Winners for London Wine Competition 2021 released


Posted April 16, 2021 by Yash123

The 4th Annual London Wine Competition 2021 results are out. Participants from all around the world were judged by the top sommeliers, master’s of wine, and master sommeliers by quality, value and package.

 
Medal winners announced in the fourth London Wine Competition

Masters of Wine, sommeliers and top retailer and restaurant wine buyers choose the best wines in the world based on quality, value for money and what they look like


The results of the 2021 London Wine Competition reward some of the best wines in the world, as well as show the enormous diversity there is now in the style of wines being made, from a much larger number of countries.

In all there were wines from 36 countries to judge, with the most entries coming from, in order, Australia (207), Italy (140), Spain (131), France, Portugal, United States and Moldova, which also saw the biggest increase in wines from one country. There were entries from 13 countries for the first time including: Hungary; Belgium; Cyprus; Turkey; Germany; Lebanon; Sweden; Croatia; India; Israel; Trinidad and Tobago; Serbia; and Slovenia.

In total there was a near 20% increase in the number of entries to the competition.

Wines from 135 different varietals were entered, from which there is Super Six, making up most of the entries that include: Shiraz; Cabernet Sauvignon; Chardonnay; Merlot; Tempranillo; and Sauvignon Blanc. Wines made from Cabernet Sauvignon made up the most number of Gold medals.

The overall winning wine came from Australia with 96 points which was awarded to the Lévrier by Jo Irvine 2015 Anubis Cabernet Sauvignon made by Lévrier by Jo Irvine Wines in the Barossa Valley. As well as winning the best overall wine, Australia also received the highest percentage of gold medals.

Sid Patel, founder of the London Wine Competition, and chief executive of the Beverage Trade Network that runs the event, said: “We are delighted to see how far the London Wine Competition has come in the last 12 months, particularly considering the difficult conditions we have all been faced with, which also meant judging and hosting the event was more complicated than normal.

“But thankfully the wine itself is not disturbed by the pandemic and it has been great to see the quality, diversity and level of wine being entered from all over the world. Our thanks, go to all the producers that entered, but, in particular, to the hard work and professionalism of our judges whose calibre and expertise are so important in the overall success of the London Wine Competition.”

Unique judging criteria
The London Wine Competition raised the bar even higher with the judges selected to take part. The overall panel this year included 15 Masters of Wine and Master Sommeliers, all of who had to have direct wine buying responsibility in their current roles. Each panel had to include at least one MW or MS judge and a female judge.

Anne Jones, category manager for drinks at Waitrose, the UK’s biggest premium supermarket chain, explained why she was so keen to take part: “Out of all the competitions I judge for, the LWC is unique in assessing wines in the context of both the liquid in isolation as well as in the context of how a shopper would see it.”

Winning a medal in the London Wine Competition means as a winery, producer or winemaker, you know you are making wines that are in tune with what wine drinkers are looking for. A competition that puts every wine through three different stages of judges with separate scores for: a blind tasting to assess its quality; a value for money score based on the retail price; and a packaging and design score based on what it looks and feels like.

This is the same criteria that professional wine buyers use to determine which wines go on their own lists in their restaurants, bars or supermarket and retail shelves. It is also how average wine drinkers and consumers decide which wines they buy when shopping in a supermarket, specialist merchant or in a local bar or restaurant.

That’s the big difference about the London Wine Competition added judge, Barbara Drew MW, events manager at Berry Bros & Rudd: “The inclusion of packaging and design in the assessment sets this competition apart. I think the wine trade places too much emphasis on rating wines entirely ‘blind’. The truth is, few, if any consumers drink wine blind – the bottle, and the label are the first thing consumers see. What’s in the bottle is undoubtedly vital, but what’s on the bottle matters too.”

Top winners in the 2021 London Wine Competition

Wine Of The Year – Lévrier by Jo Irvine 2015 Anubis Cabernet Sauvignon, Lévrier by Jo Irvine, Australia.
Winery Of The Year – Bodegas Habla (Bodegas BH S.L.), Spain
Best Wine By Quality – Lévrier by Jo Irvine 2015 Anubis Cabernet Sauvignon, Lévrier by Jo Irvine Australia.
Best Wine By Value – Habla Nº22, Bodegas Habla, Spain
Best Wine By Packaging – Silverado Vineyards Estate Grown Cabernet Sauvignon, United States.

Best Wines by Country Awards
Australia: Lévrier by Jo Irvine 2015 Anubis Cabernet Sauvignon, Lévrier by Jo Irvine, Australia.
United States: Silverado Vineyards Estate Grown Cabernet Sauvignon
France: Champagne Philippe Glavier – Folie d’Cramant, Deux Six Wines
Italy: 924 Prosecco 2019, Carpenè Malvolti S.p.a.
Portugal: Quinta do Gradil 1492, Parras Wines
Spain: Habla Nº22 2016, Bodegas Habla
New Zealand: Yealands Reserve Sauvignon Blanc, Yealands
Greece: Venetsanos Nykteri 2018, Nykteri
Austria: Hafner Kashmir, 2016, Hafner Family Estate
South Africa: Du Toitskloof Old Vine Sauvignon Blanc, 2020, Du Toitskloof Wines
Moldova: Republic of- Rose De Purcari Sapiens, 2019 Vinaria Purcari SRL
Château Mukhrani Qvevri 2017, Château Mukhrani

Best wines by Varietal:
Cabernet Sauvignon: Lévrier by Jo Irvine 2015 Anubis Cabernet Sauvignon, Lévrier by Jo Irvine, Australia
Shiraz: Mr Riggs 2014 The Chap, Mr Riggs Wine Co, Australia
Tempranillo: Habla Nº22 2016, Bodegas Habla (Bodegas BH S.L.) Spain
Pinot Noir: Clyde Park 2020 Single Block F College Pinot Noir 2020, Clyde Park Vineyard, Australia
Zinfandel: Twisted Cedar Zinfandel 2017, CBC BevCo, United States
Sauvignon Blanc: Yealands Reserve Sauvignon Blanc 2020, New Zealand
Riesling: 2018er Dürkheimer Michelsberg GG Riesling Trocken, Weingut Karl Schaefer GmbH & Co.KG.

* You can view the full list of results in the London Wine Competition here.

Note to Editors

* The London Wine Competition is one part of the three London Competitions that also includes the London Beer Competition, the London Spirits Competition, all organised by the Beverage Trade Network, the events and competitions networking platform for the drinks industry.

* Wines are judged on the basis of three primary criteria – quality, value, and packaging – and scored on a 100-point scale. Spirits that scored 90+ points were awarded Gold medals, while spirits that scored 76 to 89 points were awarded Silver medals and spirits between 65 and 75 were awarded Bronze.


* For comment then contact Sid Patel at [email protected].
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Last Updated April 16, 2021