetings,
We're going to Bobino, to check out the new chef.
Thanks for the correctors and the responders....
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
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Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2005 14:02:12 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Brian's Bordeaux Bash at Erte
Greetings,
A quick correction. The 510/La Belle Vie deal is far from done.
510 will most likely remain open until a new tenant is found.
LBVie says they are looking at "several Mpls locations."
This week, we're trying to pull Brian back into the group.
So we're doing Bordeaux wines at BOBINO , 6:30 on Thursday.
Sparkling/white/ringer/dessert wines always welcome.
Bobino 222 E. Henne 612-623-3301
Note that the meters are no longer "Free after 6:00".
Rates vary.
Who: (mostly guesses)
Wine Pro Bob
Wine Pro Lori
Betsy
Russ and Sue (mostly whites and bubbles)
Bill
Janet
Ruth G.
Jim
Nicolai
Karin
Brian
Big S sale starts soon/tomorrow (3/1 [vip] - 3/19).
Thomas Liq sale starts today.
Aurora in Chaska starts today (?).
Cheers
Jim
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Lee Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax 651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
WINE & SPIRITS
Who's killing the great wines of France?
Facing a crisis, the French wine industry is finally forced to loosen its grasp on
tradition.
By Corie Brown
Times Staff Writer
March 2, 2005
The notion that French wine has fallen into the hands of philistines is sure to find an
audience when the documentary "Mondovino" is released in L.A. theaters April 29.
Director Jonathan Nossiter belabors that idea for two hours, 17 minutes and 11 seconds,
cutting back and forth between crusty traditionalists in worn sweaters and suspendered
trousers who absolutely love terroir and their spiritual opposites: chain-smoking
pragmatists in fancy cars who hawk modern methods of manipulating wine.
"Mondovino" is a lot of things; subtle, however, isn't one of them.
The French wine industry is in crisis. More comfortable basking in tradition than
questioning it, French winemakers are rethinking the rules governing how they make and
name their wines, the grapes they grow and how they are grown. Even the look of their wine
labels is being reconsidered. The French government is scrambling to promote its wines in
America, even . gasp . considering a Madison Avenue advertising campaign. (Champagne
already has one, and it's the one French region for which sales are actually
climbing.)
The debate central to "Mondovino" . one that's raging across France's
storied wine regions . only appears to be a tug of war between art and commerce. Those
stark contrasts grow fuzzy in the gray light of the real issue: The world is not buying
enough French wine. Market forces aren't known for encouraging individuality .
Velveeta sells better than Taleggio. But for the first time in the history of French wine,
the demands of the global market are an unavoidable fact.
"It has taken a while for our producers to understand that there is a problem,"
says Christian Berger, the agricultural counselor with the French Embassy in Washington,
D.C. And even now that they have accepted that fact, "there is no unanimity at all on
what should be done."
Wine looms large on the French economic landscape. Representing 12% of France's
agricultural production, it accounts for $9.9 billion of the country's gross domestic
product. French wine sales worldwide have been gradually eroding for years. The situation
became a crisis last year when wine exports (excluding Champagne) fell 6.7% in volume and
9.2% in value on the heels of 2003 sales, which were considered dismal, according to the
French Federation of Exporters of Wines & Spirits.
Making matters worse, French wine consumption has dropped to historic lows, with the
country drinking half as much wine per capita as it did in 1960. An aggressive federal
campaign against drunk driving is part of the reason, according to Berger. Strict new
standards, more stringent than those in California, have the French thinking twice before
having a second glass of wine with dinner.
But the real problem is there's too much French wine. Hoping for a quick fix in the
region that appears to be hardest hit, the government is paying grape growers in Bordeaux
to rip up marginal vineyards and turn surplus wine into industrial alcohol. So far,
however, only 475 acres of a targeted 25,000 acres of vineyards have been plowed under.
The government plans to distill a whopping 250 million liters of wine from the abundant
2004 vintage into alcohol, 10 times as much wine as would be distilled in a typical year;
most of it is labeled Appellation d'Origine Contr�l�e (AOC). Still, it won't be
enough to sop up all of the surplus.
