Corkage costs leave bitter taste (NZ)

Corkage costs leave bitter taste (NZ)

Hefty corkage charges are being labelled “screwage” by outraged restaurant customers, with some eateries charging up to $30 a bottle to serve wine customers have brought themselves. A Sunday Star-Times survey found widespread variations in the cost customers faced to bring their own wine. Some charged only a few dollars, while there were reports of some fine dining establishments charging up to $60. A reader poll found only 2 per cent of respondents thought a corkage charge over $20 was reasonable, while 76 per cent thought $5 and under reasonable, reports Auckland Now.

Ambitious projects planned for winery (NZ)

The weather at South Wairarapa’s windswept Ocean Beach was looking increasingly stormy, but Bill Foley didn’t mind. “I love tough weather,” the US billionaire said. About 120 guests at his exclusive lodge Wharekauhau didn’t mind too much, either. They were invited to lunch on Saturday as former shareholders and guests of Te Kairanga, the Martinborough winery he bought last year. Foley thanked them, then revealed how his New Zealand company was launching the Wharekauhau Wine and Food Society, reports The Dominion Post.

Wine rich-lister has eye on environment (NZ)

“Sustainability means being able to do the same thing forever. Whatever you take out, you put back in – plus a little bit for love.” So says Peter Yealands, owner of Yealands Estate. It is a philosophy likely formed during the thousands of hours he spent sculpting the 1000ha Marlborough vineyard and its 25 wetlands with his beloved diggers and bulldozers. With the launch of A Bloke For All Seasons – the Peter Yealands Story last month, Yealands’ remarkable business mind is revealed to all who have seen him as something of an enigma, reports The New Zealand Herald.

Best of all worlds

Some years ago, an agricultural scientist told me that Hobart and its surrounds was one of only three regions on the globe that could successfully grow and ripen such a wide and variable range of fruits and crops as grapes, pomme and stone fruits, hops, rye, barley, berries and more. Add in an abundant supply of clean water and, in terms of this column, we’re in the very happy situation of having the local raw ingredients to produce a range of alcoholic beverages unmatched anywhere else in the country, perhaps in the world, reports The Mercury.

Champagne sales bubbling in Australia

New figures from France’s Champagne Bureau show Australia imported 4.862 million bottles in 2011, an increase of almost a third, helped by the soaring Australian dollar. That made us the 8th largest import market in the world for a beverage usually imbibed at celebrations. And it’s not just Australians who are opening their wallets for the French drop, with sales of Champagne worldwide rising as much as 7 per cent in value. Volume topped 323 million bottles last year, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

A home among the grapevines

One day, pub owner Rosie Cupitt got to thinking about the glasses of wine she was serving every day at her Bowral bar. But it wasn’t just an idle thought. Before long, she was studying winemaking and working in local vineyards. Then she travelled to France and learnt some more in the Loire Valley near Sancerre. That still wasn’t enough for this born-again wine lover. She sold her pub and bought some land between Milton and Ulladulla on the NSW South Coast and started pegging out vines, reports Adelaide Now.

Grape harvest rolls on, even if it rains

Rain, hail or shine. That was the mantra this week at Adelaide Hills winery Hahndorf Hill as a week of cooler and wet weather threatened to delay the 2012 grape-picking season, writes News Limited national wine writer Tony Love. In the Hills, with its prized Sauvignon Blanc grapes ripe and ready along with other white varieties, the vintage was well under way despite the unseasonal temperatures and rain, according to Adelaide Hills Wine Region president Darren Golding.

Chromy’s grape expectations

Entrepreneur Josef Chromy wanted a world-class facility when he proposed a new $5 million function centre at Relbia near Launceston. Mr Chromy said that the aim was to increase annual visitors to the cellar door and restaurant past the present 40,000, reports The Mercury. “We were looking for a little taste of Europe in Tasmania,” Czech-born Mr Chromy said. The Josef Chromy Restaurant and Function Centre, which seats 120 people, looks over 61ha of predominantly Chardonnay and Pinot Noir grapes. Premier Lara Giddings opened the facility last week.

McDonalds has wine on the menu in South America (Argentina)

Never thought we’d ever, ever say this, but McDonalds serves wine…good wine. Don’t rush out to the drive-thru just yet, however; the bottle is only available as part of a value meal in the Argentine wine capital of Mendoza. Billed as the “Sabores Mendocinos” menu, the meal includes a double-patty burger of Angus beef, two meat empanadas, and a 187mL (glass!) bottle of local Malbec produced by Bodega Santa Julia, reports Wine Times.

Rains threatens Riverland recovery

Grapegrowers in the Riverland are warning that the rains and an international grape glut could choke off any recovery in the wine industry. That’s despite conditions for grape growing improving this year after last year’s torrid season, reports The World Today.

Scroll to top