What Was Your Most Recent Bottle of Wine?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • cloughie
    replied
    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
    .

    ... at lunch in a little bistro in Tufnell Park yesterday a bottle of white beaujolais (Didier Desvignes, beaujolais blanc aoc 2013). It was really very good. I have not encountered white beaujolais before, and it doesn't seem to be easily available : the Wine Society doesn't have it.

    Has anyone else seen it / enjoyed it?


    .
    Yes, also I have had Rose. Rose and Red are Gamay, but it appears the white can be made from a variety of grapes grown in the region - usually Chardonnay but can be Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris or Aligote.

    Leave a comment:


  • vinteuil
    replied
    .

    ... at lunch in a little bistro in Tufnell Park yesterday a bottle of white beaujolais (Didier Desvignes, beaujolais blanc aoc 2013). It was really very good. I have not encountered white beaujolais before, and it doesn't seem to be easily available : the Wine Society doesn't have it.

    Has anyone else seen it / enjoyed it?


    .

    Leave a comment:


  • Pulcinella
    replied
    What I really meant was that the wine is so gluggable that we've usually finished a bottle before dinner/supper is ready, but you're right: sometimes there are a few blanks remaining (though the iPad version lets you sort them out!).

    Anyway, we're clearing the none too capacious 'cellar' out (the wine won't really travel to York, ha ha!) so last night it was a 60th birthday present bottle of Château Moulin Riche Saint Julien (get it, ts and Cali?) 2005 given to my partner by a friend.

    Certainly needed to be drunk respectfully rather than glugged!

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Armstrong
    replied
    Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
    Ah, so more blanks than Blanc at Pulcinella Towers, then ?

    before I get my coat, I wish this thread could be renamed "....Most recent bottle of wine...."


    Good points!

    Leave a comment:


  • cloughie
    replied
    Originally posted by Caliban View Post
    Ventoux "Les Traverses" 2014 by Paul Jaboulet.

    This is on the current Wine Society list at £7.50 a bottle - but is in stock at £5 a bottle at the excellent Terre de Boissons in Cité Europe (5 minutes from the Calais Eurotunnel terminal).

    Buying 2 cases led to a saving of (24 x 2.50) = £60, which happens to be the exact day return fare on Eurotunnel*

    OK so I only broke even, but of course there were other benefits to being in France for a few hours.

    And the wine makes a delicious 'house red'.




    .

    * NB there's a EuroTunnel offer at the moment of £23 day return, Mon - Thurs until 8 December.

    Had it not been necessary to go on Saturday to fit round others, I could have made a profit...
    But more than £23 from these parts and a dodgy line east of Exeter. Jaboulet Ventoux sounds good. My latest glass, however, was Beaujolais Villages Nouveau from Waitrose. A very pleasant wine nicely complementing lamb steak. I always like to sample the new vintage, takes me back to the Beaujolais get togethers back in the 80s and 90s, often involving a Cassoulet.

    Leave a comment:


  • teamsaint
    replied
    Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
    Cheapskates here, and the house red is Aldi's Toro Loco, a 12.5% Temperanillo that goes down a treat as we attempt the Times crossword before dinner.

    Trouble is, we've usually finished the bottle before we've finished the crossword.
    Ah, so more blanks than Blanc at Pulcinella Towers, then ?

    before I get my coat, I wish this thread could be renamed "....Most recent bottle of wine...."

    Leave a comment:


  • Pulcinella
    replied
    Cheapskates here, and the house red is Aldi's Toro Loco, a 12.5% Temperanillo that goes down a treat as we attempt the Times crossword before dinner.

    Trouble is, we've usually finished the bottle before we've finished the crossword.

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Armstrong
    replied
    Ventoux "Les Traverses" 2014 by Paul Jaboulet.

    This is on the current Wine Society list at £7.50 a bottle - but is in stock at £5 a bottle at the excellent Terre de Boissons in Cité Europe (5 minutes from the Calais Eurotunnel terminal).

    Buying 2 cases led to a saving of (24 x 2.50) = £60, which happens to be the exact day return fare on Eurotunnel*

    OK so I only broke even, but of course there were other benefits to being in France for a few hours.

    And the wine makes a delicious 'house red'.




    .

    * NB there's a EuroTunnel offer at the moment of £23 day return, Mon - Thurs until 8 December.

    Had it not been necessary to go on Saturday to fit round others, I could have made a profit...

    Leave a comment:


  • gradus
    replied
    Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
    Anyone tried English wines? Two recent ones I've greatly enjoyed are Penny Black from the Halfpenny Green Vineyard and Sonnet from the Three Choirs vineyard.

    Strongly recommend the former. It was available online but I get mine from a local farmer's market.
    I like Wyken Vineyards Bacchus, very drinkable although £12.99 a bottle for the 2014.

    Leave a comment:


  • Petrushka
    replied
    Anyone tried English wines? Two recent ones I've greatly enjoyed are Penny Black from the Halfpenny Green Vineyard and Sonnet from the Three Choirs vineyard.

    Strongly recommend the former. It was available online but I get mine from a local farmer's market.

    Leave a comment:


  • ahinton
    replied
    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
    ... chambolle-musigny 1er cru 'les Charmes' Amiot-Servelle 2009.

    I don't know much about burgundy, but it was lovely.
    Well, if that experience doesn't inspire the desire to get to know a whole lot more, I'm not quite sure what would!

    I recall the delectable and brilliant Jancis Robinson writing (in Confessions of a wine lover, my copy of which I cannot seem to find right now) of a crucial occasion in her early days when she shared a bottle of Chambolle-Musigny "Les Amoureuses" (1959 or thereabouts, I think) that had been bought by her then boyfriend and she realised that her interest in it well outshone her interest in him!

    Leave a comment:


  • vinteuil
    replied
    ... chambolle-musigny 1er cru 'les Charmes' Amiot-Servelle 2009.

    I don't know much about burgundy, but it was lovely.

    And as it was at his club, and Mr Roper was paying, it seemed churlish to decline...




    .
    Last edited by vinteuil; 17-03-16, 10:13.

    Leave a comment:


  • gradus
    replied
    Aldi's Jura sparkling Chardonnay is a lovely drink and much underpriced at £7.29.

    Leave a comment:


  • Padraig
    replied
    Originally posted by Anna View Post
    . Any suggestions for low-priced sparkling for New Year
    Anna, no suggestions of any kind. I have had breakfast of scrambled eggs, smoked salmon and Bucks Fizz. Don't ask me what champagne, but it was lively.

    edit
    and lovely too.

    Leave a comment:


  • Anna
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by clive heath View Post
    The cellartracker folk seem to like the Julienas
    Which has been opened and a small sample snifter taken! So I think it'll go nicely with the lamb. At the moment a glass of sparkly wine - because you cannot have Christmas without fizz - it's an inexpensive one, Charles de Fère Brut Premium which is ok, but a bit lacking in the bubbles that get up your nose department I think. Any suggestions for low-priced sparkling for New Year gladly received!

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X