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When it comes to wines, it pays to look beyond the fashionable

about 12 hours ago
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The sommelier Honey Spencer, of Sune in east London, struck a real chord on Instagram earlier this year: “I’m so fucking sick of expensive wine,” she lamented.There followed an angry plaint about the “unrelenting rise” in the cost of bottles from “artisans making wine properly … and FORGET BURGUNDY”.In a difficult climate, this is “one of the hardest pills to swallow” for the restaurateur.The Guardian’s journalism is independent.We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.

Learn more,It’s not an easy swallow for the customer, either, given the mark-up on hard pills these days: according to UKHospitality, the price of wine has gone up 40% since 2020, which will surprise no one who has quietly wept into a £59 rioja,You can cite many reasons – our old friend Brexit, climate change, rising staffing costs, rising costs of, well, everything – but two factors stand out,One is a steep rise in alcohol duty: British drinkers already pay the highest alcohol tax in Europe and, as of this year, this will rise in line with inflation,According to a widely shared graphic from Bibendum, if a bottle of wine sets you back £7.

50, you’re actually spending £2.87 on excise duty, £1.25 on VAT and just 94p on the wine.Nevertheless, more significant is the fact that fewer of us are ordering wine at all.Again, the reasons are manifold (health, wealth, fashion, etc), but when it’s no longer a given that table eight will order a bottle of house wine – said house wine being a £42 picpoul de pinet – margins have to rise for those who do partake.

Businesses will naturally lavish more attention on those few customers who are prepared to pay, so we have an ouroboros of oeno-flation, wherein everyone gets eaten,Still, with my cocktailing hat on, I can’t help but feeling that the doom is overdone,If the hospitality sector can persuade people that £12-plus+ is a fair price for an Aperol spritz, it really ought to be able to do the same for, I don’t know, a nice Georgian saperavi or an intriguing Austrian blaufränkisch,It might take a little cocktail-esque theatricality, true – some sense of wine being a treat as opposed to the default,But the places that have done this, offering select, interesting lists by the glass and carafe, seem to be flourishing.

Personally, I rarely want a whole bottle over dinner, anyway, especially when the same style is a sixth of the price in the supermarket.Moreover, the world of wine is vast.If garagiste bordeaux and grower champagnes are beyond the reach of the casual drinker, well, head to the Languedoc instead, or shine a light on Italian franciacorta.Fashion in wine, as in all things, has secret advantages: for every overpriced appellation, there are a dozen that are overlooked.In fact, making a point of drinking only unhip grapes from overlooked regions seems an excellent strategy all round.

Waitrose Loved & Found Viorica 2024 £9.50, 12%.Cantaloupe, elderflower, blossom.A gorgeous spring white from your new obsession: Moldova.Earth, Vine & Sun Viognier Chenin Blanc 2025 £13.

99 Laithwaites, 11%.Bright, subtle blend of two underrated grapes that shine in South Africa’s Swartland.Juanico Uruguayan Tannat 2024 £10 Ocado, 13%.A deep, dark, Uruguayan speciality.Needs oxygen and meat, then: mwah!Domaine Serge Laloue Sancerre 2023 £24 Wine Society, 14.

5%.Forget burgundy: head to the centre Loire for affordable pinot.
sportSee all
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Adam Coleman escapes from rugby purgatory to the peaks with Bordeaux

Bordeaux Bègles lock says Champions Cup holders are primed for Sunday’s clash of cultures against BathThere are in truth few Union Bordeaux Bègles players better qualified to explain just how it feels to be in the eye of the storm with European rugby’s newest force than Adam Coleman. Three years ago their paths collided with almost perfect timing, with Bordeaux mid-table and Coleman unceremoniously dropped into rugby purgatory.Coleman’s career looked to be over when London Irish went out of business in the summer of 2023 before a move to France with Bordeaux. It has proved to be an inspired decision for both parties, with Coleman playing a pivotal role in UBB’s rise to the top of the club game, culminating in their Champions Cup final triumph over Northampton last year.As a dual-international with the Wallabies and Tonga, as well as experiencing rugby in almost all corners of the sport’s geographical footprint, Coleman is used to the unconventional

about 12 hours ago
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‘I really was one of those bandwagon fans’: meet Katharina Nowak, F1’s youngest race president

