Sunday walk in the vineyard – a wish

February 21, 2010

“Bildstock” near Nittel, Upper Mosel

Today, I would love to walk through a vineyard with my mother, preferably along the Mosel or the Saar. It is her 80th birthday today. I salute you mum and wish you many more years on this earth.

We could have lunch in one of the many country inns and enjoy a local Riesling wine.

But instead I am far away from the action, in Bangkok, in the tropics. This is one of the downsides if one works in far away places. As consolation I will open a bottle of Saar Riesling later with lunch.


Wine of the day: Climbing Merlot by Cumulus Wines

February 20, 2010

Cumulus Climbing Merlot

I do not drink much wine from New South Wales, except maybe Semillon wines from the Hunter Valley. The other day some wines from Cumulus Wines, the largest producer (about 500 ha under vines, not a boutique producer), located in the Orange Region, appeared in our supermarket in Thonglor, Bangkok.

I bought a couple of bottles from the Climbing Series (Shiraz and Merlot). My children liked the label. The ‘2007 Climbing Merlot’ won gold, silver and plenty of bronze medals. It’s a cool climate (grown above 600 m), fruity wine, elegant with a good structure, a delight of a wine, even if one has to fork out about 20 Euro/30 A$ for the bottle here in Bangkok.


Night life in Bangkok

February 19, 2010

Without words, but with a lot of insects


Wine of the day: 2008 Yering Chardonnay

February 18, 2010

After a hot day in the tropics nothing is better than a nice glass of white wine. We selected a ‘2008 Yering Station Chardonnay’ from the Yarra Valley. Yering Station is the oldest vineyard in Victoria. The winery is a must visit if you are touring the Yarra Valley. It’s located just outside Yarra Glen.

Only very recently had this wine arrived in our supermarket in Thonglor, Bangkok. It’s moderately priced for Thai conditions (less than 10 EURO or A$ 15) and a very lovely drink.

Wine on the terrace: 2008 Yering Station Chardonnay

Yering Station has still ‘grape growers with contracts’ and our friend Steve Sadlier is one of them. If we want to drink wine from his grapes, Yering Station is the winery to buy it from. Steve produces excellent cool climate fruit in the Yarra Valley.

We were a bit homesick and needed a reminder that Australia can be very near. Cheers folks


Who destroyed the Australian wine industry? …and the culprit is….

February 15, 2010

I have not been reading the Daily Wine News for a couple of days. After coming home last night, I browsed through the accumulated news. And, Eureka, I found for the first time someone who points his finger in the direction of the big corporate producers.

So far the tenor of most critics has been that there is just too much wine around (surplus of 20-40 million cases of wine each year) and that mostly greedy investors, money trusts and lifestyle (hobby) vintners, loaded with money made in construction or as medical doctors are the ones to blame. They are the ones who single handedly destroyed the wine sector; they produced the “wine lake”, and planted unsustainable hectares of new vineyards. The remedy was also clear: the small ones have to go. Instead wine production had better be left to the professionals (i.e. the corporates).

In comes Brian Croser, the founder and former owner of Adelaide Hills based Petaluma winery, with his view of the problem. He believes that the 2,000-odd Australian vintners are the originators of first-class Australian wine and have been the creators of the outstanding international image of their produce. The large companies, the corporates, have benefited from this positive image and “sailed on it”. However they mainly produce commodity wines of inferior quality which they dump on world markets, thereby destroying the reputation of fine Australian wines.

Whether this is true or not is certainly debatable. Everyone who extended their plantings in the hope of a larger marketshare is somehow to blame. However, finally we can hear another tune, not heard before and the public conversation has not only become more colourful but also more pluralistic, which is good for everyone.

If we have to pull out 40,000 ha of grape vines, they should come from various sources. If one of the four big companies would go and leave the sector, a lot could be gained for the remaining producers. Alternatively, small producers could pull out. What would be better for the country? this is a question not easily answered.

We will see small, medium as well as big companies leaving the industry. Many small family businesses will have their niche and will thrive regardless of the downturn of the sector. Others will close down, especially fruit producers who are at the end of the value chain (actually they are at the start of it). Also some of the investor and dividend driven schemes will come to an end. Vineyards and wineries will be hard to sell for some time to come. The big corporates will clean up their portfolios, they might de-invest in wine production and move into other segments of the beverage industry. Lower average profits in wine making will make other investments relatively more profitable. The wine sector will remain unattactive for young professionals for a while until the pendulum swings back, and the cycle of boom and bust will start all over again.

We at Two Hills Vineyard came too late to the party, and were caught out, so to say. I guess, we will go into hibernation and see what the prospects are in a couple of years time. I hope we can afford this strategy and that it will pay off some day when we can reduce costs and better market our produce. I remain optimistic and we will hang in there. Cheers to Two Hills wines!

Two Hills Vineyard, Glenburn


Valentines

February 14, 2010

I know, it’s not very romantic but I found this banner in my Soi advertising for some more business and using the Valentines occasion in a skilful way.

Have a peaceful Sunday, drink a good bottle of wine with your wife/partner, go out for lunch and after all show your love.

Cheers


And here comes the year of the mighty tiger

February 13, 2010

It started with fire crackers this morning. They made a hell of a noise in our Soi, as the Thais call the back lanes and side streets. Amazing, I thought, if this goes on, we will be deaf by night.

