WINE SCANDALS - Did you know these scandals that shook the wine world?

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
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    Looking back at the history of wine you will find quite a few different scandals but I have selected three scandals that left an impression on the wine world. The first one is the so-called “antifreeze scandal”. It is easy to forget today that there was a time when producers in Northern Europe were struggling to ripen their grapes. Some crafty or rather criminal winemakers came up with the idea to add diethylene glycol to wine to make it taste sweet without having to go through the arduous of, you know, letting the grapes ripen.
    Diethylene glycol is also used as antifreeze, and it can be poisonous in larger quantities but for the wineries, it was an easy way to increase profits.
    This became common practice among a small number of wineries in Austria and some of these tainted wines were also sold in bulk to German bottlers.
    They managed to keep it secret for a few years but the scandal unfolded, when one producer, who only own a small tractor, tried to claim large amounts of antifreeze as a business expense. The reaction in the media was extreme and the news went around the globe. The story made the front page of the New York Times. Glycol was the word of the year in 1985 in Germany.
    Austrian wine was banned in several countries including the UK
    The first time I saw a reference to this scandal was in the Simpsons episode "The Crepes of Wrath" when two French winemakers are arrested after putting antifreeze in wine and making poor Bart drink it.
    As a result of all the unwanted attention exports of Austrian wine plummeted from 45 million liters a year to just 4.4m and also the reputation of German wines was tarnished.
    The dangers of Diethylene glycol were exaggerated as the levels in most wines were generally too low to cause lethal results or even health risks
    The highest level was 48 g/l in a bottle of Welschriesling Beerenauslese from Burgenland.
    Another far more lethal scandal is widely unknown: in 1986 a winemaker in Italy mixed methanol into his wine. Twenty-three people died and more than 90 were hospitalized.
    The positive side of this story is that the Austrian wine industry enacted strict wine laws and spend a great deal of effort in rebuilding its reputation.
    Let's move on to another scandal which was even turned into a book:
    The Jefferson bottles.
    This is one of the scandals that tells you a lot about the archaic way the wine trade sometimes operates.
    Let’s start with a question: If a German music manager approached you and offered you some bottles of 1787 Chateau Lafite owned by Thomas Jefferson without disclosing his source, would you spend six figures Dollars for it?
    The German music manager was Hardy Rodenstock and he became famous for locating the world's rarest wines. He has hosted exclusive over-the-top wine tastings with wines from the best estates going back to the 18th century and some of the most famous wine tasters came from Jancis Robinson to Robert Parker.
    He claimed that the bottles were discovered in Paris and that the inscription Laffite Th. J." referred to Chateaux Lafite and Thomas Jefferson - Thomas Jefferson was a wine lover - so that part of the story makes sense but all the rest doesn’t really.
    Experts from the Thomas Jefferson Foundation raised serious doubts about the authenticity of those bottles. And think about this: How many bottles in your collection have your initials engraved into them? Have you ever seen somebody do something like this?
    The Forbes family did not care too much and they stored the bottle in terrible conditions so that at some point the shrunken cork dropped back into the bottle destroying whatever was left of the wine.
    The story became more interesting when US businessman Bill Koch bought some of those bottles in 1988.
    He filed a lawsuit in 2006 after realizing that he had been defrauded and spent millions of private investigators. What followed were different trials and all of the accused claimed they did not know.
    After diving deep into the story it seems like Rodenstock had access to far too many great wines in large-format bottles.
    Koch's private investigator claimed that the bottles were probably old but the engraving suggesting that the wine was Lafite owned by Thomas Jefferson was added with a modern dentists drill - and la voila: The most expensive bottle of wine.
    You might think that people learned from their mistakes and that the industry became more careful and less naïve … think again cause here comes the story of Dr. Conti himself: Rudy Kurniawan.

Комментарии • 171

  • @edwardenglish6919
    @edwardenglish6919 Год назад +137

    The greatest scandal for me was seeing a bottle of Domaine de la Romanee-Conti La Tache Grand Cru in a wine shop in Whittier, CA being sold for $35 in 1978 and thinking that it was too expensive and buying a Heitz Martha's Vineyard 1970 for $15 instead.

