Chwee Kueh and Champagne

Saturday 29 October, 10am
2nd floor, Tiong Bahru Market, 30 Seng Poh Road
Tutored tasting, S$35 per person (inclusive of food)

Ever wondered what wine to match with chwee kueh? How about its Teochew cousins soon kueh and peng kueh? Or what to drink with suckling pig and other roast meat? We show and explain how to match wine with local hawker food in the bustling setting of Tiong Bahru Market. Please note that this tasting begins at 10am and will be in an al fresco (i.e. non air-conditioned) setting, so comfortable clothes are advised. RSVP required.

Update 13 Oct 2011: We only have a couple of spaces left for this event. If you are planning to come in a large group (i.e. six or more), please contact us and we will make alternative arrangements.

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Rhône dinner at Nicolas

Nicolas Joanny grew up near the Rhône Valley in Southern France, and he has kindly agreed to fashion a menu to match with some of our favourite wines from the same region. We’ll taste through wines from both Eric Texier, an old and dear friend, and Helen Durand of Domaine du Trapadis. RSVP required.

Event details
Date & Time: Wednesday 12 October, 7:30pm
Venue: Nicolas Le Restaurant, 31 Keong Saik Road
Cost: S$148++ per person
Menu: Rhone Dinner October 12th 2011 (pdf)

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Tok Gong at MAAD

Tok Gong Wine Bar is popping up at MAAD this coming Friday, 7 October.  Come by any time between 5pm and midnight to have some wine, browse the stalls and chat with us. It’s at the red dot design museum and we’ll be occupying the bar counter in Gallery 1. See you there!

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Environmental concerns

Eric Texier, as quoted1 by Jancis Robinson in today’s Financial Times: “Natural wines are full of good intentions. They are full of fossil fuels too.”

Tractor usage, which is covered briefly in the column, is just the proverbial tip of the iceberg. Ms. Robinson rightly mentions the fuel and environmental cost of keeping wines chilled; more so when we’re several seas away in a tropical climate. In addition to our off-site storage facilities, we run several wine fridges where we keep stock on hand and for sampling. There’s also refrigerated delivery locally, which adds to the emissions.

We are not wholly comfortable with our current environmental impact, to be frank, and are seeking to mitigate it where possible. We choose cardboard packaging (lighter and less bulky) and place and ship larger orders (reefer trucks are fuller), to name but two measures. Insofar as these are also cost-efficient, they’re easy enough to implement.

But we wish we could do more.


1 Re-quoted, to be precise, from Jamie Goode’s new book, “Authentic Wine: Toward Natural and Sustainable Winemaking”. The article is also available on Jancis Robinson’s excellent website.

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The importance of process

I read with interest two separate articles in the Financial Times last month – a typically erudite, intelligent and self-referential piece by Martin Amis on Philip Larkin and his poetry, and a column on Giaconda’s Rick Kinzbrunner by Andrew Jefford, where the winemaker is quoted as saying, “The biggie for me is what’s in the bottle…if the wine doesn’t measure up, it’s all irrelevant”.

The ‘it’ in the quote refers to what I like to call the winegrowing process (conflating grapegrowing and winemaking), or in Kinzbrunner’s words, “vineyards, terroir, organics, natural winemaking, low sulphur, whatever”. His view is certainly understandable and orthodox – wine-drinking is an experience, and one can’t drink terroir or natural winemaking.

But there’s a danger in limiting and isolating the wine drinking experience, where the wine is just the sum of our impressions. Like the product of any other craft (both cooking and furniture-making come to mind), wine can be and tell us so much more when we place it in context, and in particular when we try to understand the processes.

Treating wine as just an object in the bottle (or more accurately, in the glass and on the palate), rather than the still-evolving product at the end of a long chain of processes, is like a conversation with a magic mirror – self-referential, and eventually where we see, hear and taste only what we want to. The dialogue can be exhilarating at first, but over time it becomes exhausting, as so much wine tasting is.

I have no wish to cast aspersions on Kinzbrunner or his approach, and I generally like his wines. But I think there is more to wine than greets the palate.

***

Martin Amis, on the surface, brings a similar approach to his assessment of Larkin’s output, writing starkly that “the simple truth that writers’ private lives don’t matter; only the work matters”. He then belies his own stated belief in the following paragraphs with a deft twist of the pen, turning to Larkin’s strained relations with Monica James (“love of his life”) as well as Amis’ father, Kingsley, in the process highlighting the relevance of Larkin’s private life to his work.

Amis is probably right, and “the gauntness of Larkin’s personal history” is why his poetry is so resonant and unforgettable. Looking up the steep slopes of the Wolfer Goldgrube in the Mosel, shaking Marc Ollivier’s callused hands, walking through Noel Dupasquier’s vineyards, or tasting at Nino Perrino’s tiny cellar, it is similarly easy to connect the dots and link the process with the product. Unfortunately, we are more commonly faced with an array of glasses, each a seeming liquid mirror, and the straightforward thing to do is to carry on our conversations as usual.

However, with patience and imagination, it is possible to turn away from the mirror, and to hear what the vineyards, vintage and winegrower have to say. Try it sometime.

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Declensions

In grammar, a declension is a group of nouns, pronouns or adjectives which follow a particular pattern of inflection (e.g. he, him, his). Over the final three sessions of Tok Gong Wine Bar at TAB (we’re moving, watch this space), we will be presenting declensions of terroir, vintage and grape varieties.

Tok Gong Wine Bar happens on Wednesdays, from 6pm onwards, at the upper level lounge of TAB, a music and entertainment venue.

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Earlier harvests

Harvests have started (and in some cases ended) across France, in many cases earlier than usual (although it seems like every other harvest is now early). Many of our growers were worried about early budding and fruit-set, especially in the Savoie. In Champagne, July was punctuated by rains, although Aurélien (Champagne Laherte) says that the dilution was minimal. It’s too early to tell what the wines will be like, of course, but harvests are similar to the sustain pedal on a piano or vibrato on a violin – they capture and alter the essence of the vintage, eventually becoming an echo of that year’s sun, rain, wind and vineyard choices.

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Joe Dressner

He passed away yesterday. I remember my last phone conversation with him, when we discussed some of the Loire producers both of us imported into our respective markets. The last few e-mails we exchanged were short, simple and quite mundane. The last time we sat down for a meal was far too long ago; we had some good, honest food and wine.

Even the most sincere and touching eulogies can come across as incomplete and flat, and the richness of Joe’s life makes it practically impossible to do him justice with words alone. I can only write that we wouldn’t be where we are without him, and others like him.

Thank you, Joe, and rest in peace.

Note: Joe Dressner founded Louis/Dressner Selections with his wife, Denyse Louis, and they were amongst the first importers to focus on authentic, honest wines rather than big brands in the US. Their son, Jules, has written about him as only a son could.

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Tok Gong Wine Bar

We’re very pleased to announce that we are collaborating with TAB, a restaurant, bar and entertainment venue, on Tok Gong Wine Bar, a weekly pop-up wine bar dedicated to serving exceptional wines. We will be there every Wednesday evening in August and September on the upper level of TAB, pouring some of our favourite wines by the glass, carafe and bottle. The list will change every week so there will always be something new to try.

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Arrivals

Our shipment has arrived and we will be arranging deliveries for pre-arrival orders. There will also be trade and public tastings throughout August for our clients. Please contact us if you have any queries about your order.

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