While at Savour Australia, I was
given a copy of Fine Wine and Champagne, published in India by Fine Publishing
India (www.fine-magazines.in).
Its luxurious presentation is similar to many of those that you see out
of China and Hong Kong, but some of the content is decidedly interesting and
unusual. The editor is Rajiv Singhal, and he has some very interesting
contributors. There are tasting notes and profiles of 100 wines from many
parts of the world, and each has a summary covering price, bottle condition,
tasting note, how many times tasted, decanting time, etc, etc, but my eye then
caught the next item, ‘Fake Factor’. It varies from comments such as
‘None yet, but in near future – yes’, or, in the case of items such as a 1956
Chilean Cabernet Sauvignon ‘None’.
It was decidedly ironical that the
Fake Factor for 1955 RomanĂ©e-Conti should be described as ‘Huge – especially
among big-sized bottling, and as you can buy original Domaine labels from eBay
at a modest price of 500 euros, it will be hard to tell without opening the
bottles if it is the real thing...’ There was a photograph of the said
Romanée-Conti opposite its taste rundown, and the bottle number was written in
hand (331). Quite apart from the clearly faked bottle number, the label
itself seemed to have done hard yards, not surprising. And before I get
off the subject (and the magazine) my eye also caught 1960 DRC La Tache.
Here the Fake Factor was ‘None’, with the added quotes ‘Inside
information a very bad vintage throughout France, but not at DRC’. Here,
too, the label seemed to have done hard yards and it was not possible to see
the label clearly enough to tell whether the bottle number was hand written or
printed.