Why the commercial wine industry has so much to thank Masters of Wine for
By Richard Siddle
Those of us with long enough memories will always associate June with weeks of anxious revision leading up to end of year school or college exams. It was all made even worse if they happened to fall smack bang in the middle of a World Cup where games going into extra time and penalties would have you been nervously counting down the hours before your next exam was due to start.
Pity then all those wine professionals all over the world who last week put themselves through days of nerve jangling stress to sit the latest round of Master of Wine exams. Now the fact you are probably in quite a good position in your career to even attempt to become a MW probably was not much of a consolation to all those who took part last week.
At least when we did our school exams we weren’t personally paying to do so (well our parents might have paid to send you to school but that’s another story). That’s what makes any sort of professional or work related exam even more stressful. You are not only putting your own business skills to the test, you’re paying large amounts of your own money to do so. Not to mention the years, in some cases, of study, painstaking research, revision, months of in-depth tastings, visits, and meetings you have had to put in just to have earned the right to take the exam.
Now normally want goes on in a MW study and exam room remains behind closed doors. It all adds to the allure and mystery about the whole MW process. Not this year. The Institute of Masters of Wine decided this week to put the full exam paper online, complete with the answers of the wines that featured in the blind tasting.
It resulted in a social media frenzy as the global wine trade gobbled it up, sharing and commenting on just how hard, or not, this year’s exam was.
It certainly made for fascinating reading as we no doubt all took a look to see how many of the questions we could attempt to answer without having done any of the hard work or revision along the way.
Refreshing to see
What was particularly refreshing to see was amongst all the more geeky, scientific and hard core viticultural questions (like questions on trunk disease and use of Lysozyme or Mannoproteins in winemaking) there were far more belt and braces, wine industry focused questions and issues addressed than you might imagine would be in a MW exam.
So are you ready? Mobile phones off. No conferring. How about having a go at some of these?
- Describe the options available for bulk transport of wine. What are the risks and benefits for each option?
- How does a laboratory analysis of a wine help the quality control manager make decisions at bottling?
- What have been the most important changes in global wine supply and demand in the past three years and what are their implications?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of private-label wines for wineries, distributors and retailers?
- Where are direct to consumer wine sales increasing and why?
The fact such issues are at the heart of a MW exam is particularly relevant - and no doubt re-assuring - for all of those involved in the day to day, sourcing, negotiating, buying, shipping and distribution of bulk and bottled wine around the world.
Particularly those involved in the bread and butter of bulk wine which for years has been seen as the equivalent of the “market trader” end of the industry, a sector the rarefied world of fine wine where one might assume MWs normally reside is not normally in any way interested in.
But then perceptions and reality are often miles apart as we can see in the nitty, gritty and detail of the MW exam.
It’s only right that anyone wanting to become a MW is as much focused on what is happening at the big volume, commercial end of the market as they are with premium, supposedly higher quality wines deemed worthy of assessing as part of a blind comparative tasting.
Move with the times
The Institute of Masters of Wine has always stressed it has looked to move with the times and that what is needed now to become a MW is very different to say 10 or 15 years ago, never mind in the 1970’s and 1980’s. Which is only right considering how much the global wine industry has changed in that time.
Just look at the rise in bulk and bottled in market wine. It’s gone from being on the sidelines of international trade, to being at the centre of what so many wine producers, agencies, brokers, importers, distributors and retailers now do. It is responsible for well over half of what some companies export and import. For all Australia’s talk of promoting higher priced wines, over 80% of what it exports is now in bulk wine.
It therefore goes hand in hand that the skills and knowledge needed to be successful in bulk wine have had to change too.
It’s also a sector that has a lot to thank MWs for. As the number of MWs has increased, albeit painstakingly slowly, over the years, its stands to reason that more commercially focused trade professionals have been able to acquire the MW letters after their name.
The mental picture some might have of an average MW decked out in their pearls or red and yellow trousers hovering around a spittoon at the latest fine wine tasting is as out of date as a 12 month old copy of Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine Book.
Instead you are much likely to find a MW in a wine laboratory meticulously going through countless numbers of wine samples to find the right blend for which ever commercial customer they are working for.
Hands-on expertise
Laura Jewell MW, head of Wine of Australia in the UK and Europe, once told me that amongst her proudest achievements working in wine was her ability to be able to source and blend millions of litres of entry level wine that would sell out during her time at Tesco. That for her was a bigger accomplishment, and use of her skills and training, than simply being able to pick out the best quality wine in a line-up.
She is not the only MW that has cut her teeth in the cut throat world of supermarket retailing. Justin Howard Sneyd, Jo Ahearne, Clem Yates and Barry Dick are just a few of the leading wine names that have been responsible for buying and building up wine ranges for major supermarkets in the UK.
Dick and Yates now work for Copestick Murray and Off Piste Wines respecively, two of the leading wine suppliers working with producers all over the world either to develop exclusive brands and wines for their own companies or private label for major retail and on-trade operators.
Dick, for example, now spends a great deal of his time working in Eastern Europe working with local producers to help them develop their own skills and resources to be able to service and supply ever demanding retail customers.
His thesis that helped him get the MW was very much on point as it was entitled: “Analyse the performance of ISO tanks versus single-use Flexitank as a method of transporting a bulk white wine from Australia to the UK.”
Then there are key wine figures such as Phil Reedman MW who was part of the Tesco wine team in the late 1980s that was the first to introduce screw cap wines, primarily from Australia and New Zealand, and with it revolutionise so much of the wine trade we know today.
Justin Knock MW, who as well as helping to run the Wine Institute of California in the UK, and his own wine merchant business, Philglass & Swiggott, is still very instrumental in helping to drive awareness and understanding of bulk wine with his work with Encirc, specialists in bottling, filling and packaging.
The world over there are MWs playing key and important roles at the very heart of the commercial wine industry.
This week MWs have descended on Rioja, Spain to attend their symposium which comes around as often as a World Cup and discuss in detail many of the world’s leading trade issues as well as, no doubt, get way down into the dirt and geeky side of the sector. On this year’s agenda are sessions on new terroirs and regions, the impact of climate change, counterfeit wines, the changing consumer, as well as in-depth look at wine trends and styles in key countries including Spain, Argentina, Greece, Australia.
So as well as all the geeky talk of high acidity, membrane filtration and non-malolactic fermentation we can all be assured there will still be room for debates on bulk over bottled, private label over branded over their tapas too.