Or cute dogs for special cuvees.originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Um, yeah, like Wildman, C&E, the old Schoonamaker, etc. In fact, in the old days, it was pretty much ubiquitous.originally posted by Mike Klein:
I think it is a little tacky but a lot of other importers beat him to it long ago. Chadderdon, as Nicholas mentioned, also Wilson Daniels had or has some pretty prominent neck labels and who knows what else. Probably quite a few others as well.
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Or cute dogs for special cuvees.originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Um, yeah, like Wildman, C&E, the old Schoonamaker, etc. In fact, in the old days, it was pretty much ubiquitous.originally posted by Mike Klein:
I think it is a little tacky but a lot of other importers beat him to it long ago. Chadderdon, as Nicholas mentioned, also Wilson Daniels had or has some pretty prominent neck labels and who knows what else. Probably quite a few others as well.
You know, if they didn't, no one would mind the importer intrusion.originally posted by Matteo Mollo:
Whatever, the wines kick ass anyway.
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
Who cares.How's the wine?
originally posted by Bill Lundstrom:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Back labels ... sometimes replace non-export back labels that contain useful information (such as, in Champagne, disgorgement date, dosage, etc.). That is a true handicap for American bottles.
for wines that aren't champagne what else would go on the back label that you can't glean from the web?
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
One recent bottle I had here in Paris was an ouill Ganevat chardonnay-savagnin blend. There was much detail on the back label about the blend composition, parcels/terroir, vintage, time in and type of barrel, the fact that it was ouill and not sous voile, etc. I'd imagine that would all be lost if an importer's back label had to take its place.
originally posted by SteveTimko:
It's not like it's unprecedented
![]()
Sadly, a lot of wine drinkers may not know Foillard, but they will know Kermit Lynch. I don't think it's ego. I agree with Slaton, that he's trying to create a brand. I also think it's a good short term boost because enough people will immediately know it's a wine of Kermit Lynch quality.
Or because they fear losing the AOC in any particular vintage and don't want to change labels if that happens.originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Some French producers are using what is technically the back label appear to be the front label in order to be able to add information that the authorities won't on the front label, and they call what appears to be the back label the front label.