Private brands are basically the same thing as own brands, only with made-up names so that people who think they’ll look mean for serving a bottle that shows the name of the supermarket where they buy their wine, don’t have to worry. They’re all those Castellos de This and Châteaux de That when, really, there’s no such place.

What happens is that the retailer does their research and then tells the supplier – often a co-operative or a mid-size producer – that they have room for, say, five-thousand cases of an up-front, medium-quality reserva Rioja if they can get it on the shelf for xyz pounds a bottle in X weeks time. The winemaker does their sums, taps into their bit of the world’s ocean of surplus wine, and … Bingo! “Baron de Alava” – or, for all I care, our old chum “Windy Bottom” – is born.

Most of the majors now send their own experts – not just their buyers – out into the world to work with producers to make and market private brands. A few even become mini-brands in their own right and get sold to other supermarkets. It’s all about “positioning” and they’re pitched above the “own labels” at around the same level as the big international brands and attract customers who want to feel they’re getting a wine made by “real” people in a “real” place rather than by a bunch of machines owned by a corporation. As it happens, they often are … it’s just not the people or the place they think it is.

If you’re sad that the grapes in your wine are not being lovingly harvested and vinified in his shed by a friendly, slack-jawed yokel in a beret, skip the rest of this paragraph. The big producers need to be very nimble to sell all their “juice”. An Aussie firm that is a humungous provider of supermarket own-labels also sells its own brands in direct competition with the separate labelling of the same wines as supermarket private brands while – get this – supplying millions of cases of wine made under contract for some of its biggest, household-name, competitor brands. They’re all there, side by side, on the shelf.

M&S, who don’t sell branded products, were the first UK retailers to do private brands when they wanted a separate tier above their own labels and decided that “Chevalier de Hows-Your-Father” had more cachet than “M&S Chablis.” Meanwhile, the Wine Society approached the problem of different quality levels equally successfully with its “Exhibition” range and this seems to have been the model for the “tiered” own-brand offerings elsewhere.

Margins are better on private brands than on “real” brands because there are fewer marketing costs involved and the good ‘uns are among the best-value wines on supermarket shelves. They tend to come and go quite quickly – presumably an algorithm somewhere is doing the math – but a few current favourite bargains are listed below. (It also counts as a crash-course in getting the hang of the dodgy names thing.) As ever, reading our knowledgeable and conscientious (and, not infrequently, irresistibly attractive) newspaper wine writers is the best way to keep up with it all.

Marks and Spencer: Perez Burton, Soleado, Valdepomares, Falleras, Secano, Clocktower, Cobborah, Corriente del Bio Réserve de la Saurine. Marquès de Alarcon

Sainsburys: Spanish Steps, Flor de Nelas, Marquès de Montoya, Elegant Frog, Rio de la Vida, L’Esprit de la Cité

Tesco: Gran Tesoro, Viña Mara, Palais des Anciens, Villa Taurini, La Leyenda, La Terre, Fern Bay

Waitrose: Cuvée Chasseur and Cuveé Pêcheur, Whale Caller, Moncaro, La Rectorie, Montgravet, Eva’s Vineyard, Fontaine du Roy

Asda: Gran Vega, Marques del Norte, Pleyades, Mas Miralda, Le Monferrine, Villa Ludy, Château Salmonière

Co-op: Villa Pani, Rocca Vecchia, Les Crouzes

 

An example of a private brand label

 

 

 

Supermarket own brands used to be the “grey goo” of wine. There has been significant improvement in recent years but they are still to be bought randomly only by the wreckless and the feckless (i.e. those who don’t give a feck). The job of finding what I estimate to be the 15-20% of genuinely good wines has been made somewhat easier by the introduction of premium ranges by most chains – upping the hit rate to maybe 25-33%.

Finding the, what?, maybe 3-5% of real stonkers – regardless of range, and often produced by leading winemakers – is not so easy. BUT, at the tastings that the supermarkets organise for the wine hacks they stick out like … well, like very sticky-outy things indeed and these same few dozen wines feature regularly in the columns of the national press writers. A quick scan of who’s writing about what and, yes, jotting down a few notes, is well worth the little effort required.

