Matt Kramer is an American wine
critic writing great stories for Wine Spectator in America using his subtle wit
and guile to entertain people with his thoughts on wine, something he has been
doing since 1976 when he first got thrown in at the deep end by his then employer,
a weekly publication for which he wrote about food.
Since then, Matt has gone on to
pen eight books and has written for most, if not all the influential wine
publications in America and whilst he was in Hong Kong last week, Wine Times
took the opportunity to interview the man whom we here have been reading for
years.
His books include his insights
into the regions of California wine, Italian wine and Burgundian wine, whilst
his others are a general look at wine with titles such as “Making Sense of Wine”
and his most recent publication “Matt Kramer on Wine: A Matchless Collection of
Columns, Essays and Observations by America’s Most Original and Lucid Wine Writer”.
Talking to Matt prior to having
dinner with the man himself and Louis Jadot owner Pierre-Henry Gagey at Hullett
House here in Hong Kong, we wanted to know what inspired him to get into wine
writing and what the fundamental role of today’s wine critic really is.
WTHK: How did you first get into
wine writing?
MK: “Actually I began as a food writer
36 years ago and I had come back from a 3 month bicycling trip around Europe to
start my new job as a food editor of a small newspaper. The publisher of the
newspaper said ‘what do you know about wine’? I told him I knew nothing about
wine other than it comes in red, white and pink! He then told me that while I
was away they had done a mock-up of the new food page and to fill up space we
put in something called “Wine of The Week”. Then he told me “you’re writing it”!
I then told him ‘but I don’t know anything about wine’, to which he replied ‘that’s
ok, neither does anyone else’! That’s really how I started writing about wine.
I started writing about wine the exact same week I started drinking wine”!
WTHK: Can you remember the first
wine you ever tried?
MK: “That I ever drank? The first
wine I ever drank would have been something stupid like Lancers Rosé and when
we were cycling in France we were young and poor so all we would buy would be
wine from the grocery stores that were sold by the alcohol level. We drank a
lot of douze degree that was probably only 3 or 4 Francs per litre! But in
terms of fine wine, I remember the first wine I wrote about which was Drouhin
Beaujolais Villages – which wasn’t a bad choice”!
WTHK: Do you have a “go to” wine?
MK: “No! There’s too many. We
live in a remarkable time period and if you’ve been doing what I’ve been doing
for 36 years you do get a certain perspective and its one that I really marvel
at. There are now more incredibly fine wines from more places than really could
have ever been imagined even 20 years ago. The challenge for people like
ourselves is, frankly, to persuade people that greatness – true greatness – now
appears in many places that have not been sanctified by time or tradition.
There was a wine that was one of my wines of the year in my column for the
Spectator and it was from a zone in Northwestern Spain called Ribera Sacra and
this wine is fabulous, it is Burgundy in everything except grape variety and
location. But it comes from this amazing soil, but the whole zone had been
founded by Benedictine and Cistercian monks 700 years ago. When you taste this
wine you say “this is incredible”, but it’s difficult to convince people that
genuine, authentic greatness now is appearing in places that simply do not have
the tradition of people having read about it like they do with Bordeaux and
Burgundy”.
WTHK: You have written eight
books – any chance you’ll do more?
MK: “Nothing on the horizon but
the publishing market is not in the best of health at the moment and I’m not
going to say there aren’t books in me, but whether those books get published
remains to be seen. It’s a question of economics really”.
WTHK: The title of your latest
book is “A Matchless Collection of Columns, Essays and Observations by America’s
Most Original and Lucid Wine Writer”. Did you name the book yourself?
MK: “My agent did! It was
immodest on my behalf and I was gracious enough to allow him to suggest the
title!! Was I responsible, no! But I didn’t exactly say “no, no, no”! I figured
if they wanted to say that I wasn’t going to object”.
WTHK: What would you say the role
of today’s wine critic really is?
MK: “I think the role of any
critic be it wine or movies or theatre occupies several levels. At one level,
it is to entertain. If you can’t write entertainingly, no one will finish
reading what you started. So, as a writer you have a responsibility to
entertain. There are different kinds of critics and I am not what the French
call a “grand degustateur” – meaning a great taster in regard to the scale of
what you do. So a guy like Robert Parker or James Laube taste thousands of
wines a year and write detailed tasting notes – they are ‘grand degustatuers’.
My kind of wine criticism is there to enlighten people, get them to think about
something they may not have thought about before and maybe even provoke them a
little – as well as to entertain. So it depends on the kind of critic you want
to be and the kind of critic the reader wants to read”.
WTHK: This is your first visit to
Hong Kong so what do you think about the place?
MK: “That’s like asking a wine
newby what he thinks of Richebourg! I’ve been here 48 hours but you look at the
place and think ‘wow, you’re not in Kansas no more Toto’! It’s wonderful being
here because I enjoy Chinese food so all I’ve really been doing since I got
here is eating! I get up in the morning and get dim sum at 7am….this is great!
I’ve hit the streets and happily here in Hong Kong everyone speaks some English
so I am capable of communicating what I want”.
WTHK: Do you have any opinions on
pairing food with wines?
MK: “This whole business of
pairing food and wine came to us from the French. It’s something that I am not
particularly immersed in but the idea of it came arbitrarily 150 years ago. If
you look back at how this happened it came at two levels, one, it was simply
regional. The Burgundians had their foods and they knew which of their wines
went with their foods. They were not sitting there saying ‘do you think this Mourvedre
from Bandol goes with the Boeuf Bourguignon’! For them, the business of wine and
food pairing was that you drank your local wine with your local food. Secondly,
you had a group of people in Paris for example, who would go to restaurants and
drink fine wines of which there were, tops, maybe 5 dozen labels that they
would drink. Out of those maybe 12 or 15 would be Cru Classe Bordeaux and there
would be Grand Cru Burgundies, top quality German wines from the Rheingau or Mosel
and maybe a Cote Rotie or Hermitage – but it was a narrow world, and it was an
equally narrow world for the dishes they were eating. There was no fusion
cuisine back then! I believe the trick is to choose a good wine, and if that
good wine is even remotely appropriate for the dish or dishes in question, the
wine can take care of itself. Is it the perfect paring? Who knows? But to be
perfectly blunt, who cares!?”
You can read Matt Kramer’s
monthly article in Wine Spectator Magazine – available from all good bookshops
in Hong Kong.
Very enlightening views from Mr. Kramer especially with respect to wine and food pairing. Thanks Ali for reporting.
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