Monthly Archives: September 2017

NWC 2017 The Five Gold Medal Winners

Q&A | Gold medalist Justin Corrans of Ningxia Winemakers Challenge

By Jim BoyceJustin Corrans of South African led the gold medal charge during last week’s finale of the Ningxia Winemakers Challenge, a two-year project that saw 48 candidates from 17 countries travel to Ningxia, pair with local wineries for harvest in 2015, and practice their craft.

A ten-member panel judged the 48 NWC wines last week and awarded five gold and ten silver medals. Of the golds, their pick of the day was made by Corrans, who is CEO at Mountain Ridge and paired with winery Lanxuan in Ningxia for the contest.

This week, Corrans was back in Beijing on business and I asked him about the NWC.

What was the biggest challenge of the Challenge?

Practicing my sign language. I had a good translator, but when she left the winery, all communication stopped for a while. We also had issues at the beginning, some butting of heads with one of the consultants, but in the end I got the wine I wanted. You have to look at what’s possible, you have to look at the context.

Everyone got three hectares of grapes in the same vineyard. What was your strategy?

We did a tasting of Ningxia wines [after arriving in Yinchuan] and I found they were good but often had a herbaceous undertone. I wanted to avoid that while juggling other factors, including rain and my own logistics.

Ideally, we would have picked later but harvest generally works against you. We picked half before a rainstorm and the balance a week later. Once the fruit dried out, the analysis for the two groups was remarkably similar.

I also did a bit of a picker’s course before harvest, with instructions like avoid the Cabernet Gernischt, and tried to supervise the pickers. We did a good session on the sorting tables.

And once you got your wine underway?

Because the fruit had relatively high acidity, I was a bit nervous. That delicate fruit could have been overwhelmed with oak, plus we had to consider budget, so we went with four new French barrels. We used some 500-liter barrels and tank material as well.

You’ve made very consumer-friendly wines. Did your NWC wine fit that mold?

It doesn’t have an obvious fresh and fruity character, it isn’t soft and juicy. The tannin structure is what helped set it apart from some of the other wines. There was more extraction. Being concerned about the given flavors, I fermented it quite hot, and I think it worked.

What would be your advice to Ningxia as a wine region?

To have more focus on viticulture, to try to figure out how to manage it. On a smaller point, Ningxia could use a good world-class laboratory so that analysis is more accurate.

Ningxia is largely tied to Cabernet. Any other grapes you think might work?

I tasted some surprisingly good Pinot Noirs, including the 2013 from Lanxuan. Earlier ripening varieties should get more consideration. With late-ripening ones, there is the challenge of pruning and burying the vines before winter arrives.

What was your favorite Ningxia food?

The lamb is always a standout. We are proud of our lamb in South Africa but Ningxia is also very good.

What would you pair with it?

I’d probably pick one of the new-style Cinsaults coming out of South Africa.


Corrans also told me he found similarities in the South Africa and China markets.

“There is so much potential with emerging wine consumers,” he said. “That growing middle class in both countries is where you want to be.”

He said part of Mountain Ridge’s strategy is to focus on shebeens, a kind of bar with grilled meat. That is revealing a market much bigger than typically thought.

“There is a bit of a ‘fear of the unknown market’,” he said. “Some people think you sell wine by sitting down and having a three-course meal. But you need to adapt to the culture, and the traditional African way of doing things presents the flavors all at once.”

This sounds like it might bear some fruit for food and wine in China, where simultaneously enjoying numerous dishes is the norm.

We can also expect to see Corrans in China, especially given that, as CEO of Mountain Ridge, he is eying this market.

“I’d very much like to expand the market for our South African wines,” he said. “I started as CEO three months ago and have been traveling and learning so much since then.”


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Chateau LeBron | NBA star James and Ningxia wine in Beijing

By Jim Boyce | LeBron James is seen by many as not only the planet’s top basketball player but also, within the NBA, as having swish taste in wine. The Cleveland Cavaliers star’s Instagram feed features the likes of Opus One from Napa Valley, Pontet-Canet from Bordeaux and Sassicaia from Tuscany. (See here for comments on his picks by top sommeliers.)

James’ mansion in Miami also includes a sweet wine cellar. And he’s been to known to make wine-centric bets, like this one with fellow player Draymond Green that cost him USD2,500 worth of Silver Oak.