*
Altering the structure
Ultimately, it is the structure of the wine industry that must change, according to Ren�
Renou, a Loire Valley winemaker and the current president of the powerful National
Committee for Wine of the AOC, the organization charged with enforcing the country's
strict regulations for the making of premium wines. Renou has proposed a radical overhaul
of the country's winemaking rules . the most sweeping changes since the AOC was
codified in 1929 . to give winemakers greater latitude in how they make and sell their
wines.
"People say I am burning the history of France," quips Renou. But perhaps the
better analogy is religion, he says, "like when they changed the way the priest says
Mass," referring to the Catholic Church's decision to abandon Latin for modern
languages in the 1960s. French wine sales are suffering, he says, because France has
failed to modernize its winemaking industry.
Renou advocates producing less AOC wine. Perhaps 10% of it isn't up to minimum
standards, he says. "We can't anymore tell the nice wine story to people and not
have it correspond to what is in the bottle," he says.
When pressed about how much wine he'd like to see taken off the market, Renou
backpedals. "We're France. If you push too far, winegrowers will riot. They go
on strike and shout in the streets. The politicians don't like it." While there
is no formal schedule for considering Renou's proposal, he says the French government
could enact it as early as this year.
It likely will take longer. "France acts as if it still has a monopoly on wine and
can insist that consumers learn our complicated wine story," says Renou. "We
have lived for centuries where the only problem was to make the wine producer more
comfortable. Today our problem is to make the customer more comfortable. They buy whatever
they like."
And they are buying American, Australian, Chilean, Argentine and South African wines along
with improved wines from Spain and Italy. For $10, these wines may not equal fine French
wine, says Renou, but they can be very good. And from the point of view of the American
consumer . Renou likes to refer to a grocery store shopper in Little Rock, Ark. . they are
infinitely easier to comprehend.
"A second way to understand wine has been created by the New World. It's about
the grape type, the color, the sugar," he explains. In other words, it's easier
to understand Pinot Noir than to memorize the appellations of Burgundy. "In Little
Rock, wine is a quick, immediate pleasure, no dream, no story, no explanation. The New
World is more efficient. The French are not prepared for this world," he says.
America matters because the U.S. spends more money on imported wine than does any other
market in the world. And while French wine sales have fallen in America, overall
consumption here is inching up. Americans now annually consume roughly 10 bottles of wine
each, up from seven bottles 10 years ago. Compared with the French, who drink an average
of 77 bottles a year, there is plenty of room for the American market to grow.
The falling value of the dollar . a 40% shift over the last three years . is making the
American market more and more difficult to navigate. What was a $10 bottle of French wine
in 2001 now costs $14, taking into account the shifting exchange rate. Wines from outside
Europe haven't experienced the same currency fluctuation, or the resulting price
increases.
Most French vintners have cut their prices to try to keep their wines competitively
priced, according to American importers. But often that's not enough. "With the
2000 vintage, I sold thousands of cases of Bordeaux wine for $7 a bottle," says Steve
Winfield, a Los Angeles-based importer who sells only Bordeaux wines. "I'm
scouting for wines with the 2003 vintage that I can sell for $7, and they are hard to
find. Everyone's margins are squeezed."
There is no crisis for the best French wines, says Berger. "At the top of the market,
prices are a bit crazy, rising higher and higher every year with no problem selling the
wine. The difficulty is for the middle and lower end segments. The global market for wine
is more competitive there. There are plenty of new producers."
And for these wines, America is the most important market. "The bulk of the market is
new to wine," says Berger. "They don't know much about it, and they
apparently like wines that are fruity with a lot of sugar. Our product is not as well
suited to this market as, say, Australian wine. French wine is more subtle. We have no big
brands. Our labels are difficult to read."
Bordeaux winemakers, says Berger, have been the most outspoken critics of the changes
proposed by Renou. After record sales of its celebrated 2000 vintage, "it has been
hard for them to come down to earth," says Berger. "The situation is very tense
in Bordeaux."
