Blog

Something for the weekend – a nice claret

Something for the weekend – a nice claret

DSCF5905Ch. Pey-Bonhomme Les-Tours 2012, Blaye – Côtes de Bordeaux
13%
€19

This was a really enjoyable wine, classic Bordeaux, with clean blackcurrant fruits, a seam of acidity running through, and a light dry tannic bite on the finish. I had mine with a roast shoulder of pork (Tamworth, from ethicalpork.com, excellent) and it was very good. I suspect it would be even better with lamb.

Available from Green Man Wines, Terenure; 64Wine, Glasthule; Fallon & Byrne, Exchequer Street; Clontarf Wines; Mortons, Ranelagh.

Posted in: Top Drop

Leave a Comment (0) →

Something for the Weekend – a Tasty Riesling

Something for the Weekend – a Tasty Riesling

DSCF6387Pikes “Hills & Valleys” Riesling 2014, Clare Valley, Australia
€17.50/£11.75
10.5%

I reconnected with Clare Valley Riesling yesterday at the Wines of Australia Tasting in Dublin. They had a delicious mature Pewsey Vale Contours Riesling 1999 at the masterclass. Back home I opened a bottle of this lovely light Riesling from one of the better producers in the region. Light, fresh and crisp with lime zest and green apple fruits, finishing dry. A nice aperitif, or even better with crab. The price drops to €15.75/£10.58 if you buy a case from jnwine.com. Also available from The Corkscrew, Chatham Street, D2,

Posted in: Top Drop

Leave a Comment (0) →

Ginger Porter, Rascals Brewing Company

Image 2

Emma Devlin & Cathal O’Donoghue of Rascals Brewing

First published in The Irish Times, Wednesday 27th January, 2016

We all know that Enid Blyton’s Famous Five drank lashings and of ginger beer to wash down massive quantities of sandwiches on their many intrepid expeditions into the countryside. Except they didn’t; apparently there is no such quote in any of the many Famous Five books. It didn’t stop The Comic Strip Presents….using it in their parody Five go Mad in Dorset. I’m not sure if Rascals Brewing Company had this in mind when they created a ginger porter, but then Julian, Dick, Anne and George were aged between eleven and thirteen and unlikely to indulge in underage drinking.

This was the first beer ever brewed by Emma Devlin and Cathal O’Donoghuee, the team that make up Rascals. They intend making it an annual winter seasonal, available until early March, or until it runs out. This year it is available in very smart tactile cans for the first time. The Rascals ginger porter is refreshing and very drinkable, medium-bodied with a nice kick of ginger on the finish

Posted in: Beer & Whiskey, Irish Times

Leave a Comment (0) →

SEVEN RED WINES TO BUY AT THE LIDL FRENCH WINE SALE

Image 13

Lidl recently held a tasting of their next French offer, that will start on 22nd February. This will be smaller in size than Christmas or September, but there were some good red wines, mainly Bordeaux.

Beaujolais Villages 2014 €9.99 – very, very light, but smells and tastes like Beaujolais. If you want something tasty to drink while watching TV, this might fit the bill.

Ch Clos Fontaine 2010, Francs – Côtes de Bordeaux €12.99 – from a good vintage, this wine is now mature, with lovely ripe cassis and plums and decent length. Great value.

Ch. Quattre 2009 Cahors €12.99 – if, like me, you like firm, cool wines with chunky black fruits and a dry finish then buy this to sup with your breast of duck (also available from Lidl).

Ch. de Carles 2008, Fronsac €17.99 – light and soft with easy ripe plummy fruits. Fully mature and reasonable value for money.

Josephine de Boyd 2009, Margaux €24.99 –fragrant on the nose, with some new oak; a nice concentration of elegant smooth blackcurrant fruits with a dry finish. Very good. This is from Ch. Boyd Cantenac, a Grand Cru Classé.

Ch. Livran 2010, Cru Bourgeois, Médoc €14.99 – a wine I used to drink regularly many years ago. Four-square meaty, firm solid claret. Decant and drink with roast red meats or keep a year or two.

Les Fiefs de Lagrange 2011, Saint Julien €24.99 – my sheet said only available through Lidl Customer Service, but my local branch (Greystones) still has this, and other fine wines, left over from the Christmas sale. This is from another Grand Cru Classé, Ch. Lagrange. I really like its elegant smooth blackcurrant and mint fruit and effortless elegance.

Posted in: Blog

Leave a Comment (0) →

LIDL FRENCH WINE OFFER – WHITE WINES

Image 11Lidl recently held a tasting of their next French offer, that will start on 22nd February. The offer will be smaller in size than Christmas or September, but there were some good wines. Red Wines tomorrow.

From the white wines my picks would include the following. The first two would be good for everyday drinking.

Alsace Pinot Blanc 2014 €9.99 – decent well-made crisp dry white wine.

Alsace Riesling 2014 €9.99 – a good crisp dry wine with clean green apple fruits.

Bourgogne Hautes-Côtes de Nuits 2014 €12.99 – some nice pears and a thirst-quenching stony minerality.

