Awards and citations:


1997: Le Prix du Champagne Lanson Noble Cuvée Award for investigations into Champagne for the Millennium investment scams

2001: Le Prix Champagne Lanson Ivory Award for investdrinks.org

2011: Vindic d'Or MMXI – 'Meilleur blog anti-1855'

2011: Robert M. Parker, Jnr: ‘This blogger...’:

2012: Born Digital Wine Awards: No Pay No Jay – best investigative wine story

2012: International Wine Challenge – Personality of the Year Award




Showing posts with label Andrew Jefford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Jefford. Show all posts

Monday, 18 December 2017

Andrew Jefford on Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé – all things are not equal


The cross above Chavignol with 
the often present Sancerre in the distance


There is a very good post (Sancerre and friends) by Andrew Jefford on decanter.com today. Not a surprise that Andrew's article is good. No the surprise is that this is the first time that such a long established wine writer has visited Sancerre, Pouilly-Fumé and the other Central Loire appellations. Andrew has been covering wine for over 30 years now and starting before areas like Argentina, Australia, Chile and South Africa have risen to prominence.

Whatever – it is clear from  Andrew's photos that he visited Sancerre during the autumn. Hopefully he enjoyed the often magnificent show of autumn colours that this most picturesque and spectacular Loire provides. 

As ever Andrew's observations are acute noting that good whites from here do not have the obvious Sauvignon Blanc characteristics, the differences in terroir between Pouilly and Sancerre as well as the Kimmeridgian Crescent that starts in Champagne passes through Pouilly, Sancerre, Menetou-Salon and is below ground by the time it reaches Quincy. 

The differences between Sancerre and Pouilly? Taste-wise not at all easy. I suspect in a blend tasting it would be more down to pot luck for me.  The differences that are most apparent are geographical and topographical. Sancerre clearly has a bigger area that is suitable for vines. More importantly, I think, it has in the town of Sancerre a real focus and centre that Pouilly sorely lacks. A very significant proportion of Appellation Sancerre faces Sancerre town. 

In contrast the vineyards of Pouilly run north to south. This probably wouldn't matter if the appellation had a recognisable centre. After all Burgundy's Côte d'Or also runs north to south but has lively Beaune to provide a focus for both the Côte de Nuits and the Côte de Beaune. Pouilly-sur-Loire is very sadly moribund and increasingly so. This is in very stark contrast to the lively and thriving town of Sancerre. The glory days of Pouilly-sur-Loire, when it was a staging post on the Route Nationale 7 – the road southwards to the sunshine and immortalised by Charles Trenet – are very long gone.

Pouilly-sur-Loire suffers from the curse of the Autoroute 77, which by-passes the town, and has gradually drained away its lifeblood. My guess is that most residents do their shopping in supermarkets of Cosne or in La Charité. 

Sancerre has also been blessed with a series of dynamic producers and leaders, who from the 1950s have traveled to sell their wines. Initially to Paris and then more recently around the globe. These include the Mellots, the Bourgeois, Vacherons, Jean-Max Roger, Vincent Pinard and others

Once again, in contrast, Pouilly has few obvious leaders. Certainly the late Didier Dagueneau had a strong personality with equally strong views but was really a rebel with a cause – as likely to chastise his colleagues as to lead them. Baron Patrick de Ladoucette is Pouilly's leading producer in terms of vines planted. He appears a distant aristocratic figure. In just under 30 years I have met him once – a rather strained visit and meeting with the great man at Château de Nozet.     
It is surely significant that when the Bureau du Central Loire was founded, Pouilly preferred for a number of years not to join the organisation. The Pouilly producers have, however, got together for their wine centre – La Tour du Pouilly-Fumé. Sancerre has its Maison des Sancerre.  
          
Finally in the Anglophone world Sancerre is much easier to pronounce than Pouilly-Fumé.

In 2018 Andrew will be writing more about his visit to the Loire's Central Vineyards – I look forward to reading them.


      

Sunday, 22 May 2016

Andrew Jefford's eloquent plea for the UK to remain in the EU



Vote Leave is led by Boris Johnson
who has long been a supporter of the EU


In just over a month the UK will vote on whether to remain a member of the European Union or leave. The Referendum will be on Thursday 23rd June 2016. Given that we joined the European Community in 1973 – 43 years ago – holding another Referendum on whether to stay in or not rather underlines our always ambivalent attitude to the European Union and the European ideal.

I have long been a convinced supporter of a European Union and hope that we will vote to remain in the EU. I see myself as a European whose main home is in London. To vote to leave would be a terrible mistake.  

Yesterday wine writer Andrew Jefford posted on Facebook an eloquent and wise plea for remaining in the European Union:  

'These are my children’s eyes, photographed by their mother. They are young British citizens who, at present, live as freely in Europe as they could in the UK. They aren’t, of course, old enough to vote in the UK’s June 23rd referendum on continuing membership of the European Union, but their lives will be affected far more than my life will by the outcome. If you are a young British voter, please vote. It will be the most significant vote you’ll ever cast. No General Election will ever have this level of significance.