In the end we decided to go out, do some shopping of groceries and decided spontaneously to go for lunch to the dumpling place called the Royal Kitchen on Thonglor. At the entrance, right on the pavement, large trestle tables were laid out with all kinds of food, some drink and incense, all offerings in honour of the gods. And I had not brought my camera, what a shame. The restaurant was packed. We ordered all kinds of dumplings and the four of us consumed a sumptuous Chinese meal. It felt so great. This is our start into the year of the tiger. We drank of course beer.

But I have a wine suggestion for the tiger year. ‘2007 Nero D’Avola’ by Cusumano. Have you heard of the brothers Cusumano, Alberto and Diego? I had not. The bottle has a glass enclosure (yippieh). The colour is most beautiful.

2007 Nero d’Avola by Cusumano, Sicily

I find their website a bit cumbersome, the wine is not. Sicily’s most important indigenous red variety produces wonderful wines with soft tannins and plum, berry and spicy flavours. They compare to our Shiraz wines for instance the ones from Heathcote, Victoria. I can only highly recommend this wine from Sicily. It matches the power of the tiger.

Gong xi fa cai – Happy New Year


The Flax Oil Diet – A tribute to Peter Ryan (almarrhum)

February 12, 2010

You guessed right. This blog entry will not deal with wine but with food, and health. It’s exactly 3 months that my friend Peter Ryan died of liver cirrhosis. He introduced me to Dr. Johanna Budwig (1906-94) and her diet, which has all kinds of healing qualities. I must admit, I was very sceptical at the time.

But then Peter healed his liver cancer successfully with the Budwig diet. The doctors had only given him a maximum of six months to live. Then he changed his diet radically with the result that the cancer could not be found any more. In the end he died of the cirrhosis of the liver but he had gained quite some time and enjoyed a quality of life he would not have had if he had gone for a “traditional” cancer treatement.

Johanna wrote the “Oil Protein Diet Cookbook”. She discovered the healing powers of flax seed oil. Her 500 or so recipes in the book are all based on flax/linseed oil. She was nominated seven times for the Noble Prize, and despite never receiving this, Dr. Budwig was the foremost expert on cancer and nutrition.

Sandra Olson Budwig Video.com

Sandra Olson has set up a very interesting website on Johanna Budwig and her diet. This is a must-visit site. She also was in contact with Peter. In fact Peter was very active in various chat rooms helping cancer patients to cope with their predicament. Some of these friends left messages on this very blog, reminiscing about Peter and his efforts in their circles.

Dr Budwig’s diet has also other benefits, one of them being that blood pressure is reduced. If it could be that easy to get the blood pressure down, I asked myself, why is that this diet not widely known and discussed publicly.

The yoghurt-fruit-nut-linseed oil breakfast

Since we moved to Bangkok, I have had access to fresh linseed oil, and therefore I have started to have a quark-linseed oil-fruit-nuts mix for breakfast., Peter’s Budwig breakfast. I have been on this ever since. And guess what happened? My blood pressure came down like an avalanche. Awesome. I could not believe it. Fortunately, I am not the only one experiencing this effect. Almost all the people in my friendship circle who have switched to flax/linseed oil have gotten off blood pressure reducing medication. This is all thanks to Peter. We miss him.

Isn’t it a beautiful little flower?

Blue flowering flax
(Source: http://www.blackthornarable.co.uk/photography/linseed/D14336_rj.jpg)

Flax fields like this one you can find in Northern France
(Source: http://blog.teroforma.com/images/flax_field_1_med.jpg)

PS: When I was young I worked on a farm near Vernon/Seine. There, one can see many beautiful flax seed fields with white and blue flowers. That was the time before digital cameras, that’s why I took the above photos from the net. Thank’s guys for letting me show these picture.


The Old Man with the Beard

February 9, 2010

Famous last words

As a native of Trier, I treasure the most famous son of our city, Karl Marx, though he left rather early and spent most of his time in exile in London. He used to love wine, especially Riesling from the Ruwer where the Marx family used to own a vineyard and of course my beloved Mosel.

I like the poster above (this is why I took a shot through the window to get a glimpse of it), but unfortunately these were not his last words. he did not say: “Sorry folks, it was just an idea.” Only later generations could come to that conclusion. As family gathered around the dying Marx awaiting his final utterance. It is reported that he barked at them and said: “Go on, get out! Last words are for fools.”


A year has passed: the Victorian bushfire tragedy 2009

February 8, 2010

All over Victoria, public and private ceremonies were held to commemorate the death of the 173 fire victims killed a year ago in the most devastating bush fires the state had seen. It reminded us, the living, how fragile human life is and how grateful we can be to be still around.

Our house and vineyard was narrowly saved by local firefigthers and fire crews from New South Wales. In our street only property was lost and thanks to the vigilance of our neighbours lives and homes were saved. Casual visitors to the area can hardly detect any sign of the devastation.

Reading through the pages of the Age with descriptions of the anniversary and the memorial services, one is reminded of the horrors people went through and the losses they had to cope with. The individual stories make you sad and it is hard not to cry. The resilience of those bearing hardship is admirable. And the solemn question creeps up, “How would I have dealt with such tragedy?” Would I have been as brave?