Henry Jeffreys – Vines In A Cold Climate

The People Behind the English Wine Revolution

I have mixed feelings about this book. While it is undoubtedly an illuminating account of the recent history of the English wine industry – though it’s a pity the Welsh wine industry is largely ignored – and the key personalities involved in the ‘English Wine Revolution’, I didn’t always find it an easy read.

The book covers a range of important topics such as climate, natural wine production, organic viticulture, grape varieties, sparkling wine, soil health and so on in a comprehensive but not overly detailed manner, and it also focusses heavily on the personalities involved in the industry, as suggested by the subtitle. However, some of these latter accounts are often spoilt by the tittle-tattle which make them read like excerpts from a gossip magazine rather than a serious book about English wine. 

But what really put me off the book was the poor editing. Page after page is peppered with typos. In a passage about Tillingham Winery, for example, Lord Devonport is then spelt as Devenport within a few lines, and in a passage about the Languedoc wine region, Domaine Saint Rose is also written as Sainte Rose in the same paragraph.  And if an author wants to use French terms to spice up the text, then it helps to get it right! So, ‘petits soupers’ not ‘petites soupers’, ‘cabernet noir’ not ‘cabaret noir’, and ‘éminence grise’ not ‘éminence gris’. It might be nit-picking but it drove me mad and I had to put the book down several times. I would have thought Allen & Unwin would have had the book edited before releasing it …

The book has attracted positive reviews and awards but for me, on balance, it’s just three stars.

Available from Waterstones and other booksellers (£10.99-£16.99)

The Coravin Wine System

On those (admittedly rare!) occasions when you open a bottle of wine but just want to drink a glass or two, wouldn’t it be great if you could reseal the bottle and put it away again?

Good news – the Coravin wine system does just that! It ejects wine from the bottle by pumping in argon gas so the wine doesn’t oxidise. The Coravin wine system inserts a needle into the cork (or screw cap) and as the argon enters the bottle, you can pour as much or as little of the wine as you like. Then you remove the needle and the cork or cap re-seals, protecting your wine till you want to open it again. Ingenious.

What’s more, the wine tastes just the same the next time you have a glass as it did the first time. Incredible but true.

A wine lover’s dream come true. And a perfect Christmas gift- check out the Coravin wine system here

Looking for a stocking filler for a wine lover? Try this

Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine Book 2024: Latest Edition

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Now in its 47th year of publication, Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine Book is the world’s best-selling annual wine guide. The key reference book for any wine lover – with helpful facts and commentary on everything from grape varieties, to vintages, to wine growers and regions, as well as advice on which foods go with which wines. This is the wine book!  A perfect Christmas gift.

Waterstones £14.99

For another Christmas gift idea for a wine lover, see here.

Oz Clarke: English Wine – from still to sparkling

An ideal gift for a wine lover who is keen to learn more about the newest New World wine country – England (and Wales). Oz Clarke’s ‘English Wine – from still to sparkling’ tells the story of the transformation of the wine scene on this fair island over the last few decades.

Starting with a history of English wine from how it used to be, Clarke takes the reader through the Nyetimber Effect and the changes it heralded to where we are now. There’s a great section on location and a comprehensive overview of vineyards and wineries across England and Wales, with lots of useful information, including contact details, wine recommendations etc.

All you ever wanted to know about English (and Welsh) wine – all in one place. A great book. And the perfect gift for your favourite wine lover!

Waterstones £20

For other great gift ideas featuring English & Welsh wines, whether bottles, cases or wine tastings, visit Grape Britannia

Kikkerland Wine Bottle Thermometer

This neat wine thermometer is a quick and easy way of checking the temperature of your wine bottle and is a very useful little gadget for any wine drinker. An ideal stocking filler for a wine-lover!

It’s a simple cuff that fits around the bottle and quickly displays the temperature. It also gives the recommended serving temperatures for the most popular wines.  

Available from Lakeland, John Lewis, Amazon etc. Priced around £9.00 -£11.00

For other wine-related Christmas gift ideas, see here

A neat little book – the A-Z of supermarket wines

Ned Halley – The Best Wines in the Supermarkets 2021

This is a neat little book. Consider it the A-Z (well A-W anyway, Aldi to Waitrose) of supermarket wines. Now in its seventeenth consecutive edition, The Best Wines in the Supermarkets 2021 guide is a veritable mine of useful information: details of grape varieties, tips on drinking or keeping, serving and pairing and a useful wine vocabulary. And of course the all-important best buys across the supermarket range – red, white, pink, sparkling, even the odd fortified, and including the 27 wines rated a perfect 10 (five of which are under £6 a bottle).

Lots of suggestions to help you discover new wines and find something to suit your taste and budget, whether it’s a Gaillac Blanc from Sainsbury’s, a Michel Chapoutier Côtes du Rhône Villages from Tesco, a Cava Brut from Waitrose or anything else in between.

Waterstones £8.99