| Best Shed boasts best wine |
| Written by Paula Goddard |
| Saturday, 18 August 2007 20:00 |
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With only one in ten people renting allotments from their local parish council, the National Society of Allotment Having a winery as sponsors of a gardening competition may seem an odd choice. But it makes absolute sense when you realise 94% of gardeners drink wine (compared to just 70% of UK adults as a whole) with the majority drinking wine at least twice a week. Being a keen wine-drinking gardener and allotment holder myself, I thought it would be a good idea to check out the National Allotments Week’s sponsors understanding of allotments. Using the Add Comment feature on Caliterra’s Winemaker’s Blog I asked Head Winemaker Sergio Cuadra if the winery had the Chilean equivalent of an allotment. Apparently they do.
Sergio also has some advice for British allotmenters wishing to grow their own vines:
And if your vines and vegetables aren’t growing as they should he offers this advice:
A deep red coloured wine that tastes like liquefied allotment fruits – blackcurrants, redcurrants, blackberries and cherries. Robust and warming, this wine would be just the thing to drink in your allotment shed on a frosty autumn day. Caliterra Cabernet Sauvignon 2006, Colchagua Valley, Chile. £5.99 This blackberry and blackcurrant tasting wine needs to be matched with a flavourful meat pizza. Food will help soak up some of the 14.5% alcohol. Caliterra Shiraz Rosé 2006, Colchagua Valley, Chile. £5.99 A cherry-red rosé that tastes like you’ve stirred some allotment-grown raspberries into plain yoghurt, then ground black pepper on the top. A bit weird. Caliterra wines are available from smaller independent wine merchants (including Conwy Fine Wines, The Vintage House, Ellies Cellar, Kingsgate Wines and Vicki's Wine Merchant) and online at everywine.co.uk and the Northern Ireland retailer The Ava. |
Installing a wine rack in his shed will now be top of Glyn Harrison’s list of jobs to do at his Griffithstown allotment. Winning Best Shed category in the
and Leisure Gardeners hopes their annual initiative will promote greater awareness of allotments and boost gardening back up from second place to first in the listings of UK popular hobbies (surfing the internet comes top).