    • @barath4545
      @barath4545 Год назад +14

      I was offered a DRC case of 1995 in 2001 by a hotel, where they had a tasting of their other case of DRC.
      They thought, hey either we might sell it over 10 yrs or get rid of this 2nd case now.
      I turned them down when they wanted $4000 for the case, I was thinking more like $3000.... Jeezus, its probably $50k now.

    • @bver1149
      @bver1149 Год назад +2

      U funny♡
      DRC per bottle same price as an oz of gold approx in the 70s

    • @georgigeorgiev-ei4or
      @georgigeorgiev-ei4or Год назад +4

      @@barath4545 More like$100K.

    • @shaunsandow2073
      @shaunsandow2073 Год назад +2

      The Heitz was probably quite nice 😳😇🍸

    • @edwardenglish6919
      @edwardenglish6919 Год назад

      @@shaunsandow2073 Almost as good as the 1968.

  • @rodenbach69
    @rodenbach69 Год назад +10

    In Las Vegas, more Petrus 1982 is drunk each year than was ever produced.

    • @shaunsandow2073
      @shaunsandow2073 Год назад +1

      You gotta love Vegas - fake to it’s core. I recall a conversation with a boisterous American woman…’why would you bother going to Paris to see the Eifell tower when we’ve got a new one here’…what a dickhead.😳
      I’m sure she loves the Vegas 82’ Petrus

  • @marzollo7772
    @marzollo7772 Год назад +35

    As an Italian I'm both glad and surprised to not have my country mentioned

    • @z03fke
      @z03fke Год назад +5

      yeah i remember the brunello scandal in i think 2008 right?

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +26

      I am coming for you too 😉

    • @spaniardsrmoors6817
      @spaniardsrmoors6817 Год назад

      Shut up ure not Italian, just here to stir up **** against them.

    • @ilBBoyMoro
      @ilBBoyMoro Год назад +1

      Also the methanol in Barolo, 1986, I mean...

    • @gengisjjjjjj
      @gengisjjjjjj Год назад +1

      @@ilBBoyMoro never in Barolo, ie was cheap barbera.

  • @novalexa3135
    @novalexa3135 4 месяца назад

    Worth mentioning is also the Brunello scandal, of 2008, when several of producers of the area were incriminated with making the wine with grapes sourced outside the Brunello area.

  • @drmatthewhorkey
    @drmatthewhorkey Год назад +10

    Great idea for a video. Austria sure has rebounded and Wine Austria is a benchmark as a wine promotion body in Europe!
    Rudy is free now!! Good luck to all those rich guys back in Indonesia 😂

  • @solomonmengeu1003
    @solomonmengeu1003 Год назад +4

    These 3 wine scandals that you mentioned are probably the biggest ones from the past 30 years or so. I can't say which one is my "favorite", but the Austrian anti-freeze wine scandal changed the wine industry for the better. As Austria totally changed its wine laws/regulations and now has some of the strictest in the world and even though their production is pretty small quality is very high.
    The Rudy Kurniawan scandal was the most outrageous and hardest to believe as it was obviously a case of something being too good to be true is often enough not true and/or a scam. The fact that so many millionaires and billionaires got swindled out of large amounts of money is hard to believe.
    But a lack of knowledge about wine together with wanting to impress people and drinking wine for prestige rather than enjoyment and pleasure probably contributed to it becoming so big. Sour Grapes was interesting, and it did lead to greater awareness, caution and wine collectors and drinkers paying greater attention to provenance and a wine's origin.

  • @winnydegustator
    @winnydegustator Год назад +1

    Let's not forget about Sassicaia scandal in Sicily.

  • @evalio4476
    @evalio4476 Год назад +2

    Great video as always, was waiting for you to cover the Brunello scandals. Maybe in part 2

  • @schmup53
    @schmup53 Год назад +1

    Just bought a bottle of Gewürztraminer yesterday, Malat "Crazy Creatures." It's delicious.

  • @alessandrocupellini4580
    @alessandrocupellini4580 Год назад +5

    Not a fascinating story, a tragic one instead, but I think you should consider to talk about the "methanol" scandal in Italy, when several brands of cheap wine (mostly barbera) had been added with the alchool above mentioned and this caused the death of many people and for others blindness and permanent damages. Thank you for your job.😊

  • @thereseandersson5279
    @thereseandersson5279 Год назад

    Super interesting topic! I really enjoy the diversity in you videos. Thank you for another great one. /T.

