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Wine Spectator praises a Milan restaurant that doesn’t exist

  

By Jerry Hirsch, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 22, 2008

Milan’s Osteria L’Intrepido restaurant won Wine Spectator magazine’s award of excellence this year despite a wine list that features a 1993 Amarone Classico Gioe S. Sofia, which the magazine once likened to “paint thinner and nail varnish.”

Even worse: Osteria L’Intrepido doesn’t exist.

To the magazine’s chagrin, the restaurant is a Web-based fiction devised by wine critic and author Robin Goldstein, who said he wanted to expose the lack of any foundation for many food and wine awards.

To pull off the hoax, Goldstein created a bogus website for the restaurant and submitted an application for the award that included a copy of the restaurant’s menu (which he describes as “a fun amalgamation of somewhat bumbling nouvelle-Italian recipes”) and a high-priced “reserve wine list” well-stocked with dogs like the 1993 Amarone.

The application also included what Goldstein suggests was the key qualification: a $250 entry fee.

“I am interested in what’s behind all the ratings and reviews we read. . . . The level of scrutiny is not sufficient,” said Goldstein, who revealed the prank while presenting a paper at an American Assn. of Wine Economists meeting in Portland last weekend.

In response, Wine Spectator Executive Editor Thomas Matthews listed in a posting on the New York-based magazine’s website its “significant efforts to verify the facts”…

Tom Pirko, a beverage industry consultant who lives in Santa Barbara County’s wine country, said the hoax would dent the magazine’s credibility.

“This gets down to what the Wine Spectator is all about. It’s not exactly Wine for Dummies; it’s more Wine for the Gullible,” Pirko said. “This gives the appearance of paying for advertising disguised as a contest.”

Restaurants that win the award receive a plaque they can mount for diners to see and a listing as a wine-friendly establishment on the magazine’s website. They typically use the award as a form of marketing and advertising, Pirko said.

Goldstein said he came up with the idea while doing research for an academic paper about the standards for wine awards. He is coauthor of “The Wine Trials,” a book that looks at how 500 blind tasters from around the country evaluated 6,000 wines ranging in price from $1.50 to $150 a bottle.

He contends that people think wine tastes better when they know it is expensive, citing as evidence taste tests that show two-thirds of people preferred a $12 Domaine Ste. Michelle Brut, a Washington state sparkling wine, to a $150 Dom Perignon Champagne.

When he crafted the bogus wine list for Osteria L’Intrepido (Italian for “The Fearless Restaurant”) Goldstein also included a 1985 Barbaresco Asij Ceretto, which Wine Spectator described as “earthy, swampy, gamy, harsh and tannic.”

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