Before her first Miami Grand Prix in charge, Nowak opens up on F1’s boom time in the US and flying the flag for women in the sportThere is an air of buoyant confidence about Katharina Nowak that is striking but also understandable given the robust state of Formula One in the United States and at the Miami Grand Prix, where the 29-year-old who is at the helm of the race believes the sport only has more to come.“F1 is at its strongest right now that we’ve seen, the interest in F1 is still going up and will go further,” she says in the buildup to this weekend’s meeting in Florida. “From my seat at the table, we are seeing the interest continue to grow.“Obviously 2022, when we launched the Miami GP, was a perfect storm but last year ESPN reported record-breaking viewership numbers in the United States for 22 out of the 24 races. We’ve seen it in our success in our ticket sales this year that, there is strong demand for the Miami GP and for F1

about 15 hours ago
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Trial or error? Lancashire bear brunt as county game adjusts to new substitute rules | Ali Martin

Lancashire are not the most popular county at the moment. From next week the live-streamed coverage of their matches at Old Trafford will go behind a paywall – free to members, £20 a season if not. And so the thrill of Jimmy Anderson bowling from the end that bears his name will play out to a smaller audience.Although beyond this, or the broader sadness at Old Trafford becoming a dystopian hotel-cum-events space where the first team feels secondary, there seems to be widespread agreement that the Red Rose have been hard done by of late: namely, in the ongoing trial of injury replacements in English cricket.To recap, this year teams in the County Championship can replace a player if they are afflicted by injury, illness or a significant life event – a broadening of existing allowances for concussion or England call-ups

about 17 hours ago
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Cricket Australia’s BBL sell-off on hold after Queensland joins NSW in rejecting plans

Cricket Australia’s plan to sell off stakes in the eight Big Bash League franchises has been placed on hold after Queensland joined New South Wales in rejecting the original privatisation proposal.Queensland Cricket, which controls BBL side Brisbane Heat, has backed Cricket NSW’s opposition to CA’s plan to sell up to 49% of each franchise to private owners, with valuations of up to $200m per team.The Victorian, Western Australian and Tasmanian cricket associations have shown support for the BBL privatisation plans, while South Australia is open to the idea for other states but wants to maintain control of the Adelaide Strikers for the time being.The revolt from two state associations leaves the future of the T20 league up in the air from the 2027-28 season, as CA begins to consider alternative options.CA chief executive Todd Greenberg said he would have gone ahead with testing the market if five of the six states had supported the privatisation proposal

about 19 hours ago
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AFL player Nathan O’Driscoll opens up on depression and mental health struggles

The family and teammates of Nathan O’Driscoll have expressed love and support for the Fremantle midfielder after he posted an unfiltered account on social media of his mental health challenges.The 23-year-old, who has played just twice this year for his home town club the Dockers, shared on Instagram that he has come close to taking his life three times, and that recent weeks have been especially challenging after the death of someone close to him.“I’m sharing this because speaking up matters. No one is there to judge you, every person I’ve opened up to has supported me in ways I never expected,” he said.“From the outside, it might look like I have everything, but what’s going on internally can be a very different story

about 24 hours ago
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LIV Golf poised to inform players that Saudi funding will end this year

LIV Golf executives are poised to confirm to players that Saudi Arabia’s funding of the circuit will cease at the end of 2026, in a move that will begin a scramble between some leading names in the sport to return to traditional tours.Without an alternative and unlikely funding source from 2027 onwards, LIV in its current form is staring at closure just four years on from staging its first tournament. Nothing has materially changed for LIV in recent weeks yet formal admission of an upcoming Saudi exit will be viewed as a key moment in a disruption story that is heading towards a messy finale.The Saudi Public Investment Fund, which has ploughed more than $5bn (£3.7bn) into LIV, informed the tour’s management of a change in approach during meetings in New York immediately after the conclusion of this month’s Masters

1 day ago
societySee all
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Raise tax on alcohol and junk food to cut deaths from liver disease, experts say

1 day ago
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Trial of non-invasive endometriosis scan boosts hopes for quicker diagnosis

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Leasehold ban in England and Wales unlikely before next general election, minister says

1 day ago
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The use of advanced practitioners in the NHS is no reason to fear for patient safety | Letters

1 day ago
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The landlords’ view of the rental market | Letters

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Swearing banned by one in five councils in England and Wales, report on ‘busybody’ fines shows

1 day ago