Good Food

BUDGET BOTTLES

Victoria Moore’s picks

- @how_to_drink @planetvict­oria

Forgoing a takeaway coffee would be enough to upgrade the bottle of wine he planned to share with his wife

How much is too much to spend on a bottle of wine? For one in three people, the answer is even a penny more than £5, according to the consumer research group Kantar. Responses to this news mostly fall into two camps. There’s the HORROR from the wine lover end and there’s the VINDICATED from all those who feel they might be treated like a pariah if they dare to admit that this is all they pay.

And me? I wasn’t all that surprised. Among those £5 drinkers will be those who can’t afford to spend more, those who could afford to spend more but who aren’t calibrated to be sensitive to taste (these same people might wince if they came round to my flat and heard me playing music out of a tiny, cheap speaker), and a third set who think they can’t afford to spend more but actually choose not to. I’m talking about people like the photograph­er I once worked with on a wine shoot. We did a lot of tasting on that day. The photograph­er sighed and said he’d love to buy the £10 bottle of plush Argentinia­n malbec I had just showed him but – budgets, you know? Money was tight at home. I nodded. Across the afternoon he ordered and paid for two cappuccino­s at £2.60 a piece – which I had particular­ly noticed because takeaway coffee is something I think I can’t afford.

Forgoing a takeaway coffee would be enough to upgrade the bottle of wine he planned to share with his wife at the weekend. It wasn’t the choice that surprised me (after all, why not choose a coffee or two over better wine?), but the fact that he didn’t seem to realise he’d made that choice.

If you want to know how much better wine can be at £7.50 or £10 than at £5, you only need look at the numbers. Duty on still wine in the UK is charged at a flat rate of £2.23 a bottle. VAT is 83p. Count £1.08 for the total margin (an importer and a retailer will need a cut), 36p for packaging and 20p for logistics and you have about 30p left for the wine itself (figures courtesy of Bibendum Wine). At £7.50 a bottle, the calculatio­n leaves you £1.42 for the wine and at £10 a bottle you get £2.70-worth of wine. So it’s clear to see that upping your spend isn’t a fool’s game. That said, you might be seriously budgeting this month so I’ve found two of the best wines I can for a fiver (or thereabout­s). The red is a soft blend of tempranill­o, bobal, cabernet sauvignon and garnacha called Toro Loco Reserva 2015 Spain (Aldi, £5.49). The white is the beautifull­y aromatic Gers 2018 France (M&S, £5) which is floral with a white grapefruit and green apple tang.

Also, my top tip for another way to budget: buy and drink a half bottle of wine and save the bottle. When you open a new bottle, immediatel­y pour half the liquid into the half-bottle, cork it and save it for another time. It can keep up to a week like this. Drink less, drink better.

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