Daily Mail

Prosecco? It’s only good for descaling your kettle, claims top restaurate­ur

- By David Wilkes

FOR some, it is a must for special occasions – and for many others it adds sparkle to a casual midweek drink with friends.

But much of the cheaper prosecco being drunk by Britons would be better used for cleaning dentures or descaling kettles, according to a leading restaurate­ur.

Russell Norman, founder of the award-winning Polpo Venetian restaurant­s, said: ‘Aside from mixing it in cocktails, I leave it to hen parties. I leave it to wearers of novelty T-shirts.

‘I leave it to the terrifying hordes of daytime drinkers who haven’t been able to score a Prozac prescripti­on. Although I’ve heard that it is good for removing stains from dentures. And dissolving limescale in kettles.’

He gave his scathing assessment of what he considers to be the low-quality, industrial­ly-produced Italian fizz being sold in some supermarke­ts in food and drink magazine Noble Rot.

He singled out ‘Lidl car park prosecco at £ 3.33 a bottle’ and also expressed his horror at the ‘disturbing’ growth in prosecco- themed gifts, such as a doormat with the words ‘Come in if you have prosecco!’ written on it.

Prosecco has enjoyed a phenomenal rise in popularity as the UK’s party drink of choice over the past decade.

But Mr Norman said this success has led to mass production and a dip in quality. In the article, he points to how two classifica­tion labels were created by a consortium of producers to confirm a bottle’s status: DOC, which means designatio­n of controlled origin, and in 2009, as the prosecco boom began, the more stringentl­y regulated DOCG, which means designatio­n of controlled origin and guaranteed.

Mr Norman said: ‘It meant the DOCG winemakers could not cheat, cut corners or overproduc­e. The lessregula­ted wineries, however, were able to produce on an industrial scale at a much lower price, making wines that were no longer a sophistica­ted expression of the glera grape, but a 11.5 per cent ABV lemonade that has been enthusiast­ically embraced and guzzled by the masses, from stampeding crowds stockpilin­g Lidl ‘six bottles for £20’ special offers to hen parties swigging directly from the neck.’

He said ‘good prosecco’ was still available in the UK and recommende­d those labelled Cartizze, an area within the main producers’ region of Valdobbiad­ene, which cost around £30 a bottle.

Andrea Battistell­a, a wine specialist at the Consortium for Prosecco DOC, denied that prosecco was industrial­ly produced or low quality and said every batch was thoroughly tested.

A Lidl spokesman said: ‘We’re grateful to Russell for calling out the unbeatable value of Lidl’s award-winning Allini Prosecco.

‘We would also like to emphasise that at Lidl we are big on embracing everyone who enjoys good food and drink – which always includes the novelty T-shirt wearers.’

‘Guzzled by the masses’

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