Celebrating diversity
10 Dec 2008Thank you so much to the London Bloggers for the enthusiastic response to last night’s experience and experiment. Presenting wine from wineries that have a blog to fellow bloggers must qualify as some sort of world first, shouldn’t it? [some photos here]
In any case, I want to thank all those who came along, and especially those winery bloggers that sent us the wines to taste and videos to watch. One of my key objectives was to get my fellow London Bloggers to look at wine in a slightly different way, and I think we succeeded.
I will try to upload the video of my brief talk from last night along with a summary of the main points to accompany the slides I’ve already posted at a later date (YouTube rejected my upload this morning!).
I will also give you a link later today to the videos from each of the participating winery bloggers.
However, I did want to post a few thoughts on your reactions to the wines and to wine blogging today and remind you of the competition (see details below).
By far the most controversial must have been the sherry, but sherry is used to it! Some of you bravely tried sherry for the first time which is wonderful. There were a handful who loved it (including me I admit) but 20 year old dry oloroso sherry might be a little like jumping in a the deep end when learning to swim - it is an overwhelming experience!
With the whites, there was an interesting split between those who liked the drier style of the Riesling Kabinett and Vivanco Viura/Malvasia (predominantly the men) and those who liked the richer, fruitier Auslese Riesling (many more of the women).
When it comes to the reds we had clear differences in people’s palates. A number of you came up to tell me that they found the lighter, “peppery” style of the Higueruela wine, made from the unusual all-red Garnacha Tintorera, amazing, whilst others found it wasn’t full-bodied enough for them. What more demonstration do we need that we all like different wines and catch-all recommendations are useless?
I found several fans of Italian wines who were surprised to find a Morellino di Scansano on the list as it is a rare sight still in the UK, but the wine (as well as the bottle and lovely label) was tasting really good.
To be honest, the votes on “favourite red” were quite evenly spilt between the Casa de las Vides CVP (and its unusual bottle), the Dinastia Vivanco Crianza and the Cortes de Cima Syrah. It seems that the cold weather has converted many of us to “red season” and the richer styles were very popular.
Finally, I only had a small taste of the Quevedo Reserva Tawny Port - at one stage I turned around and found a couple struggling to taste the last drops whilst trying to avoid the sediment. Draining a bottle is always a good sign!!
Basically there wasn’t a wine there that did not have a big fan which is great, and a great testament to the diversity of wine and of everyone’s palates.
I have a long list of cards of people I will be in touch with, but please do leave me a comment with your views on your favourite wines as I’m sure the wineries would love to hear it from you directly.
Finally, don’t forget to get in touch so we can chat about wine and your own experiences. I’d love to interview and reach out of the wine bubble to make what we write about more relevant to more of you.
Now, for the competition for those who made it to the tasting last night. There are 6 bottles of Dinastia Vivanco Crianza (delivered to you) available for a lucky blogger who posts thoughts about one or more of the wines we tasted. For every mention of a wine, and link to the winery blog, I’ll allocate you a virtual draw ticket (don’t forget to ping me on this blog so I know you have done it). I’ll make the draw on 21st December so you have a few days to get something up and have a chance of winning.

December 10th, 2008 at 10:03 am
Congratulations Robert! From what I've seen online, bloggers and wineries alike felt this was a huge success! Hats off to you.
December 10th, 2008 at 10:07 am
Dear Robert, thank you very much for all of your help making way for our wines on such an event.
Cheers fron Portugal.
December 10th, 2008 at 10:11 am
London bloggers and Robert, I think last night you all have shown that tastings can be done in a different way. And this is just the beginning! I am now writing a post about the tasting you had yesterday. thanks again
December 10th, 2008 at 10:31 am
Thanks a lot, Rob. It was a lot of fun.
December 10th, 2008 at 1:15 pm
Robert, thank you so much for the promotion of this tasting. We're glad you had put Quevedo in the mouth of London bloggers!
Oscar, the uber-youthful
December 10th, 2008 at 2:31 pm
[...] Looks like Rob thought it was fun, too. Robert McIntosh from wineconversation.com trying to teach me [...]
December 11th, 2008 at 2:14 pm
Great night - here's my take.
December 11th, 2008 at 2:55 pm
[...] McIntosh gave an illuminating presentation on wine, followed by a tasting session involving a range from wines from wineries that have [...]
December 11th, 2008 at 3:32 pm
[...] week, Robert McIntosh of The Wine Conversation brought together 50+ members of the UK wine blogging community through the London Blogger Meet-Up [...]
December 21st, 2008 at 6:34 am
I'm a bit late (sorry!), but here's my blog post on that evening: http://is.gd/cMXJ
December 24th, 2008 at 3:54 am
[...] prize from the recent London Bloggers “Winery Bloggers” Tasting (see the last paragraph in this post for the [...]