New Zealand Triumphs at 2012 International Wine Challenge
New Zealand Triumphs at the 2012 International Wine Challenge
It is the Olympics of wine and New Zealand has shown that quality not quantity is the key to medals success. The 2012 International Wine Challenge (IWC) awarded New Zealand wineries 26 Gold medals, an increase of almost 25% year on year, which placed New Zealand as the 6th most-awarded wine producing country in the world.
Delegat's Wine Estate and Mills Reef Winery led the way for New Zealand wineries each picking up two of the highly coveted Gold medals. New Zealand wines were also awarded an impressive 100 Silver medals, 166 Bronze medals and 168 Commended awards.
New Zealand wines were also rated as the 'cleanest' wines in the world – Kiwi entries had the lowest incidence of wine faults such as cork taint or oxidation compared with entries from 49 other countries. With more than nine out of ten bottles of New Zealand wine sealed under screwcap, the aluminium closure industry will be claiming victory over their natural cork rivals.
The 29th IWC saw 425 Gold medals awarded (the highest Gold medal tally in the history of the IWC) with winning wines selected from a record 50 countries. For the first time, entries were received from Colombia and Bosnia and Herzegovina with the latter awarded one Silver and two Bronze, establishing them as emerging contenders for quality wine production.
Charles Metcalfe, Co-Chairman of the IWC, says: “The IWC is the most prestigious and influential wine contest in the world. Its global reputation means that winning an award is a tremendous achievement, and brings the award-winning wine to the attention of an international audience. The quality of the entries from established and emerging wine producing nations is testament to the unrivalled credibility and standing of the IWC.”
Here
are some of the highlights from this year’s
results:
• Record number of 50 countries entered the
competition
• Over 376 different grape
varietals
• 4,777 total medals awarded
o 425 Gold
medals
o 1,637 Silver medals
o 2,715 Bronze
medals
• Plus a further 3,488 Commended
wines
• The top three Gold medal-winning nations for
2012 are reigning champions France with 120, Australia 69
and Portugal 55
• France topped the medal board overall
with a total of 1,136 medals, while Australia came second
with 673 and Portugal third with 444
Celebrity medal
successes include:
• Straight from Her Majesty the
Queen’s Jubilee lunch and the Prime Ministers reception at
10 Downing Street, is British, Gold medal Camel Valley Brut
2010
• American film director, producer and
screenwriter, Francis Ford Coppola, scooped 3 Bronze awards
for Rubicon
• French rugby star Gerard Bertrand scored
high with 2 Gold medals for his Domaine De Villemajou 2010
and Grand Terrior Pic Saint Loup 2010
• Professional
golfer Ernie Els got a whole in one when he picked up 3
Silver medals for his Ernie Els Cabernet Sauvignon 2010,
Ernie Els Proprietor's Blend 2010, Ernie Els Proprietor's
Syrah 2010
Charles Metcalfe adds: “Medal winning wines have the guarantee of being tasted by some of the world’s best, most impartial tasters. So the consumer can be guided and reassured by the IWC logo when it comes to selecting wines of quality and character.”
Over 400 experienced judges, including many Masters of Wine, meticulously tasted the IWC’s medal-winning wines, with each wine being tested at least three, and sometimes up to six, times, with marks for faithfulness to variety, country, region and vintage. Wine lovers can be confident when choosing a wine featuring the IWC logo that it has been rigorously judged.
The renowned and respected panel of Co-Chairmen – Tim Atkin MW, Sam Harrop MW, Charles Metcalfe, Derek Smedley MW, along with global wine expert and TV personality.
Oz Clarke, were joined by Peter McCombie MW who takes his place on the panel for the first time this year.
Details of all the winning wines are available at the IWC’s website www.internationalwinechallenge.com where you can use the search tool to find your perfect wine by grape, style and price at an outlet near you. Many medal winning wines will display the IWC logo on the bottle for easy identification.
The International Wine Challenge
(IWC):
• This is the 29th year of the International
Wine Challenge (IWC)
• The IWC is accepted as the
world’s finest and most meticulously judged wine
competition
• The IWC assesses every wine blind and
judges each for its faithfulness to style, region and
vintage
• Throughout the rigorous judging processes,
each medal winning wine is tasted on three separate
occasions by at least 10 different judges
• *Awards
include medals (Gold, Silver, Bronze) and Commended
awards
• Visit the IWC website www.internationalwinechallenge.com for
the full list of
winners
ENDS