The general concensus seems to be that Sainsbury’s Taste the Difference (TTD) is the best of the supermarket own-brand ranges at the moment. In no order at all, these are some the best at the lower end of the price-range: Verdicchio, Brachetto d’Acqui, Douro, Casablanca Sauvignon Blanc, Gavi, Crozes Hermitage, Languedoc White, Curico Merlot, Moscatel, Chilean Rosé, Rosé Côtes-de-Provençe, Trentino Pinot Grigio, Grüner Veltliner, Beaujolais-Villages (made by Duboeuf) and Côtes-du-Rhône Villages (made by Chapoutier. See? I’m not joking about top producers).

Tesco’s large (too large) Finest* range (and what that f**king “*” is for, I’ve never understood) is a mixed bag, but with some very good stuff at the (generally) lower end, like Vinho Verde, Autumn Riesling, Alsace Riesling, Steillage Riesling, Picpoul de Pinet, Gavi, Palomino, Rueda, Fiano, Grüner Veltliner, Grenache-Marsanne, Tapiwey Sauvignon Blanc, Australian Dessert Semillon, Muscadet, Ken Forrester Chenin Blanc, Malbec Rosé, Côtes Catalanes, Dão, Douro, Touriga Nacional, 10 Year-Old Tawny Port, Nero d’Avola and Teroldego. Sounds like a lot, but there are over 100 in the range. Lower down, among the regular stuff, South African Chenin Blanc, Reserve Australian Shiraz, Sicilian Red, Simply Muscadet, Soave Classico, Verdicchio Classico and Reserve Australian Riesling/Gewurztraminer shine.

Morrisons gets plenty of stick from the wine hacks, but there are good things to be had, among them Cotes du Rhone La Calade (a standout cheapie), Moscatel de Valencia, Italian Pinot Grigio, “Italian” Chianti (as if ..!), Australian Chardonnay, Merlot delle Venezie, Corbieres and (on and off) stonking Barolo (from Araldica) for under a tenner.

For real cheapies, Asda have a handful of the (few) really good ones: Marsanne Pays d’Oc is worth going to Asda for, and their Beaujolais, South African Chenin Blanc and Australian Chardonnay are good. Pickings are slim among the own brands at the Co-op, but some of the better own-label stuff is from their large range of Fairtrade wines, especially the Argentinian Malbec and, of the unfair trade offerings, the Argentinian Cuyo Cabernet Franc and the Chablis’ are none too shabby

Marks and Spencer have a quite small range of good own-label stuff (try Fitou, Spanish Garnacha Shiraz, Ardèche Gamay, Minervois, Orvieto, Chilean White, Touraine Sauvignon and Sparkling Rosé Zinfandel – yes, really!).

Ironically (or annoyingly, depending on how you look at it) Waitrose – by a country mile the best of the supermarkets as far as wine, or for that matter, food is concerned – have one of the smallest ranges of own brands (but, usefully, they often name the – usually top-class – producers and they’re pretty good across the board). But, like M&S, they concentrate their best efforts on the artful (if somewhat crafty) business of “private brands” and we’ll look at those next time.

Everybody knows it’s a total swizz that the actual contents of a five-quid bottle of wine only account for about 40p – and that most of the rest is siphoned off by the Fat Controller. So a glass half-full of something genuinely good at that price – or below – always seems to taste even better for it, as if the F.C. hadn’t noticed that the truffles had somehow got mixed up with the bog-standard mushies.

Those truffles only account for – at most – one percent of supermarket wines and sniffing them out does take a little know-how, but thankfully you don’t need a special sort of pig. You have me instead.

Mostly, the bargains are to be had from rootling about down among the own brands and the “private brands” (they’re the same thing, only with made-up names so that people who think they’ll look cheap if they serve a bottle that shows the name of the supermarket where they buy their wine, don’t have to worry).

Other things to set the nostrils twitching are unloved (but lovely) grape varieties like Chenin Blanc, Marsanne, Grenache and Merlot and wine regions that are on the up, especially ones in Italy and Spain which have a lot of “previous” to make up for.

Remember that most wine-writing hounds tend to forage around the same spots on the wine-forest floor and it’s always worth checking out what they’ve dug up especially as the supermarkets don’t push most of the wines listed here very much (except to the hacks) because, in the nature of things, they’re not their most profitable. Most are in some way or other outliers – freaks even – and frequently they’re not around for very long – so check back here often.

