Volcanic Wine Awards | 25th anniversary events | The Jancis Robinson Story

England's grove of wine academe

Thursday 26 May 2016 • 5 min read
Image

26 May 2016 To celebrate the start of the International Cool Climate Wine Symposium in Brighton today we are republishing the article below about one of the driving forces behind the ICCWS, Plumpton College. Since it was written, way back in 2007 (look at those wine prices!), this educational establishment, the only one in Europe offering university level wine courses in English, has gone from strength to strength and has trained winemakers all over the world, not just in England but throughout France and in Germany, Portugal, Cyprus, Canada, California, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

14 July 2007 ‘Plumpton’ has a nice, cosy ring to it, doesn’t it? But could it join the list of the world’s pre-eminent centres of wine academe: Bordeaux, Montpellier and Dijon in France, Davis and Fresno in California, Adelaide in Australia, Geisenheim in Germany, Brock in Canada and so on? A new, £1.5 million Wine Centre has just been opened there, presumably with that hope in mind.

Plumpton College, a rural adjunct to the University of Brighton at the foot of the South Downs in some of southern England’s most beautiful countryside, is basically an agricultural college designed to provide vocational training for hundreds of teenagers. On the 2,000-acre (810-ha) campus are 300 head of dairy cattle as well as ewes and sows aplenty, cereal crops and hundreds of live educational aids from birds of prey to wallabies. However, 15 acres (6 ha) of their Sussex slopes are devoted to vines, specifically grown to provide practice for Plumpton’s 80 full-time and hundreds of part-time much more mature wine students.

Looking at the new Wine Centre’s winery gleaming with stainless steel and even a few oak barrels, Mary Kelly, an Irishwoman who teaches wine chemistry at Montpellier and has her own winery in the Coteaux du Languedoc in southern France, observed, 'I’m really jealous of the set-up here. We don’t have anything like this at Montpellier.'

Christine Parkinson, the highly respected and resourceful wine buyer of Alan Yau’s Hakkasan group of restaurants in London, was also at the opening – not least because she sends her team on a bespoke 12-week wine course at Plumpton. 'We’re massive fans of the college', she assured me.

Thanks to donations from the likes of the South East Economic Development Agency and the Vintners Company, Plumpton’s wine department is at last housed in an attractive, specially designed, ecologically sound, wavy-roofed new building with tiered lecture room, two labs and a light, airy Vintners Room for wine-related events. For the moment it looks straight out on to its predecessor, a brick shed (soon to be pulled down) that is more than a little reminiscent of a prisoner of war camp. Indeed most of Plumpton’s architecture has a certain Heath Robinson make do and mend feel to it.

Perhaps it is this ethos that has imbued so many Plumpton graduates with such obvious affection for the place and a spirit of camaraderie that contrasts with the earnestness that can so easily blight wine students. Or perhaps it is the resolutely cheery, ruddy-faced Head of Wine Studies Chris Foss who was hired in 1988 to start this improbable enterprise.

He was chosen because he was Anglo-French, had made wine in Bordeaux and had some experience – not directly relevant, it has to be said – in tertiary education. The then Principal John Wilson’s initial decision to try to start a wine department was seen as both risky and foolhardy, but Foss has clearly inspired great loyalty as well as knowledge in the hundreds of Plumpton graduates who are now helping to run the wine business around the world. Plumpton graduates now make wine in California, Chile, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Portugal, Burgundy, Languedoc-Roussillon and of course England. Emma Rice went from editor of Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine Book to enologist [US spelling] at Cuvaison winery in the Napa Valley and says 'I would never have got this job without Plumpton, and thanks to the course in production, which I would thoroughly recommend, I now have a network of friends all over the world'.

Foss is inordinately proud of what has been achieved since the wine department started out as two rows of vines and two glass demijohns quietly fermenting away in his office. The department now offers three full-time wine courses including a BSc in vine-growing and winemaking, at least seven part-time courses plus those of the Wine & Spirit Education Trust, seven full-time members of staff who teach vine-growing, wine-making and a newer wine business course. He is also keen to develop the research side with all full-time students expected to play their part in, for example, adapting a milk analyser for wine analysis or investigating the importance of exactly when bentonite fining is added to a wine.

The Wine & Spirit Education Trust is based in London and has become the pre-eminent global force in theoretical wine education but Plumpton students are expected to get their hands and everything else dirty. Professor Richard Selley of Imperial College, London, invited by Foss to celebrate the opening with an apposite lecture on climate change, told me that Plumpton’s is the only library he knows with a notice telling students to take their rubber boots off before entering. I met two girls from Manchester who came to Plumpton every week on a part-time course and loved being thrown on to a tractor and being expected to make their very own wine.

Winemaking one day a week sounds implausible, or at least difficult, but there seems to be no shortage of energy and gusto within the ranks of students and staff which includes winemaker and Plumpton graduate Peter Morgan, who once worked at Nyetimber, producer of some of England’s finest wine. (One of his bottles of half-made fizz in a nearby bottle stack exploded halfway though the Principal’s speech at the opening ceremony.) The sparkling Plumpton Estate Pinot-Chardonnay Reserve seems to this palate to be the most successful of the college’s own wine range so far.

