The artwork and packaging department installs me with confidence. As a writer I'm really interested in the words. It's almost square, like a brick with chamfered edges on the longer sides, giving it that posh feel in the hands, like a real big pack of Davidoffs, or a $1000 perfume pack from the Madelaine. Posh stuff aside, turns out it's not like a brick by accident. In the later 'sixties, when the brilliant winemaker Ian Hickinbotham, who at Max Schubert's invitation was then Penfolds' sales manager in Victoria, was working on the first modern bladder packs, principally to increase the sales of Grange in Melbourne, he designed it like a brick. "I recall using an Otis King round ruler," he recalled in his autobiography Australian Plonky, "to calculate the measurements of a small carton to contain the bag so that the height was twice width, which was one-and-a-half times depth - the same as a household brick." See? Style change! You can tell I got that out of a book! Hah! Anyway, because of my height, it's easiest for me to start reading at the top. 'Stanley WINES,' it says. 'EST BEFORE AUG 09 315 21:12.' At first I felt it was unusual for winery historians to be so specific about the actual time of their establishment but then I realised there was quite a lot of time already passed by twelve past nine on the night of the 9th August whichever year they chose. Some of that critical text has managed to slip off the little matte rectangle where it was supposed to go, so I can only presume the bit that says 'Fine drinking now, but will cellar well for ten to fifteen years' was part of the stuff that missed its patch. Which patch, just incidentally, seems made from that rubbery stuff on scratchy scratchy gambling tickets.
That's always promising. Rub off to get rich.
Just to be thorough, let's have a read of the
end. Near the squirter, there's like a private letter to me. It says 'Notice
something different about your Stanley Cask? That's right, the name has
changed. As part of the EU agreement on wine terms, Red Lambrusco can only be
used to describe wine true to its varietal origin. For this reason, the
Australian wine industry has adopted the name Dolce Rosso. So rest assured that
while the name has changed, it's still the same great wine. Stanley WINES.'
Noting the correct use of apostrophe's, I felt real confident about reading the
other end. Down here it says STANLEY WINE COMPANY Stanley WINES NEW NAME
SAME WINE DOLCE ROSSO RED LAMBRUSCO Stanley takes pride in
producing wines of consistent quality. If you are not totally
satisfied with this wine please ring Quality Assurance 1800 088 711. Nothing's
as sure as Stanley.' If you ring, you'll probably get Angela, who seems
real helpful in a kind, motherly sort of way, but I only got her answering thing. I'll bet she was talking to Stanley. Then there's a proper
official-looking bit that goes 'THE STANLEY WINE COMPANY PTY LTD SILVER CITY
HIGHWAY, BURONGA, NSW 2739 THIS WINE WAS MADE USING FINING AGENTS WHICH CONTAIN
EGG, MILK, AND/OR FISH PRODUCTS TRACES MAY REMAIN. PRESERVATIVE (220) ADDED
10.5% ALC/VOL PRODUCT OF AUSTRALIA (75%) AND SOUTH AFRICA (25%)' So there you
go. A great example of how Australia is more honest at packaging than those
friggin Froggies. Anyway, let's taste it. Ready? Okay. It seems just a bit
fizzy on appearance, like frizzante. But it settles down. It's also a bit
cloudy, like a natural wine. Hermann my butler tells me it's brown, advice
which I must take, being a colourblind person, expecting he means that its' an
orange wine. Mr Stanley was probly too far ahead of his time to tell us he made
it in an amphora back in the days when I cellared it. Okay then, lets pour one.
To be fair to them, I use the Riedel Dolce Rosso Red Lambrusco Sommelier
snifter ($128 ea) for wines of this calibre. I have a couple of those 220ml ISO
XL-5 Wine Taster glasses (presented free in the Adelaide Hills, see photo), but when I do the numbers, it says on the squirter
there's 33 standard drinks in there and 33x220ml makes 7.26l not four so I
prefer the Riedel Dolce Rosso Red Lambrusco Sommeliers because they don't even
have a Plimsoll line showing me how much I'm allowed to have in each one of
them. I reckon that's what they call rambiguity.




4 comments:
Remember, you asked for this readers...
Brilliant stuff Whitey!
While I am a huge fan of the Stanley Brothers I think you should have referenced this Stanley:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4HZcUGPr3A
While I am a great fan of the Stanley Brothers, I feel you should have referenced this Stanley:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4HZcUGPr3A
I apologise Bob. We never had - I've still never had - a television, so I missed this perfect Stanley. I find his dimple rather fetching.
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