Water, water, everywhere ... and all of it to drink

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
It's not every day of the week that you get rung up and asked if you will be a guest judge in a water competition - we’re not talking bottled waters here, but NZ tap water. The idea piqued my curiosity and some info duly arrived.

Water judging is a thing, with waters judged across colour (translucency without white or brown tones), clarity (crystal clear with no turbidity), aroma (pleasing to smell/nice scent) and taste (pleasing on the palate).

Water professionals can use a Water Tasting Wheel that includes the four basic taste perceptions of sweet, sour, salty and bitter alongside mouthfeel, chlorinous, earthy/mouldy, vegetable/flowery, chemical/petrol and more. One of the characters listed was ‘fishy’ which was somewhat disconcerting, but thankfully did not appear in any of the samples I tasted.

The waters were to be judged at the Water Industry Operations Group NZ annual conference with the Water Taste Test sponsored by Ixom, where I was one of five judges. This has been happening in NZ since 2015, and even longer in Australia.

The whole experience had me thinking of the expectations one has as a ratepayer: you pay your rates and receive certain services, one of which is access to potable water when you turn on the tap. I take this completely for granted (I’m certain I’m not alone here).

The conference reminded me that there are people working night and day to ensure that provision of safe drinking water; something which Ixom & the Water Taste Test endeavours to highlight. Raise a glass to them!

Another local gin strikes gold

Boutique Arrowtown distillery Rifters recently secured gold at the San Francisco World Spirits Competition for their Quartz Gin, topping up the trophy cabinet with silver for their Original Dry Gin. The San Francisco competition began in 2000 and is the oldest and largest of its kind.

Rifters was founded by two Central Otago builders who met on the job, the seeds of their gin endeavour sown in 2018, with recipe trialling getting under way in earnest in 2019. Rifters was born, and their gins are now available domestically and in duty-free.

2020 Trinity Hill Gimblett Gravels Marsanne Viognier 

Price RRP $39.99
Rating Excellent 

Perfume leaps out of 
the glass, fresh grapes, 
wine gums, a Muscat 
impression, perhaps 
apricot & apricot 
kernel, spices, 
potpourri with time. 
Creamy, oily richness 
to the texture yet a 
grainy, chewiness as 
well, the sweet fruit 
corseted by a nutty, 
bittersweet quality. 
Develops rose petal 
with a tangy, grapey 
aspect to the close. 
Uncommon, but works 
nicely.

www.trinityhill.com

2022 Misha’s Vineyard The Cadenza Late Harvest Gewurztraminer

Price RRP $35
Rating Excellent

Perfumed nose with a 
lychee top note, 
backed by rose petal 
and a stonefruit 
backdrop. Rather nice 
palate, richness yet 
not overwhelming 
sweetness, good 
complexity. Creaming 
soda, apricot, 
stonefruits, fruit 
pastille/jube, a nutty 
aspect to the close. 
Delightfully long carry 
with freshness too. 
This would be magic 
with fresh-cut fruit. 

www.mishasvineyard.com

2017 Pegasus Bay The Encore Noble Riesling

Price RRP $44
Rating Outstanding

The nose oozes 
richness. Barley sugar, 
musk, smoky botrytis, 
honey, beeswax, 
mandarin, super 
complex. Lush, 
intensely viscous, 
coats the palate, yet for 
all its power and 
sweetness there’s 
lovely balance, with a 
core of acidity that 
keeps this fresh. 
Incredibly intense, 
dessert in a glass, the 
flavours linger & linger. 
Pair with blue cheese 
perhaps.

www.pegasusbay.com