“LeBron has been showing off his taste for wine ever since he was kicking it down in South Beach with former Miami Heat teammate, Dwayne Wade—who has also shown patterns of being a wine enthusiast,” states this Cavs site. In fact, Wade launched his own brand in China two years ago. A couple of photos from a 2016 tasting he led in Beijing:

Given all this, it’s no surprise James might want to try some Chinese wine during his own Beijing visit this week. Alex Chen, from U.S. wine importer and distributor Alexander Wines, teamed with perfectly named sommelier Kobe Hou to create a lineup of U.S., Australian and Chinese wines for James and his team. I chipped in from the bench by securing two Cabernet-driven wines from Kanaan and Silver Heights in Ningxia. Here’s the menu they sent me:

This wouldn’t be the first time an NBA star tried Silver Heights. In 2014, veteran winemaker Tom Hinde visited Ningxia for a three-day tour. Hinde has stints at Flowers in Sonoma and Kendall-Jackson in Napa to his credit and now handles the wine brand of former NBA star Yao Ming. On his last night, he traded a bottle of Yao Family Wine for Silver Heights’ The Summit and later told me Yao enjoyed it. Here is Hinde making the exchange with Silver Heights’ Emma Gao in Yinchuan:

As for the tasting in Beijing, I’m told team James finished all of the wines. I’ll update when I get more info but, given multiple bottles of each, there might be some downtime!

Note: I picked Silver Heights and Kanaan because they make quality wines, they have national distribution and are relatively easy to find, and they have good stories. Thanks to Alberto Fernandez of Torres China and Wang ‘Crazy’ Fang of Kanaan for providing the wine.


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Home delivery | Ponty to launch WeChat wine shop at Pizza Cup

By Jim Boyce | Bordeaux winery Ponty, one of Grape Wall’s favorite case studies on how to sell wine in China, will launch its WeChat shop during the annual Beijinger Pizza Cup in September, says Helene Ponty.

“I’m pretty excited about it,” said Ponty, while on a trip to Wuhu, one of 40 cities she has visited in China since moving here five years ago to represent her family’s Canon Fronsac property. “It will allow people to buy from the winery at a very good price.”

The portfolio will include Ponty’s Bordeaux Superieur at rmb138, delivery included.

Ponty says the shop will be in “soft launch” mode until November and feature three wines—Clos Virolle, Blanc de Grand Renouil and Chateau du Pavillon—all of which she will pour at the Pizza Cup, slated for September 16 and 17 at Wangjing Soho in Beijing. Ponty says anyone who visits her booth will receive a rmb350 coupon to use on orders of rmb1,000 or more from the WeChat shop.

She will later add new wines, either made by the Ponty operation or in collaboration with other vineyards, such as for sparkling or sweet wine.

“It will all be based on customer demand,” says Ponty. “We will regularly conduct polls to see what people want, then import small batches to see the demand.”

“We can have lots of flexibility and reactivity by controlling everything from production to final sale,” she added, before strolling off into the Wuhu evening.

See here and here for previous Grape Wall interviews with Ponty about selling wine in China.

Ponty (right) during a tasting at Pop-Up Beijing


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Medalist and Master of Wine | NWC winemaker Nova Cadamatre’s two wins in one week

By Jim Boyce | The past week has been memorable for Nova Cadamatre, winemaking director at Constellation’s Canandaigua Winery in the Finger Lakes region of New York State. Just days after visiting China and winning a medal for her entry in the two-year Ningxia Winemakers Challenge (NWC) she has become a Master of Wine.

Cadamatre partnered with winery Lansai for the 48-candidate NWC and talked about her initial experiences in this 2016 interview. Last week, after returning home from Ningxia wine events in Yinchuan and Beijing, she wrote about the wine she made:

Going into the judging, I was happy with my wine. It reflected the challenging aspect of the competition but also was a testament to perseverance that was needed to adapt to the “challenge” aspects. These included a total language barrier, limited time (in my case) to attend to the wine, non-standard vineyard practices, as well as social and cultural isolation particularly during the first few weeks during harvest.

She also wrote about the joy of winning.

“They announced the silver medal winners first and I was surprised to hear Lansai called first!” she writes. “I was so excited to have won a medal for this even after all the hard work and dedication of both myself and the winery team.”

But two years of visits to China seems like vacation time compared to Cadamatre’s ten-year journey to become a Master of Wine. She has written many frank posts about the struggle to finish, from sitting her first MW exam in 2009 to her sixth attempt, in 2016, during which she passed both theory and tasting parts. She has written about what she changed to find success, about working on her final piece of the MW, the wine research paper, and about waiting to see if it was accepted.

You can see all of the posts about her MW journey here.

Cadamatre (second left) with fellow silver medalists of the Ningxia Winemakers Challenge.


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