Bourgogne Montagny 2014 €14.99 – a little more fruit than the Burgundy above. Pleasant pears and white fruits, with a cleansing acidity.

Image 12

Posted in: Blog

Leave a Comment (0) →

BBC Bring Back Chardonnay

BBC Bring Back Chardonnay

First published in the Irish Times, Saturday 23rd January, 2016

The urban myth persists of the customer who walks into a shop, turns down the offer of a bottle of Chardonnay and demands Chablis instead. All Chablis is of course 100 per cent Chardonnay, as is virtually every bottle of white Burgundy (this being France, there are always certain exceptions). But every time you enjoy a glass of Bourgogne Blanc, Mâcon-Lugny, Meursault or Puligny-Montrachet, you are drinking pure Chardonnay.Whenever you drink Champagne, it is very likely that you are drinking a blend that includes Chardonnay.Burgundy is home territory for Chardonnay (there is even a town of that name in the Mâconnais), and has been for centuries. It has travelled the world, finding a home in virtually every wine producing country. It was ubiquitous in the 1990s, leading to the ABC (Anything But Chardonnay) movement, followed by a decline in popularity.

I was under the impression that it was starting to make a comeback but, doing tastings in wine shops before Christmas, I was taken aback at the number of people who refused to allow a tiny sample of Chardonnay near their glass. I ended up putting my hand over the label, instead offering a dry white wine; the vast majority liked it and were surprised to find out they were tasting the dreaded Chardonnay.

Chardonnay can produce excellent sparkling wines and even sweet wines, but most of the time, it is used to produce still, dry wine. They can vary in style from crisp and refreshing to richly textured and mouth-filling, and therein lies the problem. We don’t always know what kind of Chardonnay we are buying. Is it rich and unctuous or light and fresh? The label will usually help; a wine that is 12.5 per cent in alcohol will be on the lighter side and a wine at 14 per cent will certainly be rich and full-bodied.

Then there is the question of oak. For too many years, ageing a Chardonnay in oak was seen as a sign of quality. Some producers therefore reckoned the more you added, the better the wine. If you couldn’t afford very expensive new oak barrels, then you added cheaper oak chips.

Either way, the consumer got a mouthful that tasted of oak instead of wine, and didn’t like it. In recent years, the overuse of oak has declined greatly. Used in a restrained fashion, it is barely perceptible, adding another layer of complexity, although you shouldn’t taste the oak. Some producers have taken to stating “unwooded” on labels. Although I have railed against oaky Chardonnays for years, now that they are gone, I sort of miss them. The great winemakers of Burgundy (with the possible exception of Chablis) will age a percentage of every wine they make in oak barrels. This will increase along with the quality, so that the Grand Cru will frequently be aged in 100 per cent new oak barriques. Yet because the wine is so intense, you will rarely taste it.

Why should we drink Chardonnay? Well, because it is one of the world’s greatest grapes, producing some of the most complete wines. In the winter months, alone among white wines, it seems to have the body to match the cold weather. Good Chardonnay is majestic; it is the nearest thing white wine gets to red wine. It is textured and complex, slowly releasing wave after wave of gentle flavour. Where Sauvignon Blanc and Riesling are linear and refreshing, Chardonnay seems to reach every part of the palate. It is the best white food wine of all, perfect with shellfish, salmon, tuna, chicken, pork, smoked foods, creamy and buttery sauces, as well as many cheeses.

Chardonnay reaches its apogee in Burgundy, but many other countries produce excellent examples too. So let us move on and embrace this wonderful grape. This week, I suggest three Chardonnays from different countries spanning the globe. Please forgive the rather steep prices, these wines are certainly worth it.

WINES OF THE WEEK

ImageTalinay Chardonnay 2013, Tabalí, Limarí Valley, Chile, 13.5%, €19.95

Delicious lightly textured wine with pristine fruits, a subtle spiciness and a refreshing mineral core.
Stockists: Whelehan’s, Loughlinstown

DSCF6390Viré-Clessé Cuvée Speciale 2014, André Bonhomme, 13.5%, €21.25
I have been enjoying this wonderful wine for 20 years now; a mouthwatering mix of textured pineapples, peaches and tingling acidity
Stockists: Le Caveau; Green Man Wines, Terenure

DSCF6374Dog Point Chardonnay 2012, Marlborough, 14%, £22.99/€30
Impeccably balanced lime zest, hazelnuts and peach fruits, lingering beautifully. Keep a few years or drink with chicken, pork or seafood.
Stockists: jnwine.com; The Corkscrew; Terroirs

Posted in: Irish Times

Leave a Comment (0) →

Going off-piste: Itata and Vipava

We drank these two wines for dinner last night, both from lesser-known regions.Both were very good.

IMG_0003
Burja Bela 2010, Vipava, Slovenia

Lovely complex ripe fruits, softly textured with a touch of orange peel and a savoury finish with good mineral acidity.