  • @stpd1957
    @stpd1957 Год назад

    Great video Konstantin

  • @RaMiPTV
    @RaMiPTV Год назад

    Really like this format!

  • @andrewgeorge7568
    @andrewgeorge7568 Год назад

    A great diversion from the usual, love it

  • @miguelcarrillo202
    @miguelcarrillo202 Год назад +2

    My favorite of the scandals are the Rudy Kurnwaiwan ones, I read up about it in the Spectator back at the time and loved the documentary film about it. Cheers

  • @brianpite0893
    @brianpite0893 Год назад

    Great video! The Sour Grapes scandal is my favorite.

  • @benjaminrasmussen2434
    @benjaminrasmussen2434 Год назад

    Great topic, very informative

  • @RCTricking
    @RCTricking Год назад

    Very cool Konstantin! Interesting content. I learned about the Sassicaya one from Wineking.

  • @MotorJeffries
    @MotorJeffries Год назад +7

    You’re the most entertaining wine expert on RUclips! Thanks for another great video.

  • @leonardovianello5
    @leonardovianello5 10 месяцев назад

    Great video! It's not a scandal but has been a revolution in the wine world :"the judgment of Paris in 1976, California vs France " , maybe an idea for the next video

  • @BenjaminBogliacino
    @BenjaminBogliacino Год назад +1

    The methanol scndal in the 80's in Italy was huge: 18 people died. I'm surprised it didnt get mentioned

  • @gogreenmsu03
    @gogreenmsu03 Год назад

    Love this video. Sour Grapes is a fascinating watch.

  • @nickolausj123
    @nickolausj123 Год назад

    I love your videos! I'm keep hoping you're going to do a video on the Northern Rhone. I would love to hear your thoughts on producers such as JL Chave and Jamet.

  • @FabrizioDiCarlo
    @FabrizioDiCarlo Год назад +1

    Hey Konstantin, great video! I recall seeing Sour Grapes a couple of years back and the pictures from Rudy's house were impressive (and not in the best sense)... About Wine related scandals I think what happened to Court of Master Sommeliers in 2020 was quite sad

  • @marekzielinski6339
    @marekzielinski6339 Год назад

    Sour grapes - great documentary! Highly recommended

  • @tkmmusician
    @tkmmusician Год назад +2

    Thank you Konstantin for this video. I think any one of these three stories would merit its own video, but I'm grateful for this. Whatever became of Rodenstock, anyway?

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +2

      He died in 2018 and the court cases against him never lead to a conviction as far as I know…

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 Год назад +7

    Really great to have some background stories like this.. Hugely interesting! Not so much a scandal, but perhaps it should be is, for me, the practice of putting raw oak chips into steel to give that horrible, obvious oaking flavour you sometimes get in mass produced reds.. I'd far rather have no oak flavour than that. Nice one Konstantin! 🌟🍇👍

  • @jimhayd7857
    @jimhayd7857 2 месяца назад

    The collapse of elite Sherri-Lehmann wine shop in midtown Manhattan was quite a scandal

  • @sulrandir
    @sulrandir Год назад +1

    Maybe an even worse scandal, compared to Glycol, was the methanol scandal in 1986, mentioned in previous comments. Some Piedmontese producers used methanol to raise alcohol levels. Problem, it is toxic and some people died, many became blind. This brought a lot of distrust to wine in that period (people will remember a beer TV Spot “Birra, e sai cosa bevi” that means beer, and you know what you’re drinking). This tragedy was a pivotal point for food law development in Italy (and Europe, alongside the bovine encefalopathy illness) and also a turning point for Piedmontese wines, as so many started to invest in quality. As an example, the Barolo boys movement started after these events

  • @comesahorseman
    @comesahorseman Год назад

    Interesting! Thanks!

  • @Ildskalli
    @Ildskalli Год назад

    I liked this video a lot, and definitely would like to see others in the same vein!