Practical wine courses are of course on offer all over the world, but Foss is keen to stress Plumpton’s unique selling proposition: 'We’re the only place delivering full-time courses in wine production and business in Europe in English.'

Iindeed it is the English language that may well hold the key to Plumpton’s success. Many of the students come from overseas. There are currently students from France and Portugal who have deliberately turned their backs on more obvious alternatives in their native countries because they want to combine their wine studies with learning English. Demand from South Korea in particular is especially healthy, apparently, and I met an unforgettably confident girl from Belarus who has just finished the first of her three years of wine business studies. Tatiana Malochka intends to return to Minsk to 'create a wine culture' in her native country by becoming a wine journalist or setting up her own company. Who introduced her to wine, I wondered? 'Myself', she answered proudly, and I do not doubt her.

SOME WINES FROM PLUMPTON ALUMNI

Camel Valley, Cornwall Pinot Noir Rosé 2004 England
Trophy-winning sparkling pink – the 2005 is £22.95

Cuvaison 2006 Napa Valley
Noel Young

Mudhouse Sauvignon Blanc 2006 Marlborough
A classic New Zealand combo of grape and place – from $10 in the US, £9 Four Walls Wine

Dom de la Pertuisane 2004 Vin de Pays des Côtes Catalanes
Full-bodied red from the Agly Valley – about $30 in the US

Dom de la Sauvageonne, Les Ruffes 2005 Coteaux du Languedoc
Mountain red, a blend of Syrah, Grenache and Carignan – £4.99 Booths

选择方案
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 289,030 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,889 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家
  • 存取 289,030 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,889 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 289,030 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,889 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用
  • 存取 289,030 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,889 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Free for all

White wine grapes from Shutterstock
Free for all 在较为奇特的葡萄品种中备受青睐的选择。本文的简化版本,推荐较少,由金融时报 发表。 与甚至仅仅10年前相比...
Kim Chalmers
Free for all 维多利亚州查尔默斯酒庄 (Chalmers Wine) 和查尔默斯苗圃 (Chalmers Nursery) 的 金·查尔默斯 (Kim...
J&B Burgundy tasting at the IOD in Jan 2026
Free for all 在伦敦勃艮第周之后,如何看待这个特殊的年份?毫无疑问,产量很小。而且也不算完美成型。本文的一个版本由金融时报 发表。请参阅...
Australian wine tanks and grapevines
Free for all 世界上充斥着无人问津的葡萄酒。本文的一个版本由金融时报 发表。上图为南澳大利亚的葡萄酒储罐群。 读到关于 当前威士忌过剩...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Three Kings parade in Seville 6 Jan 2026
Don't quote me 1月对于专业葡萄酒品鉴来说总是繁忙的月份。今年詹西斯 (Jancis) 提前做好了准备。 2026年有了一个真正愉快的开始,尼克 (Nick...
The Sportsman at sunset
Nick on restaurants 尼克 (Nick) 否认了经常针对餐厅评论家的指控。并重访了一家老牌最爱。 我们这些写餐厅评论的人总是会面临这样的问题:他们知道你要来吗...
Otto the dog standing on a snow-covered slope in Portugal's Douro, and the Wine news in 5 logo
Wine news in 5 此外,潮湿天气使加利福尼亚25年来首次摆脱干旱,并在杜罗河谷的葡萄园留下积雪——这让保罗·西明顿 (Paul Symington) 的狗奥托...
Stéphane, José and Vanessa Ferreira of Quinta do Pôpa
Wines of the week 如果说有一个国家在性价比葡萄酒方面表现出色,那一定是葡萄牙。这又是一款支持这一理论的葡萄酒。价格从 7欧元,11.29美元, 20英镑起...
Benoit and Emilie of Etienne Sauzet
Tasting articles 这是第 13 篇也是最后一篇进行中品鉴文章。有关此年份的更多信息,请参阅 勃艮第 2024 年份 – 我们的报道指南。 索迈兹...
Simon Rollin
Tasting articles 这是第 12 篇也是倒数第二篇进行中品鉴文章。有关这个年份的更多信息,请参阅 勃艮第 2024 年份 – 我们的报道指南。 夸尔酒庄...
Iceland snowy scene
Inside information 本月的冒险之旅中,本 (Ben) 前往北方的丹麦、瑞典和挪威。 我们抵达了一个国家,那里的北欧棱角被一层洁白的雪毯所柔化。蓝白色的...
Shaggy (Sylvain Pataille) and his dog Scoubidou
Tasting articles 13 篇进行中品鉴文章中的第 11 篇。有关此年份的更多信息,请参阅 勃艮第 2024 年份 – 我们的报道指南。 阿涅丝·帕凯酒庄...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.