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Master Class
How Barbara Philip became a member
of the international wine elite
By
Christina Burridge
For three-and-a-half years,” says Barbara Philip,
“it was pretty much 24/7.” Over a glass
of Domaine de l’Auster Faugères at Pied-à-Terre
on Cambie, the 42-year-old, Saskatchewan-born wine consultant
is describing her gruelling preparation for the Master
of Wine exam. Philip met Andrey Durbach, the proprietor
of Pied-à-Terre, back in theatre school at UBC.
As actors do, they both worked in restaurants to pay
the bills. Shortly after he started cooking at the Moustache
Café in North Vancouver, she took over the wine
list there.
By the time Philip decided to seek the MW designation,
some 10 years later, she was the sommelier at the Fish
House in Stanley Park. She would grill visiting winemakers
at work, then head home for a glass of vino and a debate
with her husband, Iain, her partner in Barbariain Wine
Consulting. Her commitment paid off when, last June,
she was named a Master of Wine.
Only 265 people worldwide have made the grade since
the designation debuted in 1953—Philip is the
second Canadian, and first Canadian woman. Before enrolling
in the two-year program, candidates must persuade the
London-based Institute of Wine Masters of their aptitude,
and they must also be interviewed and mentored by a
Master of Wine. The exam is what kills most candidates.
The theory part requires 11 essays over four days; the
practical component is a blind tasting of three wines
each day. Only four of Philip’s 79 fellow candidates
passed both sections. “It’s more than just
knowing the information,” she explains. “You
have to have an opinion about that information and be
able to articulate and defend it.”
Compared to the exam, Philip’s Master of Wine
dissertation sounds almost fun. She wrote it on Okanagan
Pinot Blanc, and whether it has the potential to become
B.C.’s signature varietal, a local equivalent
of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc or Napa Valley Cabernet
Sauvignon. In the end, she decided, it does not. Yes,
it’s well suited viticulturally to the Okanagan,
and yes, it makes good wines. But it has no champion—no
prominent person or producer to put it on the wine map,
the way, for example, Joel Peterson and Paul Draper
made Sonoma Zinfandel famous.
Philip consults for retailers, restaurants, and corporations
in the Lower Mainland and teaches two days a week in
Las Vegas for the International Sommelier Guild. The
U.K.’s Decanter magazine has asked her to judge
its prestigious Wine Awards, and the Vinho Verde Commission
has hired her to give seminars on the charms of this
Portuguese summer favourite in Calgary and Vancouver.
The restaurant trade is what’s made B.C. wine
a success, Philip believes, with local bottles on just
about every list; but she senses that the allegiance
has to do more with business than with passion. “How
many restaurant people with $40 or $50 to spend on a
bottle would spend it on one from B.C.?” she asks.
She herself is more captivated by the wines of the Loire—Muscadet,
Vouvray, Sancerre, and Chinon—because of their
dynamic balance of flavour and their adaptability to
just about any kind of cuisine. Then there’s Spain,
with its wonderfully ripe, affordable reds that deliver
far more elegance and structure than just about any
Aussie Shiraz under $25. And Spanish sherries, from
salty Manzanilla to the sun-dried-fruit-and-nut complexity
of Pedro Ximenés.
“Just maybe, I’ll open a little tapas bar
off Davie,” she says, “so I can serve them
all.”
Barb Philip's Picks
Lake Breeze Vineyards
2006 Pinot Blanc
A signature wine if ever there was one, and especially
appealing at the price. From some of the oldest vines
on this Naramata estate, it’s full of a sense
of place—you can taste the sage and the peach
flavours that define the Okanagan. Private wine stores
or
winery-direct, $15.99
Valdespino Fino
Inocente
Philip’s a sherry advocate, determined
to persuade everyone that it’s the ultimate
food wine. She loves the way this fino, from a family
business that’s been making sherry for 700 years,
manages to be both light and earthy, thanks to its aromatic
herbal
saltiness. Specialty listing, $17.83
Domaine de l’Ameillaud
2005 Côtes du Rhône Villages Cairanne
The 2005 vintage was a blockbuster one in the
Rhône, Cairanne is one of the
best villages, and this domaine is one of the best producers.
Philip likes this one
because it’s beautifully balanced and full of
juicy fruit, but has great finesse
and structure, all for just $20. Specialty listing,
$19.78
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