Название: I Bought It, So I'll Drink It - The Joys (Or Not) Of Drinking Wine
Автор: Charles Jennings & Paul Keers
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Кулинария
isbn: 9781786068361
isbn:
The only dealings I can recall having, ever, with Virgin, before now, were when the whole family (years ago) flew Virgin Atlantic to San Francisco. At one point it was about 3 a.m. London time on the plane, almost everyone had passed out – when the Virgin cabin crew, in their smart red uniforms, woke us all up to offer us a mint’n’choc ice cream. We were too fuddled and exhausted to say No or For Christ’s sake. We humbly accepted our ices, ate them, and were, in some cretinous way, grateful for having been woken up in the dead of night and required to eat an entirely inappropriate snack. Well, we said, you don’t get that on BA. A woman in a red uniform woke me up with a mint’n’choc ice! Who cares about the rest of it? Who, indeed, can remember?
So thanks, Jay, Dave and Chris. It’s been fun. It’s been about the people. And, to some extent, it’s been about the wine.
PK
This wine delivery business – it’s such a palaver …
Oh, they make it sound easy. Give your address, name the day, pick your time. But it’s so much more complicated than that.
At one time, when I worked in an office, I would have my wine delivered there. Its clanking announced its contents to all and sundry across the open-plan, and no doubt other employees thought this was evidence of a profligate lifestyle typical of senior management.
I’m luckier now, as I often work from home. But it’s only a marginal improvement to have a delivery van arrive outside one’s house, proclaiming its provenance in its paintwork. Every curtain-twitcher in the street can see you’re having a load of wine delivered, and can assemble their own little bundle of judgements as to your wealth, lifestyle and alcohol consumption. (Later confirmed, of course, by examination of your recycling box …)
However, I can now theoretically name a day and pick a time when I will be home. And, significantly, when Mrs K will be out. So as not to trouble her, unnecessarily, with concerns about infelicitous expenditure, and overindulgent consumption. The wine can then be spirited into the cellar, where its presence will not be detected amongst the bottles which are Not To Be Touched.
I have now had experience of completing several sets of merchants’ instructions for wine deliveries. Sometimes they make supposedly helpful suggestions, like ‘Is there a shed or garage where we could leave it if you are out?’ No, there is not – because if the shed or garage had open access for deliveries, I would not be spending my money on wine, but on replacing all of my stolen tools.
Some also offer a two-and-a-half-hour window during which the delivery should occur. This is all well and good, but at some point during that time I am going to have to visit the lavatory. Dare I? The last time I tried it, no sooner had business commenced than the doorbell rang. I had to yell loudly enough to be heard down on the pavement that ‘I’m in the toilet!’, an announcement both surprising and unnecessarily informative to several passers-by and next-door’s nanny.
This time, I was sent a very nice text, to tell me that my wine would arrive between 12 and 2.30 p.m.
At 11.15, the doorbell rang.
There outside the house is the emblazoned van, informing the neighbours that my consumption is now so great I must have wine delivered a dozen bottles at a time. And there inside the house is Mrs K, still working in her study.
Here’s a word of advice for couriers. Wine is like a baby – better delivered when due.
Fortunately, I was not in the toilet. Also fortunately, I was closer to the front door than Mrs K.
Speed was of the essence. ‘Anything to sign?’ I asked brusquely, anticipating one of those ridiculous handheld electronic devices they ask you to ‘sign’ with a stylus. (Few of us have experience of writing on glass, apart from the ‘yoof’ who etch tags on to bus windows, and they are more likely to be recipients of a custodial sentence than a wine delivery.)
‘Just this piece of paper. They asked me to have one of those electronic things, and I said, “How’d you expect me to hold that and a case of wine?”’
Well, let’s not get into that on my doorstep right now, thank you very much. Last month we had 15 metres of skirting board delivered, and that chap managed it, but to be honest I just want to get this case inside and downstairs, before …
‘Is that something for me?’ Mrs K’s dulcet tones precede her steps downstairs. I am caught in the hallway, case in hands, like a dog with a string of sausages.
‘What?’
‘That box.’
I think I would be pushing my luck were I to retort, ‘What box?’
‘Ah. No. It’s just, er, a case of wine actually …’
‘Oh! A case of wine. A case.’ This emphasis does not mean that she suffers any category confusion about the actual concept of a case of wine. No: it is to convey that to her, ‘case’ suggests a suspect level of both consumption and expenditure.
Fortunately, my salvation is staring me in the face – almost literally, since I still have a case of wine clutched to my chest. On the top of the box is a sticker. In most cases, I would be embarrassed by it, since obviously I aspire to be the kind of person whose cases are labelled something like ‘12 x Latour’. However, this one reads ‘Under £6 Reds’.
I gesture towards it with my chin. Mrs K observes, then moves on, with a departing, descending ‘Hmmm …’, which, roughly translated, means ‘All right – this time …’
I take the case downstairs, and stash my embarrassingly cheap bottles away. But I wonder: why not save us all a load of trouble, and put those stickers on every case …?
CJ
One: So here we are, back in the South of France, just under the shoulder of Mont Ventoux, and our chums say, Let’s go to this cave, they’re advertising Champagne, no, not méthode Champenoise but actual Champagne, so we say, Fantastic, we haven’t been to a cave since almost this time last year, with you, as it happens, and off we go, down a deeply rutted French track, throwing up dust and gravel, sweltering slightly insanely in the heat, before drawing up in front of a nobly proportioned but apparently derelict château with an industrial crane sticking out of the top.
But what do you know? This is a work in progress: and yes, as we step over some power cables and a length of hose-pipe, it turns out that the Château la Croix des Pins is indeed in business, and has set out its stall in a freshly painted antechamber, formerly the private chapelle of the château – with, as a token of lingering piety, a couple of plaster seraphim on the wall behind the cash register.
What’s more, the instant we clear СКАЧАТЬ