Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Friday Oct 21, 2011
An exceptional collection of first growth wines encased in an elegant, hand-crafted box
Linley the popular British design house and The Antique Wine Company have teamed up together to help create a grand collector’s item, a selection of five different growths that come packaged together in a lovely wine box made out of Indian rosewood with satinwood and ebony inlay.
The standout trademark of the new wine box are two intertwined threads of the DNA worked into the inlay that helps capture the spirit of the Linley Helix furniture range which is part of teh Linley Bentley Continental Flying Spur.
The motif itself is also customized created with four different veneer types that contrast nicely against the rosewood of the box. In order to get this very specific look marquetry inlay techniques have been executed which involves cutting veneers down to a design and then piecing them back together to create a pattern before they are actually put onto the rosewood base.
Marquetry itself was first created by the Egyptians and used to adorn Tutankhamen’s tombs almost 3000 years ago. Since then teh technique has been further mastered and refined so that now laser technology can replicate the process instead of demanding careful hand by hand construction.
David Linley comments: “”The intricate marquetry detailing on the box we have created with the Antique Wine Company epitomises fine craftsmanship at its best, and therefore is a be-fitting home for wines that are themselves feats of artisan skill and perfectionism. This latest venture marks an exciting new chapter in the LINLEY / AWC partnership.”
An adjunct to the distinctive Helix collection, the wine box will house five of the finest bottles of Bordeauxselected by renowned wine merchants The Antique Wine Company, who specialise in supplying remarkable wines to many of the worlds most sophisticated wine buyers.
The selection includes: Chateau Lafite Rothschild 2003 – one of the most prestigious wines of the vintage and according to Robert Parker, a modern clone of the 1959. It represents a ripe version of the essence of Lafite-Rothschild.
Chateau Latour 1982 is “Flamboyant, concentrated and opulent” – some of the words used by wine critics to describe it. Antique Wine’s Managing Director Stephen Williams, commented: “Whilst the 82 Latour is magnificent to enjoy today, its massive structure will last for another 50 or more years”.
Chateau Mouton Rothschild 1986 – one of the most profound wines of the vintage, rated 100 points, is almost port like in style and considered one of the greatest achievements of this chateau’s first growths.
Chateau Margaux 2000 – Legendary Margaux winemaker, Paul Pontallier, commented that this wine was the most tannic and concentrated – made for the last 40 years. However the freshness and ripe tannins create a great balance between modern day wine-making and traditionally-styledBordeaux.
Chateau Haut Brion 1989 - Robert Parker describes this wine as “One of the immortal wines and one of the greatest youngBordeaux wines of the last half-century.” Haut Brion is one of the most consistent Chateau in all ofBordeaux and in 1989 their wine outshone all others.
Fifty of the beautifulSantosrosewood boxes will be produced, each featuring a commemorative numbered plaque and co-branded Linley / Antique Wine Company. The exquisite design would be impossible to replicate, due to the superb craftsmanship applied at the Linley workshop.
The wine collection is displayed through a toughened glass top with a polished nickel stringing around the frame. A luxurious suede lines the interior of the box, which also features a removable stand with cut-out intersections that hold each bottle securely in place. Each box can be used as both a beautiful decorative item in its own right, which could be multi-functional, or refilled with replacement vintages on an on-going basis.
The collectors pieces are priced at £12,800 each and can be reserved by contacting The Antique Wine Company on www.antique-wine.com
Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Friday Oct 7, 2011
If you are someone who enjoys a good glass of wine but is put off by the snobbery that exists around the drink then you may well be interested in one of the ‘discovery days’ that the company Eszencia are offering. These are occasions where people are able to explore their taste in wine. The first discovery day being run by the company is taking place at the Princess of Shoreditch pub on the 8th October. The pub has a reputation for excellence having won the ‘best new gastro pub’ award in 2010 as awarded by Time Out magazine.
Wine is a great drink and something that the great majority of people do enjoy. It can be something which you can drink with friends or just enjoy while reading a book. One of the problems that people find is that they are overwhelmed by the choice and complexity of the drink. When asked to choose a wine in the shops people may struggle to know what the difference between the different bottles are and this is where Eszencia can help you.
Eszencia don’t view wine as something complicated, they simply see it as something that can be enjoyed. The company argue that you should buy which wine tastes good to you and this can be discovered with just a little wine knowledge – and the perfect time to acquire this is at one of the company’s discovery days.
