Thursday 4 April 2013

And now for something completely different.... Thai Wine


Most of us will be familiar with Thai beers whether that's through our love of Thai food or the fact that the two main ones sponsor premiership football clubs (Chang Beer's sponsorship of Everton and maybe Singha as official beer to Manchester United).  However, I am sure that many of you did not even realise that Thailand does produce its own wine (albeit in limited quantities).

Wine better than my camera skills
The issue with growing wines in the tropics is that while it is fairly hot all year around, it is divided between a dry season and a wet season where its extremely humid and suffers from heavy down pours on an almost daily basis.  This means that the wine growers have to pack all the vine growing into the dry season so that they avoid the wet monsoon season.  I'm not an expert but I understand that only certain grape varieties can do this.

If that was not enough to cope with, daytime temperatures of over 30 degrees and high levels of humidity in the wet season wine production and storage has to be carried out in controlled conditions.  If you go to any decent restaurant or wine store in Thailand you will see all the wine stored in large temperature and humidity controlled cabinets.

Despite all of this, a small number of producers have overcome these hurdles and there is now a small but thriving wine industry.

After blogging about the superb Monsoon beer from Leeds Brewery (see wrongsideofthethames.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/beer-of-week.html) I now bring you a review of Monsoon Wine.

A friend of mine surprised me with a bottle of their 2007 Shiraz from their premium range which sits between their blended and fine wines.

www.monsoonvalleywine.com/en/index.php


It had a screw cap top which is no surprise and shouldn't put anyone off these days.  In fact in those conditions it makes sense as it's likely to better protect the wine than a traditional cork.

The Small Print
We were pleasantly surprised with the wine.  It has a decent "old world" colour to it.  It was just as good on its own as well as with food.  The hints of coffee and spice, typical of a Shiraz were still there while not over powering making it easy on the palate.

The wine is distributed by Red Bull in the UK which is not as odd as it appears if we remember that Red Bull is actually originally a Thai product which was propelled into the worldwide limelight by the Austrian Dietrich Mateschitz.

I'm usually rather sceptical about wines from emerging wine producing countries as it takes some time for the quality to show through as the vines mature and the vineyards experiment with different techniques  (witness the remarkable rise of Argentinian and Chilean wines over the last decade) but this vineyard is well on the way.  So if you get a chance to try a bottle with your green curry or Tom Yung Goong don't turn it down.

2 comments:

  1. Interesting. I'm not going to be able to find that here (in Bermuda) but will look out for it when I am next in the UK.

    China has a very aspirational wine market.

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  2. Chicagoaddick - did you manage to try it. I was in Thailand recently and couldn't find it anywhere in any of the local shops! Must be for export only.

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