Archive for March, 2008
February is the sneakiest month. It lulls you into thinking it’s just like any other month, and then it pulls the rug out from under you a couple of days before you’re ready. Well now it’s March, and the first Wednesday of the month approaches, which means Wine Blogging Wednesday, the blogosphere’s virtual wine tasting event is right around the corner.
This month’s edition, the 43rd since we began the event, is hosted by Joel over at Wine Life Today. His theme for this month’s event is Comfort Wines, which loosely translates into: buy and drink a wine that helps you get into that zone of calm comfort that only good wine can bring. Joel looks like he’s gonna need it, as his daughter was born on Thursday of last week (congratulations !), which means he’s not sleeping much these days.
We all have those wines that take us someplace special, and this month your participation in WBW#43 simply involves drinking one and then writing about the experience on your blog on or before Wednesday, March 5th.
I hope you’ll join us. If you do, let Joel Know by sending him an e-mail.
More: continued here
Mark my words: China is the next big thing when it comes to wine. Wine consumption that is. I’ve had more than a few Chinese wines that make it clear that they’ve got a long way to go when it comes to making decent table wine, but when it comes to drinking wine, China is moving up fast in the ranks of wine consumers.
As China mints more millionaires every week, international business hubs like Hong Kong and Shanghai are exploding as centers for spending the newfound wealth of the nation’s richest citizens. Increasingly, a share of that cash seems to be spent on wine.
According to various sources that track such figures, wine imports to China have been growing by 50% year over year. Most of the volume of wine is primarily cheaper stuff from Australia and Chile. But increasingly, more affluent tastes are leaning towards top tier wines.
As evidence, you need look no farther than two recent developments.
Last week both Bonham’s & Butterfields and Acker Merril & Condit announced they would be holding wine auctions in Hong Kong. These two heavyweights of the wine auction world don’t do anything unless they are going to profit from it, and it seems they think there’s money in Hong Kong. I’m betting they’re right.
Perhaps more meaningful, the governor of Hong Kong has abolished all import duties on wine and spirits. One of my fellow wine bloggers Jim Boyce recently relayed the news on his blog the Grape Wall of China.
Finally, I had dinner the other night with a friend of my wife’s from business school who has started a chain of wine bars in Shanghai who says in no uncertain terms that the business is going gangbusters.
If I had any cash lying around I might invest. I’m sure there’s some colorful metaphor that would capture the potential that China has as a wine consuming nation, but all the ones that I can think of at the moment are horrible clichés.
What is the sound of 100 million mouths sipping?
More: continued here





