Registration Deadline
28 February 2025
Judging
Date
24 & 25 March 2025
Winners Announcement
22 April 2025
28 February 2025
24 & 25 March 2025
22 April 2025
By Anna
Christine Parkinson started her restaurant career in the kitchen and moved into management after 3 years as a Head Chef. Various operational roles followed, leading to responsibility for 39 restaurants. Eventually, she decided to follow her passion and concentrate on wine.
Parkinson worked with Hakkasan for 18 years venturing out and working on her own as wine and sake professional.
In a chat with our Editor, Parkinson spoke about her journey in the wine industry and shared her expertise in wine buying.
I first studied wine when I was studying for hospitality management qualifications, aged 25. I was fascinated from the start and took responsibility for wine in various restaurants and food & beverage management positions. In 2001 I had the chance to write the opening wine list for the first hakkasan and ended up staying there for 18 years, as head of wine. I'm now planning my next adventure in wine.
From the start, it was about food. Back then, no-one had a clue what wine to drink with Chinese food, so we had to find out for ourselves. For 3 weeks, I gathered the opening team every afternoon around a big table, to taste wine samples as they ate their lunch. The chefs sent out the dishes they were working on, and we tried wine after wine with them. Everyone voted on what went best with the food, and from those wines, I worked up a list. I had a rule: any wine can go on the list if it’s
Really good
Goes with the food. As The Head Of Wine At Hakkasan - How Did You Lead Your Team? What Was Your Leadership Style?
I managed the framework - how we chose suppliers, samples etc, how we measured profitability and set the standard for tasting wines with our food, but the most senior sommeliers always made the final choice of the wines for their lists.
When a new supplier sends me a portfolio, I want to turn the pages and understand what they are about. I want to buy from someone who can add something to what I already buy. does the portfolio have a personality? Are the wines new to me, nor have I seen them offered by other suppliers? I look for something fresh.
Wines from the new world are mainstream now: almost every list has NZ sauvignon blanc and pinot noir, for instance. By-glass has become much more important, helped along by the rise of equipment
to preserve wines, such as Le Verre De Vin and Coravin.
Certain wines always sell Sancerre, chablis, rioja. those were the best sellers when i started in wine, and they still are.
WSET courses were always a big part of our training at Hakkasan, but I was particularly proud of our involvement with Plumpton College - our trainees not only visited the winery and vineyards, but we sold wines from the college on our list.
Click here to find out more about Wine By The Glass Program - In David Vareille's Words
Tea! I can’t get through the morning without a cup of Beatons
Dong Ding oolong! I may have sherry later :)
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