Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting

Noble ring pulls

• 6 min read
Djuce tasting pack

Delicious canned wines and their other virtues. A version of this article is published by the Financial Times. See also Cans continued. Above, the tasting pack from Djuce.

I went to a tasting of 120 wines from some of South Africa’s most admired producers the other day. I didn’t taste them all but managed a good portion of them and the wine that stood out for me comes in a 25-cl can retailing for £5.

Admittedly the name is memorable. Worcester Sauce is typical of the creativity of the owner of The Liberator brand, and canned-wine proselytiser, Master of Wine Richard Kelley. It comes from the Cape wine region Worcester and is a strong, sweet, pale red wine made from Red Muscadel, the dark-skinned version of the poshest sort of Muscat grape. It’s fresh and grapey but far from vapid, lingering on the palate with quite a bit of presence and grip. I thought it great value and it rather distracted me from the other sweet wine there, the acclaimed wine producer Chris Alheit’s Lost and Found straw wine at £75 a half-bottle (also from Muscat vines, in this case planted before the Boer War apparently).

But Worcester Sauce is far from the only outstanding wine I have opened with a ring pull recently. Canned wine seems to be moving rapidly from convenient novelty to a category of real interest to serious wine producers and therefore drinkers.

Djuce, based in Berlin, puts wine from some surprisingly smart addresses in cans and offers free returns and free shipping – but delivers only to Germany, Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands. Verget, Guffens-Heynen and Dominique Piron in France and Meinklang in Austria have all supplied wine to Djuce and I can well understand why the Meinklang 2021 skin-contact 11.5% orange wine has already sold out.

Djuce’s sales pitch does not hold back in spelling out the environmental benefits of a can over a glass bottle. On their website Djuce maintain that wine drinkers should pat themselves on the back when they choose a can over a glass bottle, claiming, on the basis of a detailed survey by the highly environmentally aware Swedish alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, that a can is ‘28 times more efficient to recycle than bottles’ and that ‘three-quarters of all aluminum ever mined is still in use today’. According to the same survey, producing three 25-cl aluminum cans instead of a traditional 75-cl wine bottle can reduce carbon emissions by 79%.

Glass may be usefully and uniquely inert for wines meant to be cellared for years but for the 95% of all wine consumed within months, often hours, of purchase, bottles are increasingly expensive, breakable, heavy, inconveniently shaped containers. Every wine producer I talk to reports a current shortage of glass bottles, with their cost escalating, sometimes doubling, thanks to a shortage of raw materials and skyrocketing energy costs.

Glass furnaces require huge amounts of energy and, while converting some of them to low-carbon fuel sources is underway, it is no overnight solution. The production of aluminium for cans makes its own contribution to greenhouse gas emissions but recycling cans emits only about five per cent as much carbon as recycling bottles – where there is an efficient glass-recycling system in place (which there isn’t in much of the US for instance).

But I have long argued that expecting newcomers to wine to lash out for a full 75 cl of it, plus very possibly a special implement (a corkscrew) to access the bottle, is pretty unreasonable. Cans of wine are much smaller, typically 25 cl (one-third of a bottle), and could hardly be easier to open. So they are surely much more attractive to the sort of younger drinker that the global wine trade is desperately trying to attract in the face of increasing competition from craft beer, artisan spirits, cocktails, and no- and low-alcohol drinks.

And this is without considering the convenience factor. Cans are light, unbreakable, swiftly chilled and easy to store and recycle, recycling systems for cans having been in place since the 1960s when so many other drinks became available in cans.

Canned wine is already massive in the US, with trade observers reporting sales doubling to $253 million last year, and it’s already growing fast elsewhere. Grand View Research predicts that the global canned-wine market will be worth $571.8 million by 2028, having grown more than 13% a year.

That said, even I find it difficult to imagine entertaining friends to dinner with a series of cans on the table. But I could very easily imagine bringing cans out of a chilled bag at Glyndebourne, or anywhere outdoors. And it seems clear to me that al fresco drinking has become very much more popular in the UK now that, thanks to global warming, our weather is so much less fresco.

A 25-cl can provides two of the smaller regular servings commonly encountered in the UK. (There has been a noticeable increase in serving larger volumes – 175 ml instead of the traditional 125 ml – but I think this is a bit too much, especially if the wine is best served chilled.)

Of course I don’t advocate drinking wine out of a can. A good-quality wine glass would transform the experience, and I could even imagine pouring several cans into a decanter if the wine merited it, which some of them do.

One of the many good canned wines I’ve encountered is produced by Anne-Victoire Monrozier, aka Miss Vicky, the French wine blogger who happens to be the partner of Christian Seely who, as managing director of AXA Millésimes, is responsible for wine estates as luxuriously classic as Chx Pichon Baron and Suduiraut in Bordeaux, Quinta do Noval in the Douro Valley, Domaine de l’Arlot in Burgundy and Outpost in the Napa Valley. She is also the daughter of a wine producer in Fleurie, so no prizes for guessing what she puts in her cans. But it is well worth trying and, as a juicy, fruity but captivating light-bodied red from hand-picked grapes grown organically, is just the sort of wine I welcome in a can.

I’ve also enjoyed wines from the Canned Wine Co and The Copper Crew, both of which supply the UK market, the latter specialising in wines from South Africa, which is especially adept at canning wine. The Copper Crew’s winemaker is the talented young Sam Lambson.

But Richard Kelley MW’s The Liberator range is the most innovative, the name inspired by the fact that he buys up individual lots of South African wine overlooked by others, and gives each their own memorable name.

UK supermarkets are gingerly trying out cans, though for the moment mainly for rather uninspiring wines. I hope this will change.