  • @someoneelse2262
    @someoneelse2262 Год назад +5

    The Premier Cru Berkeley wine merchants scandal! Check it out. I actually bought thousands of dollars worth of wine from them over many years and in the end only lost about $800 worth of wine they never delivered on. I was completely stupid because a friend in the business told me they were about to go down but I couldn't help myself and placed one last order on some futures where the price was to good to pass up (duh). Anyway, I came out way ahead but I know of several people who lost tens of thousands of dollars (and the folks who made the pyramid collapse lost hundreds of thousands).

  • @markclavecin
    @markclavecin Год назад +7

    I met Rudy when he came to the restaurant I was the Chef Sommelier at. His talent for blind tasting was absolutely amazing. I saw him again at La Paulee in New York. He was at a table with a 6 liter bottle of Romanee Conti 1979 in front of him. He offered me a taste. The bottle carried the number 0001.

  • @robdielemans9189
    @robdielemans9189 Год назад +20

    I liked the sour grapes one the most. Rudy must've had an amazing palate in order to fabricate amazing wines by blending a slew of other wines and some additives. I hope he starts a YT wine channel I believe we can learn a lot from him.

    • @simply417guy
      @simply417guy 10 месяцев назад

      I initially had the same thought, “that Rudy must’ve had an amazing palate”, but then I thought, how would a buyer even know what an ultra rare, 1 of only 8 bottles ever made, 1940ish French Bordeaux even taste like? 🤔 😊

    • @robdielemans9189
      @robdielemans9189 10 месяцев назад

      @@simply417guy Your remark triggered a spark in my brain. What if..... Rudy was great at social engineering and meticulously picked out the people who pay big bucks for wine but who weren't the most educated nor great at tasting and understanding when a wine is majestical. I've got some friends who still smoke and when I open up a bottle for them I don't choose the one where the greatness comes from an intricate bouquet of subtle notes. I just go for big taste. Interesting thought this one is.

  • @jameshaws9986
    @jameshaws9986 Год назад

    I kinda wanna have one of the rudy wines. That'd be a great story to tell

  • @mh1972
    @mh1972 Год назад +5

    I love how Austrian wine makers messed up but learned from it an it turned around the whole scene for the good

    • @lucvanackeren5445
      @lucvanackeren5445 Год назад

      I thought it was mainly a Dutchman who was behind the glycol fraude ...

  • @teonatokhadze1255
    @teonatokhadze1255 Год назад +1

    Thanks Konstantin for this entertaining video. And what a coincidence for me, as i am reading a book about scandal #2. The name of the book is Billionaire's Vinegar. Very juicy and captivating story indeed.

  • @ptg01
    @ptg01 Год назад +1

    Great video ! Indeed, the damage RUDY did is still unknown. But one has to be impressed with his palate and his ability to blend wines and fool a lot of 'experts / collectors''....

  • @senator558
    @senator558 Год назад

    The Premier Cru scandal was pretty big too.

  • @fuzznakano
    @fuzznakano Год назад

    good show Konnie

  • @stephenbest4924
    @stephenbest4924 Год назад

    Very interesting.

  • @garrettkowalsky5650
    @garrettkowalsky5650 11 месяцев назад

    One that I lived through in the industry was the Gianfranco Soldera scandal. Supposedly an ex-employee angers the winery at night, opens the spigots, and almost the entirety of 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, etc are dumped onto the floor. HOWEVER, based on comments and behavior afterwards, there are unsubstantiated rumors that it was actually just an insurance play all along. Soldera was a unique personality and not beloved by all (RIP)

  • @georgigeorgiev-ei4or
    @georgigeorgiev-ei4or Год назад

    Some years ago I read that Las Vegas has sold more '82 Petrus that the winery has produced.

  • @ryanrowat6640
    @ryanrowat6640 Год назад +1

    I'm interested in knowing if Rudy's counterfeit wine was actually good. The show indicated he has an amazing skill in tasting wine.