AsdaAsda
Asda Beaujolais  £4.37  The price of a pint up West, but 2009 may be the best ever year for Beaujolais and this is just cherrylicious.
Asda Marsanne Pays d’Oc £3.98. The wine hacks’ favourite: the best-value white wine in the UK? You’ve got to like Marsanne – strangely, not everybody does. I do.
Asda Australian Chardonnay £4.29. Made from bulk “juice” from anyoldwhere in SE Australia, imported in tanker and bottled in Norwich. Sounds good? It is. Honest.
Mas Miralda Cava Brut £4.28. Cava is no longer just acidic, burpy, best-for-spraying stuff – this is fun for foam-fuelled frolicaholics.

The Co-operative
Fairtrade Argentine Organic Malbec  £5.99. One of the best Fairtrade wines – a gushing gob-filler that’s made for a rare steak.
Les Crouzes Old Vines Carignan  £5.19. Super-juicy but with some complexity that those old vines’ deep roots have guzzled up out of the good earth.

Morrisons
Morrisons “Italian” Chianti – is there another kind?£ 4.99. Chianti-Lite but sweetly ripe with all the requisite almonds and cherries.
Morrisons Merlot delle Venezie  £4.49. Full-chipped with oak, but silken-robed a-tightly and a fine breakfast wine with fowls.
Cotes du Rhone La Calade £3.79. Crappy bottle, crappy label – but I’ve had worse Gigondas for three times the price.

Marks and Spencer
Cobborah Aussie Chardonnay £5.49. Not your old-style, blowsy, big-hair Aussie chardo – restrained, balanced … elegant, even.
M&S Spanish Garnacha/Shiraz. £4.29 Persuading Spanish growers to prune (i.e. cut yields) is the best thing ever to happen for cheap wine.
M&S “Coppiere” Chianti £5.49. Bitter chocolate rather than the usual almonds or sour cherries but still quintessential Chianti.
M&S Valdepomares Rioja 5.99. Is it Rioja? Not really. Not even Crianza. Is it any good? Yes – soft, silky, summery.
M&S “Soleado” Chilean Merlot Central Valley £4.99. A real juicy lucy – not your bog standard “fuckin’ merlO.”
Vin de Pays de l’Ardeche Gamay £4.99. A favourite with M&S staff – soft and silky (the wine, that is). Eat your heart out Monsieur Beaujolais.

Sainsburys
Taste The Difference Trentino Pinot Grigio £5.99 Full of nougat and white fruits and rich and thick, like Jordan.
Longue Dog, Languedoc £4.99 Jokey names are a no-no but I’ll make an exception for smoky, black berry-fruits and smouldering spices.
Taste The Difference Cotes-du-Rhone Villages £5.99. Made by Chapoutier – chunky, ripe fruit, but depth, complexity even – a classy, mini-me Chateauneuf.
Taste The Difference Beaujolais-Villages  £5.99. Made by Duboeuf and very merry cherry. 09 will be even better when it comes in.

Tesco
Cesarini Sforza Riserva Brut Italy £6.00 (min 6 bottles from Tesco.com). I’m breaking my own BOGOF rule as this zesty pinot noir fizz seems to be more-or-less permanently “discounted” by 50%.
Canti Negroamaro-Zinfandel £4.46. In Italy’s heel, Negroamaro is “bitter-black” and makes brimstone wine as dry as a Belgian’s bathmat.
Fern Bay New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc 3-litre box. £4.50 per bottle-equivalent for  good, grassy NZ kit is a deal if you ask me.
Reserve Australian Shiraz  £4.16 Big oak, big black fruits and a big swig of black coffee for good measure.
Gran Tesoro Garnacha Rosado Spain £3.79 What amazing value the best of the real cheapies are! Jammy, with a twist of pepper. The red’s good too.
Sicilian Red NV £3.63. It’s red. It’s from Sicily. It’s good.

Waitrose
Eva’s Vineyard White Hungary £3.99 You’ve got to be up for it – it’s a bit OTT, but there’s an awful going on for the money

Cuvée Chasseur Vin de Pays de l’Hérault £4.19 Bright, spicy, ripe, sun-filled – all those southern French things.
Whale Caller Shiraz/Cabernet Sauvignon South Africa £4.29 Never mind the lame “private brand” name. Fresh – “lifted” is the winespeak buzzword.
Good Ordinary Claret £4.74 Does a bit more than it says on the tin. Doesn’t actually come in a tin though.
“Aventura” Chilean Cabernet/Merlot £5.49:. Label says “ignore me.” Wine says “drink me.”
Moncaro Rosso Piceno £4.99 Really bright and tight with a light Italian touch- everybody loves it.