In a bid to remove the shroud Eszencia has worked with leading figures from the wine industry to develop a new, innovative but, most importantly, simple way to understand wine. This knowledge can be accesses via one of Eszencia’s new wine courses which are called Discovery Days. These Discovery Days are about understanding what tastes and flavours you like and how to use this information to make positive buying (and drinking!) choices in the future. They are not about being talked (or preached) at and focus on the enjoyment wine can bring…and not the confusion.
The Discovery Days, which are held on Saturdays from 11am-3pm, involve the following:
o Taste Experiments - from tuning up your sense of smell to mapping your taste buds. You’ll experience the different dimensions of wine for yourself, and demystify a lot of wine jargon in the process.
o Superb wine – you will taste, drink and compare sixteen wines, each carefully selected to show off the characteristics of a different style. We concentrate on helping you to identify the styles that you prefer. By the end you will be able to do some blind tasting if you want to.
o Award-winning food – is served throughout the day. We start with canapés, have a light lunch in the middle, and cheese in the afternoon.
o Eszencia’s own materials – for you to use on the day and take away with you. Materials include Eszencia’s pocket-sized Wine Passport, filled with recommendations according to your taste profile.
Eszencia’s Discovery Days make great, affordable, presents for friends and family who may think that the world of wine is beyond them! They also make a fun, and interesting, day out for those seeking to do something a bit different on the weekend.
For more information about Eszencia visit www.eszencia.co.uk
Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Friday Sep 30, 2011
Launch of trend-setting gourmet coffee by subscription company
What people choose as their favourite coffee can be wide ranging. We don’t mean the choices that people make between the different instant varieties but whether they prefer beans from Africa or from Indonesia – or from many of the other places around the world that are famous for making coffee.
Many people simply rely on the ranges that they can find in a supermarket when choosing their coffee, but this is usually a very poor representation of the number of coffees that are actually available. Like wine, coffee comes in many varieties and there is a huge amount to choose from out there each with its own distinctive taste and flavour.
Now there is a new way for people to get access to the world of coffee that you just can’t find at the supermarket. The company Kopi is offering to deliver coffee to peoples homes each month. It is offering a really great way for its subscribers to try out a new and very different coffee each month. The service started this month and is really good way for you to broaden your coffee horizons.
Kopi’s coffee:
- Chosen by experts from world-class estates– collectively the Kopi team has over 150 years’ expertise
- Discover one new top-notch coffee every month
- Ultimate in convenience – delivered through your letterbox
- Single-origin coffee – the best beans from just one region; no blends
- Coffee you just can’t get in a supermarket
Kopi’s coffee arrives ground – or for real connoisseurs – as whole beans; you choose. And in a chic, cleverly designed box that slips easily through your letterbox. Inside, the freshly roasted coffee is foil-wrapped for freshness in a nifty re-sealable bag that stands up by itself. Alongside the coffee is a beautiful booklet featuring fun, fuss-free knowledge on its unique characteristics and provenance.
Members also have access to an exclusive area on Kopi.co.uk, which provides brimfuls of fresh knowledge about each month’s specially selected coffee; from fascinating facts about where it grows and how it gets its unique taste to handy hints on how to serve the perfect cup.
This isn’t the domain of the jargon-spouting coffee geek however/ Kopi wants the nation to enjoy a genuinely better cup of coffee, with information presented in simple language and visuals that everyone can understand and be inspired by.
Elevate the breakfast buzz to a taste bud sensation, wow at parties with your sophisticated after dinner drinks and knowledge, or provide the perfect gift to anyone who cares about the quality of their beverage.
Subscriptions start from just £7 a month. Orders are now being accepted at www.kopi.co.uk/join1, with the first October batch of corking coffee limited to a few hundred people.
* Britons alone spent almost £1billion pounds on their caffeine habit last year. Source: Daily Mail article by Matthew Barbour, May 2011.
Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Tuesday Sep 27, 2011
The difficult balance between colour and roundness
The majority of grapes are black with white juice; only the film is coloured. The qualities of “fruity” and, especially, “roundness in the mouth” are obtained through a pre-fermentation maceration, and then in aqueous conditions, and the harvest, which can selectively extract some dandruff compounds (aroma precursors, polysaccharides, etc.).
This maceration also supports a broadcast to the grape anthocyanins responsible for the colour of grapes and therefore wine. The winemaker must therefore strike the right balance between the desired colour for the finished wine and the flavour profile (roundness, perception acid, etc.) from the same wine.
