Stephen Quinn is a writer who currently writes for Decanter China and The China Post. Stephen takes a look back at last week’s HOFEX event and reveals his highlights of the week.
The Hong Kong international wine
challenge held in May in conjunction with HOFEX, Asia’s leading hospitality
tradeshow, revealed a handful of innovative wines.
Tradeshows can sometimes be
stuffy, with lots of sales people in dark suits and ties. Winemaker Chris
Archer created a fun atmosphere to launch Joiy, a sparkling Riesling, at a
stand where staff wore Hawaiian style shirts and necklaces of flowers.
Archer, based in Wellington, the
New Zealand capital, wanted to make the point that wine was meant to be fun. It
works. Joiy will soon be New Zealand’s biggest selling Riesling.
It is a delight to drink,
especially with a slice of lemon. It has delicate honey and floral notes with a
citrus zing, and only 9.5 per cent alcohol, making it ideal for social events.
It would be excellent with fatty Asian food in summer, the acidity cutting
through the oil.
Archer said wine was meant to be
joyous and easily approachable. “I wanted a wine that was unpretentious and at
the same time distinctive.”
The wine is sold in packs of four
bottles each of 250ml, with eye-catching packaging that suggests a sense of
fun. Archer has created a range of cocktails that work well with the Riesling.
The wine won a silver medal at the wine awards but should have been named
champion wine for the level of innovation. More details can be found at http://thecrushhk.com
Another new idea that impressed
was a range of premium beers made using wine techniques, also from New Zealand.
Winemaker Josh Scott, who has
already made a name for himself with award winning Scott Wines, decided to make
beer using the attention to detail related to wine. His Moa Breakfast beer, for
example, is fermented with cherries as well as hops, and has a champagne-style
bottle and closure. It is delicious.
The beer is named after the moa,
an extinct flightless bird that apparently was about the size of a horse.
Archeologists working near the brewery in Marlborough, famous as a Sauvignon Blanc
region, discovered moa bones. A cheeky advertising campaign later proclaimed:
“Finally, something drinkable from Marlborough.”
The beers are finished using
wine-making techniques such as barrel ageing and bottle fermentation. These
bottles are hand-turned the same way as in Champagne.
“We could go out tomorrow and buy
the same machines that other breweries use instead of people,” Scott said. “But
instead we brew beer the way it used to be made 100 years ago.” More details
can be found at http://www.moabeer.com
Moa exports to the US, Canada and
a range of Asian countries, including China.
The wine that won the prize for
best sweet beverage at the show happens to be the second oldest wine in the
world still in production. Lambouri Winery in Cyprus makes the Commandaria
Legacy from indigenous mavro and xinisteri grapes.
The name comes from the estate of
the Knights Templar in Cyprus known as the Gran Commanderie, which later became
known as Commandaria.
The oldest wine, incidentally,
comes from the same vineyard — Ya’in Kafrisin, which translates as “wine of Cyprus”.
The techniques used to make the
Commandaria later gave us the method known as passito, where grapes are dried
on straw beds in the sun before the juice is extracted. This concentrates
flavours.
This wine matures for nine years
in large oak barrels. Because of that process it offers intense aromas of
toffee, dried figs and fruitcake. Think of it as Pedro Ximenez (PX) but with
soft tannin and acidity, instead of the overwhelming sweetness of PX.
The English king Richard I, known
as the Lionheart, drank Commandaria at his wedding in Cyprus in May 1191 and
proclaimed it “the wine of kings and the king of wines”.
Legend suggests that the grapes
used to make Commandaria were the same grapes taken to Portugal that eventually
became the source for port. But that is another story.
After the Knights Templar
exported the wine from Cyprus to Europe’s royal courts it became famous around
the world. But it is little known in Asia, and deserves a wider audience. It
would be perfect with strong cheeses, but is delightful by itself.
Stephen Quinn can be contacted by
e-mail on sraquinn@gmail.com
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