  • @dees86
    @dees86 Год назад +1

    A history from the pinot of a winemaker:
    Customer orders 12 bottles of aged wine and brings them back as he considered them corked. In case the real problem was removing the cork without breaking. He destroyed all corks and did Not taste any of the bottles. He showed up 2 days after opening and the wines were still quite alive but not willing to pay or understand

  • @cutrockr-diecastracing2773
    @cutrockr-diecastracing2773 Год назад +2

    The German wine scandal of engine coolant use was what came to mind when I saw your heading.
    I know you described it differently, but how I can recall it at the time. (Aussie here) It really affected what was a great industry for German wine in this country at the time, for many years to follow. (My first "official" training in wine tasting was from the German Wine Exporters here before that time, however, was weaned on Champagne!)
    But....On a smaller wine scandal level......Hard to prove later, but.....
    Scenario:
    One visits a winery for a taste.....
    Buys some bottles of the excellent samples given....
    Then later, opens the wine, and it is.....Scheiße
    Now, I know that can be for many reasons....
    But one of them could be, what they served you, isn't what they sold you!
    Love your work, Merci
    Marc D - downunder

  • @88gcllc
    @88gcllc Год назад

    Gr8 video, Petrus and DRC r the most counterfeited wines n the world

  • @aarondesentz8742
    @aarondesentz8742 Год назад

    This was a very cool video

  • @SteelyTheVan
    @SteelyTheVan Год назад +2

    A wonderful topic to cover - I’m sure it’s just the tip of the iceberg. I know certain bars top off their “top shelf” spirits with lesser brands (This happens a lot in Vegas - single malt tastes a lot like Johnny Walker Red, hmmm) However, are there examples of regular practice at restaurants around wine - not topping off, but misrepresenting?
    One question for you- can you cover wine additives and how (if at all possible) to determine which wines contain those additives ? I know it’s more common to fine additives in lower priced wines, but not always….

  • @williamgechtman9287
    @williamgechtman9287 Год назад +1

    The Carolina Wine Company in North Carolina was named one of the top wine retailers in the country, with temperature controlled storage. They would regularly offer futures at reasonable prices for hard to get wines and relatively unknown wines at bargain prices that turned out to be great.
    Unfortunately, they were using the proceeds from new futures sales to pay for other wines that had already been purchased, as it was shipped.
    I lost a not insubstantial amount of money as I was one of the ones holding the "hot potato" when this business practice came to light and the business had to declare bankruptcy. I was in good company, as the governor of North Carolina and Itzhak Perlman also both lost money.
    More than the money, what I miss most is the wine that was never delivered but I had paid for and was in my "mental cellar," including '05 Chateau Margaux and a few bottles of Royal Tokakji Essencia.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад

      That must hurt!

    • @someoneelse2262
      @someoneelse2262 Год назад

      Wow. Hadn't heard about that one. Sounds like the same exact schemeas the Premier Cru one in Berkeley CA that I mentioned above. John Fox from Premier Cru got sentences to six years in (a predictably cushy) jail (he just got out!). Did anybody get sent down in the Carolina Wine Co?

    • @williamgechtman9287
      @williamgechtman9287 Год назад

      @@someoneelse2262 This took place in 2009, or at least the bankruptcies, personal and corporate, were filed then, but I don't remember a criminal case. A quick and not extensive Google search did not bring one up up.
      I'm not sure if the owner, Chrish Peel, wanted to commit fraud, or just got behind and then kept dancing as fast as he could, delivering a quality product, good value for money, up until the day he couldn't.

    • @williamgechtman9287
      @williamgechtman9287 Год назад

      @@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine It did, but luckily there was other wine with which to console myself, including wines bought through them.
      Do you know anything about Terre du Lion, a St Julien I got from them at a ridiculously low price, that was delicious for years?
      It was reputed to be adjacent to the Leoville las Cases vineyard, and in the family, but vines too young to use. It disappeared after 2009, I think, the story being it was finally being blended into some of the lesser LLC labels. None of that may be true, of course.
      Thanks for all the excellent content!

  • @sirclemeni1
    @sirclemeni1 Год назад +1

    im from austria and some areas from burgenland could stil not recover 100% from the glycol scandal. on average wines from burgenland are typically sold 20-30% cheaper than wines from lower austria or styria with the same quality. one reason for me to visit the area around the neusiedlersee once a year to stock up on reds and on rich white wines. you can get some really high quality blaufränkisch, chardonnay and cabernet for 15€ per bottle.