The economic arguments for Britain remaining in the European Union are many and compelling. Leaving would be an act of economic self-harm. Most of the putative upside – only thinly sketched out by those who wish the UK to leave the European Union – is hopeful fantasy, as would quickly become evident in the slow economic hangover that will follow any possible vote for Brexit. Independent international economists overwhelmingly concur with this view. 

EU migration to the UK has been of great economic benefit. Farming, transport, construction and the health service are four sectors among many which would struggle in the UK without EU workers. Migration is not a separate issue to economics, as those advancing the Brexit argument assert. 

Read the rest of Andrew's post here


Andrew Jefford 

Monday, 4 May 2015

JIm@2015 Decanter World Wine Awards

 In the middle of judging some Loire whites
My thanks to John Switzer who took the photos

Surrounded by a duo of legends: 
John Livingstone-Learmonth (left) – Andrew Jefford (right)

Saturday, 10 November 2012

#EWBC: Source of thought ...


What a blistering start to the conference – three very thought-provoking interesting keynotes.  The academic, the mystic and the practitioner – each sharing their own experiences, approaches and insights.


 #EWBC12: Andrew Jefford

Andrew Jefford’s well-constructed, intelligent, academic thesis on source – straightforwardly and eloquently delivered, demonstrating well his themes of passion and inspiration, having a tale to tell, the importance of listening (even to men in dark suits and even to men in Champagne!), and finally urging us to bring more humour and a little more irreverence into our writing.


 #EWBC12: Randall Grahm

Randall Grahm going back to source, urging an approach to wine culture and wine making that moves away from the laboratory approach that has developed in the new world, and produces high-performance wines that are the same no matter where they are produced, back to an approach that better reflects terroir, including growing vines from seed.


#EWBC12: Christian Payne

Christian Payne, lively and amusing, telling us stories about telling stories, emphasising that good content always finds an audience, sharing his practical approach to mixing text with photos, audio and video, making a case in particular for audio, highlighting that data is everywhere (even in his jeans!) and that data + time = story (D + T = S).


Tuesday, 24 April 2012

2012 Decanter World Wine Awards: some pics

Peter Franz and the Sensible breakfast group

Gérard Basset MW: Regional France

Tony Aspler: Canada 

Mark Savage MW

Mark Williamson (Willi's Wine Bar, Paris)

 Andrew Jefford: Languedoc-Roussillon

 Anthony Rose

 Beverley Blanning MW and Guy Woodward (editor of Decanter)

 Judges gathering

 Gérard Basset MW
 John Livingstone-Learmonth sprinkling gold dust over the Rhône with Steven Spurrier

 Chris Kissack proofreading his Bordeaux book due out soon (Dennis Books)

 Juan Carlos Rincón suitably attired for The Worx

Panos Kakaviatos

 Peter Nixson

 Richard Baudains: Italy

 Tony Aspler and Sarah Ahmed (Portugal)

Allan Cheesman and Chris Kissack

 
 


Thursday, 14 April 2011

2011 Decanter World Wine Awards: studying the form and picking the winners

King Roan (John Livingstone-Learmonth) getting down to the serious business (above and below)

 

Other photos from Studio 2@The Worx:

Andrew Jefford and Elizabeth Gabay MW
Christian Honorez (H2Vin)

Douglas Wregg (Les Caves de Pyrène) and Marcel Orford-Williams (The Wine Society)

Gérard Basset MW
Neil Irvine (No2 Pound Street) on Loire panel

 

Chris Kissack (Loire panel) reflecting

Photographer checking his pics

Unfortunately I forgot to change the white balance on some of these photos.

Sunday, 8 March 2009

Wine on the internet: the battle against craziness goes on

Jancis Robinson and Andrew Jefford: Could these sites be banned in France and their authors arrested?

Although the French wine industry last week saw off the absurd proposal that there should a charge for all wine tastings – both professional and amateur – the war is not yet won. The legality of mentioning alcohol on the internet has still not been resolved. It seems likely that the French Parliament will make the mention of alcohol on the net legal but it may be severely circumscribed. There is an amendment from UMP Yves Bur from Alsace (Bas-Rhin) and the socialist deputy Jean-Marie Le Guen (Paris) that would restrict the mention of alcohol to only those sites run by producers or négociants.

This would mean that all wine sites run by writers/journalists, magazines, all blogging sites except those run by producers or négociants would be illegal in France. This would presumably mean that eRobertParker, the Wine Spectator, Jancis Robinson, Tom Cannavan’s Wine-Pages, Jamie Goode’s Wine Anorak etc. etc. would all be illegal in France. So, too, presumably any mention of alcohol in on-line newspapers.


'What future for wine if you can no longer talk about it?'
Good and pertinent question on a road sign in Anjou last summer
(photo from Micaela and Sue, La Grande Maison)


It would also hit other types of site, tourist sites for instance, that are likely to mention wine or spirits like Cognac, Armagnac or Calvados.

As all wine sites can be accessed in France does this mean that anybody running a wine site anywhere in the world, who is not a producer or négociant, will be breaking French law? If this is case will Robert Parker and Jancis Robinson, for example, be in danger of arrest and being dragged before the French courts next time they visit France?

See also:
This wine forum thread on Tom Cannavan's wine pages
Various postings on Hervé Lalau's Chroniques Vineuses
This post and others on Wine Brands