Among the factors that determine this balance, the temperature of the grapes is a powerful lever for control of diffusion of the film to the juice. Thus early harvest when the weather is cool is most often the rule, particularly in southern regions like Provence.
In summary, for the desired wine, the winemaker will have to find the best compromise between:
the level of maturity to which the colour of the potential harvest has reached, the temperature of the harvest, which determines the rate of diffusion of dandruff compounds, and the duration of the pre-fermentation maceration, which determines the intensity of these same phenomena.
Methods for obtaining juices
The pink wine can be made according to two main principles: bleeding and direct pressing.
Bleeding
Historically, some of the juice from the vatting reds was removed in order to increase the concentration thereof, by simply increasing the solid to liquid ratio. In this case, the elements of the film broadcast to a smaller amount of juice, and the red wine obtained is more “full bodied”. This technique is suitable for wineries little specialised in the development of Rosés and has several disadvantages.
The first disadvantage is that the juice is also sweeter, so the pink is often “alcohol” developed, that is to say that it has a “burning” characteristic and the related strong-tasting alcoholic strength by volume obtained after fermentation. On the other hand, a high maturity of the harvest is generally sought for the development of red as the colour and quality of tannins are often higher, which further accentuates the problem for the development of Rosés from bleeding these same vessels.
Another disadvantage is the maceration and the juice that is made can be more colorful, which is not compatible with the style of some current rose wines. Also, the extraction efficiency is limited, and a maximum of around 20% of the collected juice does not have a specialized rose to the level of a full cellar.
The principle of “bleeding” is perpetuated in the pink regions oriented by the use of “tanks techniques” called “drains” (made by Fabbri or Elite, for example) in which the winemaker can mace vie rate the grapes, taking more or less time depending upon the goal. In practice the time is between two and twenty hours. These tanks are used to extract up to 60% juice, especially if the harvest is enzyme. It can also serve as a buffer vessel to absorb the inflow of harvesting, which may be supported in the case of mechanical harvesting, until the presses are available.
Posted by admin | Under British Food, Drinks, Novelty Foods
Wednesday Sep 21, 2011

Vimto Halloween Bottles
A fiendishly good limited edition of the nation’s favourite fruity drink is set to hit the supermarket shelves this Halloween, as Vimto launches a range of specially designed bottles, perfect for themed parties and other Halloween fun.
The spooky limited edition haunted house designs are available across all 2L bottles of Fizzy Vimto, No Added Sugar and Cherry Vimto. These party sized bottles are great for sharing, so Vimto has designed a special range of creepy cocktail recipes that will add some seriously mixed up fun to your fancy dress frolics.
Here are their yummy Halloween themed Vimto cocktails to keep your little ghouls, goblins and guests entertained this Halloween.
The limited edition Halloween bottles are available in all major supermarkets from early October, so start practising your creepy Vimto Halloween cocktails.
Vimto’s Creepy Cocktail Recipes
Vimto Eyeball Surprise
A supernaturally simple concoction that every stylish spectre will be drinking this Halloween. Use an ice cream scoop to make two ‘eyeballs’ of ice cream and press jelly sweets into each one to create the pupils. Place them in the bottom of a tall chilled goblet and recite a witches incantation. Fill the glass two thirds full of devilishly delicious fizzy Vimto and watch the fiendish foam froth over the top of the glass.
No Added Sugar Vimto Spooky Strawberry Heart
This is a great drink to serve to a scare to your guests. Swirl some No Added Sugar Vimto in with some cranberry juice and pour into individual glasses. Keep up the fear factor with a ‘Bleeding Heart’ made out of a bbq stick speared strawberry. Simply dunk the ‘heart’ into the glass and serve chilled.
Cherry Vimto/ NAS Cherry Vimto Blood Curdling Brew
The perfect cauldron concoction for witches and wizards everywhere! Put the flesh of one chopped melon along with 10 crushed red seedless grapes into your cauldron (or glass if cauldron not available) and blend until they form a ghoulishly bloody pulp! Strain into a glass and top up with fiendishly fruity fizzy Cherry Vimto to create your brew.
Witches tip – Half-fill an ice cube tray with water, add a halved grape to each section and press a raisin into the centre and then freeze to create eyeball ice cubes!
For more fun Halloween recipes, party tips and more visit the Vimto Facebook page at www.facebook.com/vimto or on Twitter @RealVimto.
Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Sunday Aug 21, 2011
Tea comes in many varieties and the most widespread of these is green tea. Green tea is the least processed tea and tastes fresher. Despite this, black tea has become the most popular type in the West after its introduction at the start of the 19th Century.
Tea has many health benefits and this is true of both the black and green varieties. Black tea is the more processed variety and has the same benefits as green tea just in lesser amounts. These benefits are reduced further when milk is added to the beverage. A recent study has shown that tea will help you maintain better cognitive function as you age.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has stated that black tea is a group three carcinogen – there is no proof of it causing cancer in humans, but it has done so in mice. Something most people do not realise is that black tea leaves are produced by leaving the leaves to rot for a while.
At the supermarket, green tea may seem expensive compared to its black counterpart. Even when you pay this greater amount you are still purchasing an inferior tea product. The leaves are often old and therefore cheaper for the big tea companies to sell. Essentially the big tea manufacturers are selling you an inferior product at a higher price. Furthermore this ‘green’ tea may just be black tea mixed with a bulking agent, giving a yellow appearance when brewed, which is not exactly what the buyer would expect from a green tea product.
If you go to a Japanese shop you will get a real idea of what green tea is supposed to be like. The first thing you are going to notice is the price, it starts at £4 for 100g and the cost will rise with better quality products. In Japan the most commonly consumed green tea is Sencha, this is a highly recommended product. There are many excellent online retailers where you will be able to find this sort of tea.
There are ways to tell if you have purchased a good, high quality, green tea. This will require a little skill in the brewing however, as green tea can easily spoil in the brewing process, something that cannot happen with a black tea. If you have brewed the tea correctly then it will be a dark green colour if of a high quality, it should also taste very fresh and have a sweeter aroma than black tea. If it is brown or yellow then you have purchased a low quality green tea.
Posted by Alan | Under Drinks
Thursday Jul 28, 2011
A major part of Ben Shaw’s birthday celebrations is a tour of the country, visiting fairs and shows to encourage the visitors to share their memories of this famous brand of pop. Ben Shaw’s celebrates its 140th birthday this year and the company who brought Dandelion and Burdock to the masses is making a big deal of this milestone.
Ben Shaw created his soft drinks company in 1871, the same year that the Royal Albert Hall was opened on the shore of Lake Tanganyika the immortal words were uttered by Stanley; “Dr Livingstone I presume?” By the time that Dr Pepper and Coca-Cola made their respective debuts in 1885 and 1886, Ben Shaw’s was a teenager and by the time Pepsi arrived on the scene in 1898 he had four established favourites with the British public.
These iconic flavours, which are still favourites today, were Dandelion and Burdock, Cream Soda, Cloudy Lemonade and Bitter Shandy. Ben Shaw himself drove around delivering his drinks on the back of a cart pulled in turn by the 4 shire horses belonging to the Shaw family; Cherry, Blossom, Dick and Bonny.
Years later, when the famous pop vans made their first appearance and the drinks were now sold in glass bottles, canny kids clicked onto an easy way to earn some pocket money. For the princely sum of a shilling an hour, Shaw’s grandchildren and their friends watched the bottles as they came off the production line, making sure they were perfect and had no dirty marks on them.
A spokesman for Cott Beverages, Sundeep Gill, said that it was a remarkable achievement to still be in business after 140 years, and it was also amazing to think that the same 4 original flavours were still the nation’s favourites. He added that the brand had truly stood the test of time and was still popular and relevant today.
Lots of other landmarks events took place in 1871, including the formation of the British Rugby Union, the birth of the F.A. Cup and the first ever Bank Holiday, Whit Monday; the year when a young Ben Shaw left his job in the textile industry in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire and set up his own business bottling and selling natural mineral water from the nearby Pennine Hills. The move proved successful and he soon expanded his business introducing traditional soft drinks made with only the finest ingredients, in his purpose built factory.
Today Ben Shaws’ drinks are more popular than ever; in fact, many celebrities have mentioned their particular fondness for the taste of the good old fashioned flavours, including Sheridan Smith, star of the West End hit “Legally Blonde” who recently tweeted: “Could murder a dandelion & burdock now! As a kid, I even wrote a story called Dandy the lion and bird Doc.”
Part of the brand’s birthday celebrations includes a tour around the country, visiting shows and fairs and encouraging visitors to share their Ben Shaws’ memories.
For more information, visit either the Ben Shaws website or its Facebook page