  • @clydeblair9622
    @clydeblair9622 Год назад

    Heh, heh, heh. W. C. Fields said "never give a sucker an even break". More money than brains.

  • @powder-blue
    @powder-blue Год назад +1

    Wow 1985 was a wild year. (Also the year I was born haha)
    More wine scandals please!

  • @mark-matthijskattenberg7122
    @mark-matthijskattenberg7122 Год назад

    Nice video: maybe you can also make a video on German wine in the seventies?

  • @spiritalex9397
    @spiritalex9397 Год назад

    No favourite scandal but maybe you could do another one about this Bordeaux-Wine-Scandal whose trials have been held recently? Anyway thanks for the video!

  • @stanleovart
    @stanleovart Год назад

    Interesting. Give More stories

  • @andrewyarosh1809
    @andrewyarosh1809 Год назад

    For the next volume, let’s talk about the Burgundians and other French producers adding Algerian and Tunisian bulk wine to plump up unripe vintages.

  • @johnqureshi9840
    @johnqureshi9840 Год назад +1

    Worst scandal for me is being priced out of the burgundy market

  • @missourimongoose8858
    @missourimongoose8858 Год назад

    You should make one of Rudy's recipes sometime for a video just to see how it is

  • @Fibonacci21
    @Fibonacci21 10 месяцев назад

    Dr. Conti made indeed some huge mistakes, but on the other hand we have to admit that he managed to recreate the perfect replica, fooling people who are have tried and collect some of the most expensive wines in the world. I agree with Konstantin though that retailers and wine makers should work together to minimize counterfeit.

  • @Pummelfay
    @Pummelfay Год назад

    Did u taste Le Tapie (the red one on jaques). I love it.

  • @marquisbois990
    @marquisbois990 Год назад +2

    Biggest wine scandal I can think of is that time I drank way too much in the company of my mother-in-law. I’ll leave it to your imagination….

  • @ericifune5543
    @ericifune5543 Год назад

    In the early 70's, Port producers had to get their fortifying spirit from the governmental IVP. A lab tested the completed wine and found the spirit used was thousands of years old and probably petroleum based rather than grape based. All Port from 1972-1973 had to be destroyed.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад

      Wow … never heard that story before. Is there an article on that?

    • @ericifune5543
      @ericifune5543 Год назад

      @@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine I've talked to a number of family run Port producers who discuss it. I've tasted a1973 White Colheita which was technically illegal, but the family kept a few bottles. (Not for sale of course.)

  • @clydeblair9622
    @clydeblair9622 Год назад

    I was working for Pieroth when the scandal was revealed. We had to do some fancy stepping at appointments! Although looked down upon, we actually had some outstanding wines especially from the Nahe. A client and I shared boar burgers with a Nahe Qualitatswein and he bought 2 cases. Oh, and that Mosel Auslese!

  • @myronroth6164
    @myronroth6164 Год назад +1

    Great summary. Not a scandal per se, but the book "Billionaire's Vinegar" makes for a great read. Also, not really a scandal by the "Judgement of Paris" is also great story of the quirkiness of the wine industry (and the subject of a great movie, Bottle Shock).

    • @msalvs
      @msalvs Год назад

      Thank you for the recommendations

  • @wildflorida8007
    @wildflorida8007 Год назад

    🍷 so scandalous!

  • @maxikochi
    @maxikochi Год назад +1

    Schloss Schönborn in the Rheingau is an interesting story too. Perfect example for the work of german food safety authorities to not only ensure food safety but also faire competition. Nevertheless i would like to try one of those "illegally" produces wines as they supposedly taste phenomenal!

  • @mrmistmonster
    @mrmistmonster Год назад

    I watched Sour Grapes when it was on one of the streaming services and it is some funny, funny stuff. Features the third Koch brother.

  • @jwp2166
    @jwp2166 Год назад +4

    Just after your video I watched Sour Grapes (for the second time). It's a great documentary. My main question about it remains: Did Rudy Kurniawan really have the amazing wine palate and knowledge that so many in the documentary say he did and if so how did he acquire it being so young and having no evidence of serious wine training? I'm thinking you have far more knowledge, training, and expertise about wines than he did. Would appreciate your thoughts on the matter. Appreciate the fact that you keep coming up with interesting ways to talk about wine.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +1

      That’s hard to say. He might have been able to make people believe that he is a great taster, just like he made them believe he is a rich kid.

