James Aufenast investigates the murky world of mark-ups.
London is
one of the most expensive places in the world to drink wine. Paris has
a wealth of brasseries that list well-priced, mid-range Bordeaux,
Burgundy and Rhône wines; Spain and Italy are even cheaper; and
Australia is better priced still. But in the UK's capital, on average,
a bottle of wine in a restaurant will cost nearly three times as much
as it would in a shop - often more, in fact. Some wines cost over six
times as much when you're dining out. Would you spend £36 on a bottle
of Jacob's Creek merlot?
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'There's some rapacious pricing in London,' says Neil Beckett, editor of Fine Wine magazine. 'I don't eat out that much precisely because of what a decent bottle costs. It's a shame, because there are some great places, but you just end up paying through the nose. Mostly, I stay at home and inflict a burnt sausage on people.'
For example, a 2001 Côtes du Rhône from Guigal costs £8.49 from Oddbins. Drink it in a restaurant and you'll pay £30 - over three times the Oddbins' price. That's what this very basic, more or less mass-produced bottle from a large producer in the south-east of France costs at the Ritz on Piccadilly. The Ritz, however, isn't alone in imposing such steep mark-ups.
Other fine dining restaurants, such as Gordon Ramsay's Angela Hartnett at The Connaught and the Greenhouse in Mayfair , the Capital in Knightsbridge and Tom Aikens in South Kensington, mark up way beyond what is reasonable. Corinne Michot, head sommelier at Angela Hartnett, explains her average mark-up of nearly three and a half: 'If I list a wine under £100 our guests think there's something wrong with it. If it's not expensive enough, it's not going to be any good, is their attitude. As it happens, my prices are no worse than other restaurants in Mayfair.'
Nigel Platts-Martin's group of restaurants - some of the most
acclaimed in London, including the Square in Mayfair, Chez Bruce in
Wandsworth, La Trompette in Chiswick and the Glasshouse in Kew - used
to have a reputation for quite low mark-ups, but that's no longer the
case. Dawn Davies, head sommelier at Platts-Martin's latest venture,
French restaurant the Ledbury in Notting Hill, says her mark-ups are
justified - including one by a factor of four on a South African red
wine, Flagstone's 2003 Cellarhand Backchat, priced at £19.50. 'I start
by multiplying wine in the middle of the list by three and go up or
down from there. That's normal for London, it's what you need to make a
profit,' she says. 'Yes, I multiply some [wines] by four, but the 1982
Château Latour isn't even multiplied by one. You can't buy it from a
wholesaler for that money.' However, few of us would want to splash out
£650 on Latour just to experience its low mark-up. Usually, regional
France offers a good refuge for people who can't afford expensive
Bordeaux or Burgundy, but Pacherence du Vic-Bilh Sec, by Domaine
Berthoumieu, in south-west France, costs three times the wholesale
price at the Ledbury.
Why are costs so high?
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