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Home / The Country

Wine awards get off to a rosé start

The Country
30 Jul, 2018 09:21 PM4 mins to read

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The rise of Rosé continues with more than 100 Rosé wines to be judged at this year's New World Wine Awards. Photo / Supplied

The rise of Rosé continues with more than 100 Rosé wines to be judged at this year's New World Wine Awards. Photo / Supplied

The rise of rosé looks set to continue with a record number of entries of the in-demand wine to be judged at the 2018 New World Wine Awards.

Judging gets under way in Wellington today, where more than 1400 wines across a range of varietals and styles will vie for Top 50 status and coveted champion titles.

Jim Harré, chair of judges for the awards, says he has seen the changing trends in entries first-hand over his 11 years at the helm of the competition, which is designed specifically to showcase the best quality affordable wines.

More than 100 rosé wines will be blind-tasted by the expert judging panel – a third more entries than in 2017, which was also a big year for the rosé class.

"We've seen the meteoric rise in popularity of rosé mirrored in our entries over recent years as winemakers have responded to changing consumer tastes in both number and quality. This was particularly evident last year, when over half the rosé entries won a medal including more golds than ever before."

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Chair of Judges Jim Harré. Photo / Supplied
Chair of Judges Jim Harré. Photo / Supplied

Keeping to the rosy-hued theme, the popular red varietal Pinot Noir has also maintained its status as the most-contended class in the competition, with more than 180 entries vying for the top spot this year.

"This is only the second time in the awards' 16-year history that the number of Pinot Noir entries has surpassed ever-popular Sauvignon Blanc. With the bulk of our entries from New Zealand, it's a promising sign of our winemakers' confidence in the Pinot Noir they are producing."

Harré says continued strength in entries across all classes is an indication of wineries' high regard for the competition and the value of a potential Top 50 placing as a powerful touchpoint with consumers.

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To be eligible, entries to the New World Wine Awards must retail for $25 or less, and there must be at least 5000 bottles (or 3000 for niche varietals) available for sale through New World stores nationwide. This ensures the award-winning wines are more accessible for wine-lovers than is often the case with other wine awards.

A panel of 17 independent judges, including wine experts, winemakers and even wine scientists – all with extensive judging experience in New Zealand and overseas, will evaluate the entries over three days of judging, tasting around 100 wines each per day.

This year's panel includes two highly-regarded international wine experts: Ying Hsien Tan, Master of Wine, wine educator and owner of Taberna Wine Academy in Singapore, and Dr Rowald Hepp, winemaker and Managing Director of Germany's Schloss Vollrads, one of the oldest wine estates in the world.

Also joining the panel as new judges are Jen Parr (Valli Wines), Kyle Thompson (Saint Clair Family Estate), Nadine Cross (Peregrine Wines), Vanessa Robson (Maude Wines) and Wendy Stuckey (Constellation Brands).

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The number of Pinot Noir entries have again exceed the number of Sauvignon Blanc entries for the second year running. Photo / Supplied
The number of Pinot Noir entries have again exceed the number of Sauvignon Blanc entries for the second year running. Photo / Supplied

Returning judges include: Barry Riwai (Alpha Domus), James Rowan (West Brook Winery), Jane Boyle (Wine consultant), Jane Cooper (Alexia), Kate Radburnd (Kate Radburnd Wines), Olly Masters (Misha's Vineyard, Tripwire Consulting), Dr Rebecca Deed (wine lecturer and researcher), Sam Kim (Wine Orbit) and Simon Nunns (Coopers Creek). Shona White is the competition's Chief Steward.

As the first large awards judging following the 2018 vintage harvest, New World Wine Awards judges will be among the first to evaluate some of the early, new vintage wines.

The panel will evaluate each wine on colour, taste and smell, making collective decisions to score each wine according to the internationally-recognised 100-point system and award gold, silver and bronze medals.

"Under this system, which is used extensively at wine awards around the world, an entry is benchmarked against what a perfect wine of its type should be like, rather than against other entries."

Gold medal wines scoring 95-100 are then re-tasted and ranked with the Top 50 scoring wines earning nationwide distribution through 135 New World stores. The best of these Top 50 will then be tasted yet again by the entire judging panel to determine the Champions of each main varietal and an overall Champion Red and Champion White.

The full results will be announced later this year, with the Top 50 winning wines available in New World stores nationwide.

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The judging of the New World Wine Awards is taking place at Wellington's Westpac Stadium, one of the few suitable venues for such a large event, from July 31 to August 2.

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