I first came across this wine at a Slovenian wine tasting in Dublin a few years ago; I think it was actually the same vintage. Primož Lavrenčič of Burja estate is a believer in natural wine, made with as little intervention as possible. He farms biodynamically and uses only local grape varieties. In this wine he blends 30% Rebula, 30% Malvasia, 30% Riesling Italico, and 10% Zelen. Despite, or possibly because of its age, the wine is drinking beautifully. Not cheap though at €27.50 – certainly from Sheridans, and probably Green Man Wines in Terenure, they being very keen on natural wines.

De Martino Viejas Tinajas Cinsault 2014
D.O. Secano Interior/Colemu, Chile

A very interesting and enjoyable wine; a strange mix of red cherry and canned strawberries with an earthy note, and some light tannins on the finish. 13% alcohol and almost Beaujolais-like at times in its weight.

This is made from unirrigated old vines down in the Itata Valley in Chile. It was part of a tasting of wines from this region for a forthcoming article in the Irish Times. It sells for €17.99; I am still waiting for a list of stockists.

Posted in: Top Drop

Leave a Comment (0) →

Three supermarket red wines for €10 or a lot less.

Three supermarket red wines for €10 or a lot less.

Three bargain red wines that I came across this week; the first featured in my weekly online piece (Take It Home) in the Irish Times on Wednesday. The other two I came across at the Lidl tasting earlier this week. I have tasted them before, but on this occasion they stood out amongst a sea of inexpensive wines. Spain is one of the few countries that continues to offer amazing value at less than €10.

luis-felile-edwards-gran-reserva-pinot-noirLuis Felipe Edwards Gran Reserva Family Selection Pinot Noir 2013

Herewith my lightening guide to the world of Pinot Noir, fast becoming the wine everybody wants to drink. Burgundy produces the most complex wonderful Pinot of all. The best are hideously expensive, the cheapest are very variable. New Zealand probably comes next with excellent wines at the top end and lovely fruit-filled wines at the cheaper end. The problem is the cheaper end is generally around €15.

Germany, next door to Burgundy, produces some fantastic elegant wines too, but again they tend to start at €15. Sadly the best value (as opposed to cheapest) wines from the three above mentioned areas generally cost between €20 and €30, with nothing drinkable at €10. Only Chile can deliver here. The above wine, a mere €10 from SuperValu and O’Donovan’s in Cork, is a very gluggable light wine with earthy dark cherry fruits. Great value too.

Image 2Lidl DO Tarragona Reserva 2010
€6.99

Ever so cheap, this is a good soft sweet juicy crowd-pleasing red with no tannins and a decent amount of ripe red fruits.

Image 5Lidl DO Tarragona Gran Reserva 2009
€7.99

This is older, smoother and a little oakier than the basic Lidl Tarragona. Soft, easy-drinking wine at an amazingly cheap price. Not sure I would pay the extra euro for this one, but either wine would be great with a casserole or grilled red meat on a wet winter evening.

Posted in: Daily Drop

Leave a Comment (0) →

Two fine wines from Italy and Spain

DSCF6296Casebianchi Cumalè Fiano Cilento 2014
Organic
13%

Vibrant fresh, fruity and interesting. Herbs on the nose, honey, orange peel with a nice mineral core. I am generally a fan of Fiano although I have come across a large number of very boring wines in recent months: this one certainly isn’t. It has real energy and a lovely texture. Sheridans, by the way, have a small but very good eclectic range of wines.

€21 from Sheridan’s cheesemongers.

DSCF6385Cantos de Valpiedra Rioja Cosecha 2012
13%

This is a perfect (and very well-priced) example of a modern Rioja without any reserva, gran reserva or other designation. Smooth and ripe with cassis and red cherry fruits, well-integrated spicy oak and a very decent finish. A crowd-pleaser that cannot fail to impress.

€18.50/£12.50 from jnwine.com

Posted in: Top Drop

Leave a Comment (0) →

Eight Degrees Mór Barley Wine

Image 1
Mike Magee, Head brewer at Eight Degrees

Barley wine is not a wine at all, but a beer. It has a long history, going back to Ancient Greece, although these would have tasted very different to the modern versions, as back then there were no hops around. The wine part is a reference to its alcoholic strength, as barley wine comes in at a strapping 8-13% alcohol, making it one of the strongest beers of all. There are two styles, English and American; English tends to be maltier and rounded in flavour, American intensely hoppy and bitter. Apparently they age very well, like a good wine. However, if you want to try ageing the Eight Degrees version, you will have to be quick off the mark; the brewery is down to its last few cases.

The name says it all; Eight Degrees Mór is big and bold, with masses of American hops. The nose is deceptive, with light notes of toffee. The palate is massive, with buckets of stone fruits, caramel and spicy bitter hops. The alcohol (10.2%) kicks in nicely; this is a well-balanced robust warming beer, perfect for these cold January evenings. €4.49 for a 33cl bottle from specialist off-licences.

Posted in: Beer & Whiskey, Irish Times

Leave a Comment (0) →
Page 55 of 78 «...3040505354555657...»