*
Two branches of AOC?
Renou has proposed bifurcating the AOC into a higher and a lower level, or, he says, they
can be considered "the complex and the simple."
A new "excellence" category would require winemakers to follow more stringent
controls on wine grape growing and winemaking than current AOC rules demand. The top 20%
of current AOC winemakers likely would opt for this "excellence" category, Renou
estimates. This is the luxury market for traditional wines, and "it must be
protected," he says.
A second level of AOC wines, what Renou refers to as "normal" wines, would be
allowed to disregard many of the current AOC rules. These are the ones that must compete
with emerging international wines, he says. Winemakers who opt for this category should be
allowed to consider any grape-growing and winemaking protocol. "Winemakers would
propose their ideas to the National Committee for Wine, and we would decide if those ideas
would be permitted," says Renou. "Everything is open for discussion, while today
it is prohibited to even talk about these ideas."
That means the question of when or how to irrigate vineyards or what grapes to plant .
variables that are tightly regulated now throughout France . would be considered. There
would be fewer restrictions on what grapes could be blended together in particular wines
as well. While Bordeaux and Rh�ne blends would remain tightly controlled for the
"excellence" AOC, second-tier wines could have broad latitude with what could be
considered for their blends. In appellations in which blending is not now allowed, it
would be permitted in the second tier. Rules also would be relaxed concerning blending
grapes harvested from different parts of a region or even across regions, among other
things, according to Renou.
What about allowing the addition of oak chips during barrel aging to exaggerate certain
flavors, as is practiced in the U.S. and Australia, for instance? "Why not?"
says Renou. "We have to allow people to make decisions for themselves about their own
wine."
At the same time, Renou would like the French wine industry to police itself more
aggressively on quality. Producers who ignore vineyard yield limits, a common occurrence
today, says Renou, should not be allowed to call their wine AOC. This overproduction
"must disappear," he says. "If we want to say we are the best, each bottle
must be checked."
Renou's proposal also would relax AOC labeling rules to allow varietal names and
other New World conventions. While there are AOCs (such as Alsace) that use varietal
labeling, most don't. Winemakers have to opt out of the AOC, labeling their wines
simply vin de table, to do these things now.
The French government isn't waiting for the AOC rules to change. It is taking small
but significant first steps to help French producers sell their wines in the United
States. "We didn't usually attend wine events in America," says Berger.
"Now we are going, asking for advice on what we should do to improve sales. The idea
is to give our producers a higher profile."
Last month, the government sponsored its first five-city sales tour . Miami, New York,
Chicago, Atlanta and Los Angeles . for producers eager to find American importers.
It's the kind of dog and pony show the Spanish and Australian wine industries have
been taking on the road for at least a decade. In Los Angeles, 30 vintners poured wine
tastings for distributors.
"We decided to be proactive," says Charlotte Selles-Simmons, a producer whose
family has been making wine in Beaujolais and Burgundy since 1820. She recently redesigned
the domaine's labels to make them more appealing to Americans.
"We make it so difficult to buy French wine," she says. "Especially for the
$10-and-below wines. Showing the varietal name on the labels at this price point is
crucial. Then they don't have to get out their reading glasses, they don't have
to ask for help."
It's also about looking modern, she says. The bottle has to stand out, which
isn't easy in a crowded grocery store wine aisle. New World wine regions have been
doing it for years. Even Italy and Spain are sprucing up their labels. If you don't
do it, there is no hope of creating a brand name that consumers will remember,
Selles-Simmons says.
Selles-Simmons sells her wines through Trader Joe's, but she would like to find a
traditional distributor as well.
The model for Selles-Simmons? E.& J. Gallo's Red Bicyclette.
Gallo is showing us the way, says Berger. "Joe Gallo has the guts to believe in
French wine, to put his money there to make something happen. We are very thankful for
that," he says, noting that the Gallo wines produced in France are increasing the
sales of French wine in America.
Gallo, the savior of French wine? The chasm separating the French government from the
traditional vintners in "Mondovino" just got a little wider.