Published in The Daily Telegraph- Winter 2007

Peter Grogan journeys to the Herts of darkness to find the wisest buyers of wine

The first bottle of wine that really did it for me was a Sancerre from the Wine Society. A girlfriend and I pinched it from her father and I’ll always be grateful to him for that eureka moment of discovering that wine could provide a lot more pleasure than just the effects of the alcohol. I cursed him, though, the other day, as I trudged around Stevenage in the wind and rain trying to find the headquarters of this cooperatively owned wine merchant, founded 133 years ago.

The Society, in which each member owns a single share, fits somewhere between Waitrose – which in itself is unusual in being an arm of the John Lewis Partnership, owned by its 64,000 staff – and grand old wine merchants such as Berry Bros & Rudd and Corney and Barrow. At the station, I was told that “the wine place” was “across the footbridge and round the back of Tesco”.

Standing in front of Majestic Wine Warehouse, I damply reflect that it and, for that matter, Tesco wouldn’t be the forces they are today if the Society hadn’t blazed a trail in cutting out the middlemen. “I don’t think many people in Stevenage know we’re here, really, but that’s OK,” says Pierre Mansour, the Australasia and America buyer, after coming to rescue me in his car.

When it comes to wine warehouses, you have to hand it to the Society. Standing in the middle of its 175,000 sq ft facility – that’s two and a half football pitches – Ewan Murray, who’s in charge of tastings, enumerates: four million bottles, 90,000 active members who together spend more than £1 million a week, and a list made up of 1,000 wines from 20 countries.

But no one will be showing off, because the Wine Society has that very British mix of competence and reticence that makes it seem like a sort of Bletchley Park of the wine trade. “No one here earns a bonus, including me,” says chief executive Oliver Johnson. “So everyone’s focused on quality rather than margin.” It also means that the Society is seldom beaten on price.

Those 1,000 wines include some I’ve never heard of and I’m feeling a little nervous as I prepare to meet the six buyers. They are some of the best “noses” in the business but I soon discover they’re also an easy-going lot who wear their learning lightly.

Everyone makes mistakes, however, and Master of Wine Sebastian Payne, the Society’s long-serving chief buyer, tells of a mix-up on his predecessor’s watch. After a long day’s tasting, the cellar master calamitously ran wines from casks of three different classed-growth Bordeaux châteaux into the same vat for bottling. Rather than a disaster, the resulting blend was an immediate success. “It was baptised ‘The Society’s Centenary Claret’ and it went down very well with the members,” says Payne.

Talking to members a few days later at a Society tasting in London, it seems less surprising that we British – already the most sophisticated wine consumers in the world – look set to overtake France as the biggest spenders. Members, who come from all walks of life, spend on average £6.75 a bottle.

It isn’t a fortune, but it’s two-thirds as much again as the UK average. Joining is easy. That share costs £40 for lifetime membership (bequeathable to a promising Godchild) and you don’t need connections to join. The Secretary “proposes” those who don’t know an obliging member.

The big numbers, which are small compared with the supermarkets, give the Society the clout to buy what it likes and focus on many smaller, family-run wineries. The list is particularly strong on France with, for example, a lavish 16 wines from the stunning 2005 Beaujolais vintage.

But Chile and New Zealand shine, too. Some members prefer the Society’s Choice, a pre-mixed case of wines costing £6-£8. Others pick and choose from the more expensive “Exhibition” range, made up of perennial favourites such as New Zealand Pinot Noirs and Chilean Merlots.

As it is essentially a mail-order business, browsers will miss out unless they’re within reach of the showroom. The good news is that there’s no minimum purchase and mixed cases start at under £5 a bottle.

For subscription customers, wines are chosen to suit a budget and sent out each month. It’s called “Wine Without Fuss”, a phrase that neatly sums up this old-fashioned yet forward-looking wine merchant.
# The Wine Society: 01438 740222; www.thewinesociety.com.

WINES OF THE WEEK

2005 Dourthe Barrel Select St Emilion, 13% vol (£10.49; Waitrose).

Richly fruit-cakey, with the subtle hints of violets and tobacco that usually cost more than this.

The much-hyped 2005 Bordeaux vintage seems to be walking the walk. A fillet steak would be the perfect accompaniment.

2006 Co-op Fairtrade Cape Chenin Colombard, 12.5% vol (£3.99; Co-op).

Co-op leads the way in Fairtrade wines and this is from the biggest project in the world. An attractively perfumed nose and perky melon and apricot fruit.

