Tastings

Beaujolais: prejudice confounded

One way of dealing with the overwhelming complexity of the world of wine is to decide that there certain wines/grapes/styles that you don’t like.  A few popular favourites would be a) German wine (sweet and flavourless) b) English wine (how could you? see previous post) c) over-oaked Chardonnay (agreed).  My number one choice would be

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Light and aromatic

It is something of a struggle to persuade the world that England is a place which produces fine wine.  The reputation of the weather does not help, even though with the warming of the climate Southern England has had a good number of years in a row when it has been possible to ripen grapes

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Southern Rhône class

The ‘Bring a bottle’ club’s theme this month was the southern Rhône, an interesting counterpoint to the usual preference for the mainly more prestigious wines of the northern section of this great river.  But it proved an inspired choice with some great bottles, both white and red.  There were a few disappointments too with oxidized

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Underwhelmed in Bordeaux

In general, I like to praise the good qualities of wines which I taste. If anything I can be too positive.  But if there is something to like, I will lead with that, while noting shortcomings as they are evident.  It is surprising to me, therefore, to report that Andover Wine Friends’ May tasting of

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Antinori: kick-starting the Italian quality revolution

Decanter’s vertical tasting of the Antinori Super Tuscan wines was a remarkable chance to compare five vintages of Tignanello and Solaia going back thirty years.  But more than that, in Marchese Piero Antinori’s presence, it became a fascinating cross-section through the quality revolution in Italian winemaking over the last forty years.  As Antinori explained, in

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Soft and strong (updated)

Châteauneuf-du-Pape is a grand name with wines of a range of qualities.  If the appellation did not exist, the wines would be a much more humble Côtes-du-Rhône (Villages) and you might wonder what all the fuss was about.  But it certainly does exist and in fact, its contribution to the way the French thought about

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Things can only get better

May’s BBC 1 – bring any quality bottle or the odd joker and taste them blind  – threw up a distinctly mixed bag.  The whites in general,, unusually, did not shine, the one sparkling wine met a distinctly mixed reception and the evening was saved by good company and a high standard in the reds. 

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Two old sweeties

This weekend saw the chance to taste two interesting but very contrasting sweet wines.  I am sorry that it was only after the event that I thought to take the photo. It was one of those evenings that sort of ‘developed’ as it went along But if are very sharp sighted and use a bit

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Small is beautiful

Andover Wine Friends’ monthly tasting featured wines from small French appellations and provided a tour of the south of France with a stop-off in Corsica.  Led by Lefty Wright (picture below), it showed what quality there is outside of the well-known areas – if you can source these small-production bottles, here provided by Yapp Brothers. 

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