  • @scottcrosby9827
    @scottcrosby9827 Год назад +1

    Hi Konstantin, I have a question for you and potentially an idea for another video. The question is, what is the best way to go for finding the best value in bordeaux between buying second wines of top chateau vs buying the top wine from lesser known, and thus less expensive, chateau from the same appellation?

    • @scottcrosby9827
      @scottcrosby9827 Год назад

      And by top chateau, I don't mean first growths, but well regarded chateau whose first wine goes for several hundred dollars. For example a comparison of Les Griffons de Pichon Baron vs a Ch. Haut Bages Liberal. Similarly priced for under $100 but one is second wine of a Ch. whose first wine is $300 and other is top wine from a less prestigious chateau

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +4

      I would say definitely buy top wine from lesser known châteaux

    • @scottcrosby9827
      @scottcrosby9827 Год назад

      @@KonstantinBaumMasterofWine thanks for the reply. I will put this to the test!

  • @atamo4323
    @atamo4323 Год назад +1

    I wonder if wines bought at Sotheby’s wine store are the real deal or could they be unrealized fakes?

  • @df71091
    @df71091 Год назад

    i have alot of Beerenauslese, Trockenbeerenauslese, Eiswein from vintages below 1980, could it still be poisonous?(Mostly from Rust,Neusidl-Burgenland)

  • @gerhard15
    @gerhard15 Год назад

    I first heard about the antifreeze scandal in the Simpsons episode as well.
    Time is passing by...

  • @Kevin-yh5br
    @Kevin-yh5br Год назад

    What is the theme music used in your videos?

  • @tomddd
    @tomddd Год назад +1

    To be honest 48g per litre is quite a lot - to put it in perspective, wine containing 12 % alcohol by volume contains about 95g per litre of ethanol.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад

      Yes, but this was the highest level ever recorded. Most wines had far lower levels and the risks were greatly exaggerated

  • @daniobevasdellio7066
    @daniobevasdellio7066 Год назад

    I think you left out the "metanolo" scandal from Brunello few decades ago

  • @Ruirspirul
    @Ruirspirul Год назад

    sour grapes is an amazing documentary 😅

  • @miguelcarrillo202
    @miguelcarrillo202 Год назад

    That's hilarious. I was thinking of the same Episode of the Simpsons when I had first heard of this. Awesome

  • @typerightseesight
    @typerightseesight Год назад

    I just knew we used it to keep the soap from freezing in the winter as a professional window cleaner. haha.

  • @sherriyu8737
    @sherriyu8737 Год назад

    How about Brunello Gate?

  • @andreasessa2903
    @andreasessa2903 Год назад

    missing about Narzole 1986

  • @jicklesjingles8134
    @jicklesjingles8134 Год назад

    A big scandal today is that there are wine experts who rate wine that can't be serious in any way. For example there is Luca Maroni who to me is the biggest fake of all.

  • @mathieuTME
    @mathieuTME 3 месяца назад

    Goodness why couldn't they just put sugar in the wine to make it sweeter!

  • @mdzbtz
    @mdzbtz Год назад

    Brunellogate or course

  • @markyochoa
    @markyochoa Год назад

    I fucking love Sour Grapes. I rewatch it from time to time

  • @vaporizer1000
    @vaporizer1000 Год назад

    I am anyway like old wine but only if it is in good condition. Most difference here create cork. In my world time for wine is going very fast. And most important to me is feeling of berries in wine taste. From this year i using only ruber corks for wines. But with my technology even in this case i not sure about final results.

  • @emmetband4931
    @emmetband4931 Год назад

    Another more recent scandal, if I recall correctly, was the fake Cotes Du Rhone wines being shipped everywhere.

  • @veroman007
    @veroman007 Год назад

    the Bordeaux wine scandal involving Spanish and other wines posing as Bordeaux.

