The New Zealand Herald

Coming up rose´ in wine judging

Jim Harre´ spills on good and bad of drinking for a job

- Melissa Nightingal­e

For a video go to nzherald.co.nz

When wine judge Jim Harre´ goes to a dinner party and tastes a really good wine, he has to fight the urge it to spit it out.

It’s a difficult instinct to shake off when you spit out 6000 to 7000 wines a year.

“When I spit wine out, I’m working,” Harre´ said as he took a short break from judging wines at the New World Wine Awards in Wellington.

The chair of judges, Harre´ spent three days tasting wines at a rate of 120 a day. He starts with a table of wines and spends about 30 seconds on each, before coming back to spend more time on the ones he liked best.

“If you go too slow you start to second guess. Too fast, you miss things,” he said. “You’re relying on first impression­s and then following that up.”

As a judge, Harre´ is careful to make sure he’s giving every wine the chance it deserves to impress him.

He avoids strong foods such as garlic, chilli and curries, some of which can “deaden the taste buds”. He regularly rinses out his mouth with soda water to refresh his palate while going through a “flight” of wines.

“You actually spit out the best part of a litre and a half of water and saliva.”

Wine judges talk about “hitting the wall” on the job, which is when all the wines start to taste the same.

Harre´’s trick is to identify a wine early on that he particular­ly likes, and come back to it occasional­ly to make sure it still tastes as good. If it tastes like all the others he’s been sipping, it’s time for a break.

It’s a role judges take seriously, because, as Harre´ says, what might simply be a table of 40 wines for them, is much more for the winemakers.

“It’s actually 40 people’s hearts and souls and their expression of that year that you’re playing with . . . it’s really important that you give complete respect to the wine.”

The New World Wine Awards aims to pick out the best wines selling for $25 and under, and awards gold medal stickers to those that make the cut.

By the time a wine makes it to gold medal stage, it will have been tasted about 35 times. This means if someone wanting to try a new wine picks one with the gold medal, they’ll know it’s been thoroughly tested for quality.

“People don’t actually have to worry about the quality of the wine they drink. You’ve 1409

Wines from 179 wineries are entered in the awards.

67%

Are from NZ winemakers, with 433 of them from Marlboroug­h

326

Australian wines make the bulk of the internatio­nal entries — 461 in total

33%

Rose´ entries are up 33 per cent to 109.

seen the process it goes through, it’s incredibly robust,” Harre´ said. “They’re not going to end up with a dud wine.”

While it might sound like a dream job — and for Harre´, it is — it does have its challenges.

Harre´ cannot brush his teeth over the days he is judging wines, and has to resort to toothpaste on a finger to freshen up.

“The big disadvanta­ge of wine judging is it’s really hard on your teeth.”

Judges chew on a special type of gum which hardens their enamel. The acidity of the wine softens the enamel and it can take about eight hours to reharden on its own, during which time they cannot use a toothbrush without causing damage. But it’s worth it for Harre´ and the 16 other independen­t judges at the Awards this year.

The line-up includes wine experts, winemakers and even wine scientists — all with extensive judging experience.

This year’s panel includes two internatio­nal wine experts — Ying Hsien Tan, Master of Wine, wine educator and owner of Taberna Wine Academy in Singapore, and Dr Rowald Hepp, winemaker and managing director of Germany’s Schloss Vollrads, one of the oldest wine estates in the world.

This year is only the second time in the competitio­n’s 16-year history that pinot noir entries have surpassed sauvignon blanc.

It’s also a big year for the rose´ class, with a third more entries than in 2017.

“Rose´ growth in the last five years has been huge, it’s a bit of a phenomenon that’s broken down a few barriers,” said Foodstuff’s merchandis­e manager for liquor Morgan McCann.

Rose´ sales are up 20 per cent in the last year, the same rate it’s been growing for the last few years.

“It’s something that’s just trending,” he said.

It can be matched with different foods, can be made from a number of different grapes, and more popular wine brands are bringing out their own versions of it.

Meanwhile, sauvignon blanc growth has “flattened”, as has pinot gris.

“The repertoire of wines that New Zealanders are open to is a bit wider than it was, say, five years ago.”

People were travelling more and discoverin­g new tastes as well, he said.

This year’s best wines will be announced in a couple of months.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? New World Wine Awards judge Nadine Cross gives her palate a workout.
Photos / Supplied New World Wine Awards judge Nadine Cross gives her palate a workout.
 ??  ?? Jim Harre´ at the awards at Westpac Stadium with one that won’t reach his tonsils.
Jim Harre´ at the awards at Westpac Stadium with one that won’t reach his tonsils.

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