There is even an International Canned Wine competition. This year’s, held in Booneville, California, was the fourth. Best-of-show awards went to wines from Provence, New Zealand, South Australia and California. The judges – surely generously? – handed out 97 gold medals to 300 entries from 20 countries.

But of course canned wine is just one of many possible alternatives to glass bottles. Bottles made from recycled plastic or lined paper, bag in box, single-serve pouches and cartons are also worth considering – and the technology that keeps wine fresh and unsullied in them has improved enormously.

For some wine drinkers, any alternative to a glass bottle is unthinkable. I would urge them to lobby for reusable bottles instead.

Superior canned wines

Canned Wine Co, No 5 Old Vine Garnacha 2019 Vino de España 14.5%
£16.50 for three 25-cl cans Canned Wine Co

The Copper Crew Chenin Blanc 2021 Western Cape 13.5%
£24.99 for six 25-cl cans The Copper Crew

Maine & Jean-Marie Guffens, Djuce Marsanne 2020 France 13.5%
£8.50 per 25-cl can Newcomer Wines, €64 for 12 25-cl cans Djuce

The Liberator, This is the Sea Albariño 2021 Coastal Region 11%
£5 per 25-cl can

The Liberator, New Blood and Chocolate Cabernet Sauvignon/Shiraz 2020 Coastal Region 14.5%
£6 per 25-cl can

The Liberator, Worcester Sauce Red Muscadel 2021 Worcester 17.5%
£5 per 25-cl can

Orion, Terre di Faiano Organic Primitivo 2021 Puglia 13.5%
£3.49 per 25-cl can Waitrose

Verget, Djuce Grand Élevage 2019 Bourgogne Blanc 13.5%
£12 Newcomer Wines,
€9.50 per 25-cl can Djuce

Les Vins de Vicky, Ô Joie 2020 Fleurie 13%
$7 per 25-cl can Frankly Wines, NY, and others in the US
; imported into the UK by Propeller Wines

Liberator stockists include Brixton Wine Club, Hawkins Bros of Surrey, South Downs Cellars, Wine Reserve of Cobham, The Old Bridge Wine Shop of Huntingdon, Vino Gusto of Bury St Edmunds, Wright Wine Company of Skipton, Dylanwad of Wales, Woodwinters of Scotland and Valhalla’s Goat of Glasgow. In the UK Hawkins Bros operate VinCanCan which sells a range of about 70 canned wines online.

Tasting notes in our database and other stockists on Wine-Searcher.com. See also our other articles about canned wine.

Wählen Sie Ihre Mitgliedschaft
Mitglied
$135
/Jahr
Über 15 % jährlich sparen
Ideal für Weinliebhaber
  • Zugang zu 295,210 Weinbewertungen und 16,092 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
Inner Circle
$249
/Jahr
 
Ideal für Sammler

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
Professional
$299
/Jahr
Für Weinprofis (Einzelnutzer)
  • Zugang zu 295,210 Weinbewertungen und 16,092 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 25 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Gewerblich
$399
/Jahr
Für Unternehmen in der Weinbranche

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 250 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Bezahlen Sie mit
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Abonnieren Sie unseren Newsletter

Erhalten Sie die neuesten Beiträge von Jancis und ihrem Team führender Weinexperten.

Mit dem Abonnement erklären Sie sich mit unserer Datenschutzerklärung einverstanden und stimmen zu, Updates von unserem Unternehmen zu erhalten.

More Gratis für alle

Wild menu - yellow background
Gratis für alle Carefully cultivated wildness in the Home Counties. And an unmissable wine list. Farm to fish to fork to frying pan...
Chenin Blanxc vineyard in South Africa
Gratis für alle Jancis makes a suggestion. A version of this article is also published by the Financial Times. See also South Africa’s...
female urban hands each holding a glass of wine - Shutterstock
Gratis für alle Pauline Vicard asks, can wine still justify its cultural relevance? The answer to this question, rather than economics, may become...
Thomas Walk Vineyard in Kinsale
Gratis für alle Jancis is put in her place, by the hybrid grapes of the Emerald Isle. A shorter version of this article...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Jota Tanaka at Gotemba distillery
Getränke außer Wein An exploration of the transparency of Japanese whisky – and how that sensibility is influencing whiskey-making back in Scotland. Above...
Glass of rose with food
Verkostungsberichte Rosés for every occasion, from poolside pinks to robust BBQ-ready versions. We at JancisRobinson.com view the world through rose-tinted spectacles...
A bottle of Moreau Naudet Chablis
Weine der Woche A reference Chablis, albeit in a riper style, available from $39.95, £31.95 . Prompted by our recent forum discussion about...
Tertius Boshoff of Stellenrust shows off multiple Chenins in London
Verkostungsberichte The many Cape Chenins and Chenin blends shown at a big South African tasting in London in May reviewed. Tertius...
The Pacific ocean view from Flowers Vineyards
Unverblümte Meinungen Chris Howard asks, if there’s such a thing as volcanic wine, can there be oceanic wine? Above, seals on the...
Beaujolais vineyard harvest imminent
Verkostungsberichte Bien Boire (‘drinking well’) en Beaujolais is more fun than Bordeaux’s primeurs and offers plenty of excellent wines, reports Natasha...
Alessandro Campatelli of Riecine
Verkostungsberichte Pleasant surprises from a torrid year. Above, Alessandro Campatelli, director and oenologist (and now owner) at Riecine, made a 2022...
Japanese Wine by Nick Rowan - book cover
Buchrezensionen Nick Rowan’s new book is an amazingly complete guide to the wine (and cheese!) of Japan, for amateurs and professionals...
Weininspiration wöchentlich direkt in Ihr Postfach
Unser Newsletter erscheint jede Woche und ist für alle gratis
Mit Ihrem Abonnement erkennen Sie unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen an.