  • @thomaslyons4973
    @thomaslyons4973 Год назад

    apparently nerello mascalese was imported from etna and sold as barolo by the mafia in the 80s. I heard this in a wine bar in sicily so I can't comment on its veracity

  • @MrWhangdoodles
    @MrWhangdoodles Год назад

    Yeah, the glycol scandal is still talked about in Austria. I joke about it every now and then when I drink Austrian wines.
    Es ist schon seltsam was man macht, um weniger zu arbeiten.

  • @thomasmichael6509
    @thomasmichael6509 Год назад +1

    I don’t know if this is a Scandal, but I’d love your opinion on this. There are lots of articles floating around saying that it’s a myth that you need to store wine on its side, and some university did some study or something showing it wasn’t true. Have you heard of this? If so; what are your thoughts and experience on this?

    • @veroman007
      @veroman007 Год назад

      shorter periods it may be fine but the cork will dry out absolutely if stored upright. no way around that law of nature

    • @thomasmichael6509
      @thomasmichael6509 Год назад

      @@veroman007 yeah they claimed that since there’s 100% humidity inside the bottle it would never dry out, but I think their study didn’t test anything more than 10 years

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад +3

      Scientific research suggests that storing bottles upright doesn’t affect the flexibility of the cork while also protecting the cork from the wine’s acid, tannins, alcohol. Difficult to say what this would look like after 30 years

  • @martintayler23
    @martintayler23 Год назад

    Diethylene glycol that was added to the wine was not anti-freeze yet Ethylene Glycol is. It was sensationalist reporting using the word 'anti-freeze' that got people concerned and although no-one died from this doctoring I remember very well the harm it did to Austrian wines in particular although German wines were also tainted by this scandal.

  • @artkingvie
    @artkingvie Год назад

    For those interested in the Austrian wine scandal, I can highly recommend the deep dive that Fredrik Knudsen did: ruclips.net/video/qhN-o2ame-4/видео.html

  • @Phobero
    @Phobero 11 месяцев назад

    Wait - no methanol scandal in Italy? 😮

  • @philipohmes9395
    @philipohmes9395 Год назад

    Then there are the horse meat for beef scandals, extra virgin olive oils, turmeric for saffron scandals. We should not forget the chic brand name scandals for clothes, accessories or shoes either. We could add to that precious stones for jewels worn. So I can imagine a gathering of people, tasting sketchy wines, eating horse meat canapes, with wearing fake clothes and jewels. "It is all an illusion as I recall, I really don't know clouds at all... " ruclips.net/video/8L1UngfqojI/видео.html, Judy Collins, "Both Sides Now" recording.

  • @gls888
    @gls888 Год назад

    You've downplayed Sotheby's role in perpetuating the scams. Too much money in auctioning rare wine for them to curate and prevent frauds from entering the marketplace, instead they promoted them.

    • @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine
      @KonstantinBaumMasterofWine  Год назад

      Christie’s with Michael Broadbent was very involved in the Jefferson bottles. Sotheby’s less so. I didn’t downplay anyone’s role but there is far more to those stories than what fits into a 9 min video.

  • @carbamyl
    @carbamyl Год назад

    Châteauneuf customs busted à noria of concrete truck full of big bags filled with Vin de pays du Gard. Around 10.000 Hl

    • @someoneelse2262
      @someoneelse2262 Год назад

      If we start on that one, the lines of tanker cars heading north in the 40s through the 80s where Algerian wines would go into Rhone wines, Rhone wines would go into Burgundy, etc. It would still happen except climate change is doing the shipping now :) And of course the freight cars of beet sugar that used to move around France right around harvest when i was a kid were always pretty impressive as well.

  • @flatlander6734
    @flatlander6734 Год назад

    That was interesting. But dude, you were taliking so fast!!!!!! Were you running out of video tape???

  • @RK-tj3tw
    @RK-tj3tw Год назад

    Not really a scandal, but i would love to definitively know why Australia uses the word Shiraz instead of Syrah. I have heard of everything from debunked Iran connotations to illiterate grape growers in the 19th century or maybe just a weird accent thing...what is the truth?

  • @garyedwards1150
    @garyedwards1150 Год назад

    Sour Grapes is excellent. I dont feel you can be too hard on the buyers, some con men are really good at what they do.