The price will comfort those who’ve opened their post-Christmas credit card statements.

2004 Ravenswood Old Vine Zinfandel, 14% vol (£7.50; Wine Society).

A century of experience with Californian Zinfandels means the Wine Society knows a thing or two.

This is intense stuff, meaty and spicy with a big slice of blackberry-pie fruit and a hint of liquorice. Terrific value.

2005 Bonterra Chardonnay-Sauvignon Blanc, 13.5% vol (Majestic; £5.59 for two or more to February 5).

Feeling out of touch? Try this – it’s from California, it’s organic, it’s got a unique new screw-top and it’s a blend of grapes to make French blood run cold.

It’s also very crisp, fragrant and very more-ish.

The Daily Telegraph

Published in Home Plus Scotland – January 2006

They sell one in every five bottles of wine we drink. The total is knocking on a billion quid’s worth per year. They carry over 800 different wines in total, and 113 of them were on the table at the last press tasting. So we need to know what’s what at Tesco and we’re going to have to hurry.

Tesco Premier Cru NV Champagne (£14.79) has won more awards than Judi Dench and has just as much class. It’s creamy with toasty brioche flavours and a bit of grapefruit on the nose. Try it when you want a really good glass of champagne and don’t need to impress anyone with the label. It’s a bargain as it is, although for good measure there’s 5% off half-a-dozen or more of any wine at the time of going to press – but what about nice fizz for no money at all? It can be done. La Gioiosa (“the joyful one” – and at £4.99 we’re all smiling) is a Pinot Grigio Prosecco that costs £4.99 and has a gentle, lacy sparkle that flirts in a pouty, Gina Lollobrigida sort of a way with the apples and pears on the palate.

As you know, I’m Alsace’s biggest fan. Here are two to convert you too: “Finest” Riesling 2004 (£5.99) – the heady, blossomy nose and crisp, mineral palate remind me a little of some wines I know that cost three times as much. Its Gewurztraminer sister – for a pound more – is long-limbed, rich and pineappley. A good introduction if you don’t know this distinctively spicy grape.

Are you keeping up at the back, there?

A few years ago a 6-quid Burgundy would see me running for the hills. These days, “Finest” Oak Aged Red Burgundy 2004 (£6.99) is a revelation of summer pudding fruit soup with a crisp oak edge. As you know, it’s made from Pinot Noir whereas, up the road  in Beaujolais, Gamay is the only grape in town. Morgon 2004 (£5.99), made by Labouré Roi, is all fresh, red-cherry crispness – compare and contrast. Sticking with the lighter-bodies reds, the current 2004 vintage of Brown Brothers Tarrango (£5.99) has all the crunchy redcurrant and cherry fruit we always like so much.

Heading due South, and another clash of Titan grapes to grip us. “Finest” – are we sensing a pattern here? – Crozes Hermitage 2003 (£6.99) is 100% Syrah, 100% Northern Rhône and 100% licorice, spice and manliness. It comes from the excellent Cave de Tain co-op. Down in the southern Rhône, “Finest” Gigondas 2003 (£8.99) is 90% Grenache and is all about black cherries and soft, leathery tannins. Both wines are excellent examples of their regions and their grapes.

I mentioned Chianti Classico Riserva 2001(£6.99) in my last column. Surprise, surprise, it’s also in the “Finest” range and it’s still packed with almonds and bitter cherries. From the excellent 2001 vintage, it’s maturing nicely now.

Come on, keep at it – only a few more to go…

Good claret for six quid is always worth a look, and Château Pey La Tour 2004 fits the bill. It’s a big softie, really – a gushing mouthful of damson Merlot fruit. Upscale somewhat we have Château Reysson Reserve 2002 (£9.99) – full of big, black fruits and classy tannins. It’s classed as a “crû bourgeois” which means it would be ideal to impress a classy, bourgeois crew – or something like that, anyway.

I’ve got a bit of a thing going for Tawny Port as you probably know. Graham’s The Tawny is £14.99 and completely fab – all nuts and spice and elegance. It’s in a great bottle as well – in effect a rather nice simple decanter for free. If you like it, then spring £26.04 for their 20-year-old. My tasting note says: “Awesome, dreamy, long, smooth, restful …cheap, really.” Sounds good after a long day’s work at the grape-face, doesn’t it?

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