At a more reasonable price than Beaumes de Venise, try a Mombazillac; they tend to be delicious, sweet and luscious. For red this Christmas, we're going to have some 2000 Côtes de Castillon from Tony Laithwaite, whose wines I have been buying for 30 years. We only have four of these left which, since there will only be the two of us, should suffice. It will last through the (very) rare roast beef and the cheese.
The Wine List
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David Samuels
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostGood Spanish whites are a recent discovery for me - and, like Calabresse, I am indebted to restaurants for steering me tothemwards - (tho' nowhere near as swanky as Caliban*'s usual haunts, the Gordon Ramsay empire... ) - But I have become completely persuaded, and have come to like various albariños - rias baixas very much indeed : highly recommended!
* no perfumed ponce he, o no...
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Richard Tarleton
'Originally posted by vinteuil View PostBut I have become completely persuaded, and have come to like various albariños - rias baixas very much indeed : highly recommended!
My favourite Spanish wine , for special occasions, is Ribera del Duero.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Postgoogling suggests about £20.
I quite liked the description of this wine "Wonderful nose with layers of sweet, velvety aromas, liquid apricots, fruit syrup; wonderful in the mouth; lighter than many but with very good fruit concentration; seems to gain strength in the glass, dominant flavors are apricot with a hint of pineapple and perhaps some green apple in the background; neither too sweet nor dry, this wine has very good balance; lacks the assertion of a ch yquem, but not a slouching wine either. "
by its presumption." - Thurber
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Anna
Originally posted by David Samuels View PostWe only have four of these left which, since there will only be the two of us, should suffice. It will last through the (very) rare roast beef and the cheese.
Now, what about champagne? I'm not thinking of Bolly but something more reasonably priced or a superior bottle of fizz?
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Originally posted by mangerton View Post"It's a naive domestic burgundy without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused
by its presumption." - Thurber
From the Wine Society website another classic : -
"The baroque school of wine writing went out of fashion in the middle of the last century. Gerald Asher’s description of a nuits-st-georges gives you a taste of the kind of thing: ‘Deep colour and big shaggy nose. Rather a jumbly, untidy sort of wine, with fruitiness shooting off one way, firmness another, and body pushing about underneath.’ "
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Over the last few days I've gone slightly mad (well, even madder than before). Seeing that I was out of wine I've gone on a splurge - buying a silly amount. I blame the person who started this thread (and Jancis Robinson who stupidly published a list of the 60 best reds for Christmas).
Well, I certainly won't be thirsty for a while.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostGood Spanish whites are a recent discovery for me - and, like Calabresse, I am indebted to restaurants for steering me tothemwards - (tho' nowhere near as swanky as Caliban*'s usual haunts, the Gordon Ramsay empire... ) - But I have become completely persuaded, and have come to like various albariños - rias baixas very much indeed : highly recommended!
* no perfumed ponce he, o no...
I have an albariño in the new fridge, as well as a bottle of the Pariente verdejo recommended earlier...
Moderate and very enjoyable tippling to all
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Errr ... thanks for your kind offer.
I know that wine recommendations that you see in the newspapers can be a bit iffy but, for what it's worth, this is the link to Jancis Robinson's own website, with her recommendations for Christmas wines. There are around 60 each red and white wines, starting at around £7. ("GV" = Good Value, "VGV" = Very Good Value)
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25 December. Well, there was a nice petillant from Saumur to go with the nuts and such - a fine vouvray to go with prosciutto and figs - to go with the turkey, and also the cheeses, a delicate 2002 and a then a more fruity 2004 gevrey-chambertin - a more than acceptable beaumes de venise with the pud - an armagnac that i was very happy with for the coffee and chocs - and the rest is a bit of a blur.... happy crimbletide, y'all ...
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostI have an albariño in the new fridge, as well as a bottle of the Pariente verdejo recommended earlier...
"White wines should, of course, always be chilled, but never iced. They should be chilled as rapidly as possible; the classic ice bucket is still the best method. A couple of hours in the refrigerator or a half hour in the freezer (provided one does not forget it is there) will do the trick; but a prolonged stay in the refrigerator will rob a wine of all its qualities - it is cassé - broken."
Richard Olney The French Menu Cookbook
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Dissappointed with the Chablis I had bought for the salmon starter. It had come out of a very cold fridge but did not come across as adequately chilled (ice bucket suggestion probably the best way to go on that one). Still, think I would have been better off with a Sancerre or a Reisling. Damn labels suggesting refinement and quality they don't deliver on.
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Originally posted by Stillhomewardbound View PostDissappointed with the Chablis I had bought for the salmon starter. It had come out of a very cold fridge but did not come across as adequately chilled (ice bucket suggestion probably the best way to go on that one). Still, think I would have been better off with a Sancerre or a Reisling. Damn labels suggesting refinement and quality they don't deliver on.
It's a pity that Alsace wines are often overlooked.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... but not in the 'fridge too long, I hope -
"White wines should, of course, always be chilled, but never iced. They should be chilled as rapidly as possible; the classic ice bucket is still the best method. A couple of hours in the refrigerator or a half hour in the freezer (provided one does not forget it is there) will do the trick; but a prolonged stay in the refrigerator will rob a wine of all its qualities - it is cassé - broken."
Richard Olney The French Menu Cookbook
From a rough calculation (which might well be wrong) I estimate that the amount of heat that a fridge needs to draw out of a bottle of wine to reduce its temperature from 21 to 9 degrees is around the same heat as that emitted by a 40 watt light bulb burning for one hour, and that is just for wine itself and ignores the glass bottle!
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