header-logo header-logo

14 August 2018 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 7806 / Categories: Features
printer mail-detail

Last of the summer wine

istock-160972106-1

It’s time again for Dominic Regan to provide a rundown of the best bottles to tempt your palate this summer

Twice a year—summer and December—I am allowed to abandon legal writing for what really matters: decent wine.

It would be easy and lazy to suggest expensive bottles. The intention is to recommend bottles costing no more than a tenner, with just a few breaching that ceiling.

Supermarket sweep

One unusual recommendation is to look out for wine bearing La Vieille Ferme label. Their red, rosé and white are all respectable and stock can normally be found at the Co-op and Waitrose. Full price is about £7.50 but promotions abound and it can often be closer to £6. The family behind this producer make the wondrous Beaucastel Châteauneuf, which is £80 a throw.

The Co-op has a smart wine buying team, and their own label range, particularly the Pinot Noir, is trustworthy.

Tesco has cut back on the range of wines which it sells. However, small parcels of 2010 red Bordeaux have popped

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Sidley—James Inness

Sidley—James Inness

Partner joins capital markets team in London office

Haynes Boone—William Cecil

Haynes Boone—William Cecil

Firm announces appointment of partner as UK general counsel

Devonshires—Nicholas Barrows

Devonshires—Nicholas Barrows

Firm appoints first chief marketing officer to drive growth strategy

NEWS
A seemingly dry procedural update may prove potent. In his latest 'Civil way' column for NLJ this week, Stephen Gold explains that new CPR 31.12A—part of the 193rd update—fills a ‘lacuna’ exposed in McLaren Indy v Alpa Racing
The long-running Mazur saga edged towards its finale as the Court of Appeal heard arguments on whether non-solicitors can ‘conduct litigation’. Writing in NLJ this week, Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School reports from a packed courtroom where 16 wigs watched Nick Bacon KC argue that Mr Justice Sheldon had failed to distinguish between ‘tasks and responsibilities’

The Court of Appeal has slammed the brakes on claimants trying to swap defendants after limitation has expired. In Adcamp LLP v Office Properties and BDB Pitmans v Lee [2026] EWCA Civ 50, it overturned High Court rulings that had allowed substitutions under s 35(6)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980, reports Sarah Crowther of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ

Cheating in driving tests is surging—and courts are responding firmly. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth of De Montfort Law School charts a rise in impersonation and tech-assisted fraud, with 2,844 attempts recorded in a year
As AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images proliferate, the law may already have the tools to respond. In NLJ this week, Jon Belcher of Excello Law argues that such images amount to personal data processing under UK GDPR
back-to-top-scroll