Finding Vino

January 6, 2010 3:18 pm Article by Chris S. Skarratt

This little gem of a search engine I have to thank my good friend Jamie for. He’s a chef a by trade, a bon viveur by night and a very naturally talented and therefore bloody annoying athlete the rest of the time – damn you sir! But thank you for this tip off.

Screen shotwww.wine-searcher.com offers a comprehensive way to find great wines that are hard to track down. Picture, if you will, the scene: You are at the end of a meal at the Boxwood Cafe, the set lunch was amazing and as you only spent £25 on the Prix Fixe you upped the ante on the wine and went for a fine bottle of Château Cantenac Brown (Margaux). You want more as it’s a bloody good drop but don’t want to spend another ton+ on a bottle of plonk, so you wait until you get home and type in your vin du jour and hey presto! The same wine for a quarter of the price. Let the good times roll.

The down side is you’ll probably need to buy a case or at least a half case, but if you like it that much it really isn’t a problem – providing your better half a) doesn’t find out, b) likes the fact you are investing in the future or c) you don’t have a better half and the sting of gout is just around the corner. Wine Searcher aggregates importers both small and large so you’ll almost always find what you are looking for; I’ve given it a pretty good work-over and haven’t been disappointed yet. That said, does looking for Blue Nun or Black Tower really count? (in case you were wondering, you can find both on there – but with only one entry a piece!).

So off you go then, don’t just sit there wondering about it, get on it man – there must be somewhere, in that oft hazy, oft drunken, oft reckless past of yours a bottle that you hanker after and this is your chance to track it down.

Yours from the bottom of a very well priced bottle,

Stirling

1 Comment

  • I found your blog on MSN and read a few of your other posts. I just added you to my favorites. Keep up the good work. Look forward to reading more from you in the future.

Make a Remark


In Other Matters...

  • WIE not WI

    WIE not WI

    If you didn’t already know, Thursday 8th March 2012 is International Women’s Day. What more fitting occasion, then, to host the first UK Women: Inspiration and Enterprise Symposium, a gathering of some of the world’s most prominent women in politics, business and the arts to lead a series of discussions,...

    Read more →
  • Pasqua and the Brain

    Pasqua and the Brain

    My little sister ‘does the brain’. This is what a lot of people will tell you. In reality she is not particularly little (she is in fact a fully grown 23 years of age) and what they really mean by ‘the brain’ is that she studied Neuroscience at university. These days all things inter- and extra-cranial...

    Read more →
  • Drinking with Shakespeare

    Drinking with Shakespeare

    Skimming through the FT’s roundup of 2011, its lowest points were made no less dreary by their depiction through illustrated Greek tragedy. I’m sure no one is under the illusion that 2012 (at least the beginning of it) is off to a blinding start – John Cusack might argue that it looks ultimately...

    Read more →
  • Dead Man’s Patterns

    Dead Man’s Patterns

    London and New York design agency Sheridan & Co. are to host a series of creative shows in their London space this year, the first of which showcases the work of Hormazd Narielwalla, and will take place during London Fashion Week this month. The exhibition, entitled Dead Man’s Patterns, Memento...

    Read more →
  • Murder on the Nile

    Murder on the Nile

    The latest production from The Agatha Christie Theatre Company was first adapted from Christie’s novel Death on the Nile (1937) and performed as a stage production Hidden Horizon in 1944 before opening in the West End and Broadway as Murder on the Nile in 1946. Simon Scullion deserves special mention...

    Read more →
  • Enter the Innerplace

    Enter the Innerplace

    Who doesn’t love the idea of having privileged access to exclusive parties, restaurants and shows? Innerplace is a private concierge service which uses vast knowledge and experience of London life, helped along by a rather extensive contacts book, to arrange unique experiences for members. As you’re...

    Read more →
  • Reading Trends

    Reading Trends

    The debate over the e-book or the ‘p-book’ (the latter being a term that makes me cringe), is the contentious issue in many a publishing circle. How are these reading trends evolving and can the two coexist happily? I don’t think it is quite that simple; different reading material will...

    Read more →
  • The Madness of George III

    The Madness of George III

    This tremendous Theatre Royal Bath production of Alan Bennett’s play is directed by the great Christopher Luscombe. King George III, in a spellbinding performance by David Haig, is beginning to display increasing signs of insanity, above and beyond his usual eccentricities. It is now believed the king...

    Read more →