What Was Your Most Recent Bottle of Wine?

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  • gurnemanz
    replied
    Just got back from a week's holiday in France and had various Côtes du Rhône in situ including some nice ones from 2012, which I think was a difficult year further North. In Avignon we stumbled across the church (St Didier's) where Messiaen was baptised and had a pleasant meal in a nearby square.

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  • ardcarp
    replied
    I've not been following this thread and haven't read 32 pages. In my head I differentiate between the fine wines one is treated to on special occcasions and the stuff you find agreeable for an everyday tipple. In the latter category Mrs A and I have recently discovered Lidl's range of wines which seem to represent pretty good value for money. Just shared a bottle of Stowell's Australian Colombard-Chardonnay at just under £4 a kick. Surprisingly sophisticated.

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  • Barbirollians
    replied
    I found that Graciano a bit disappointing when I tried it - rather more alcohol than anything else .

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  • amateur51
    Guest replied
    Some friends put together half-a-dozen bottles of Spanish wine from The Wine Society for a local wine-tasting yesterday. We're all keen amateurs/topers. The comments before the Wine Society description are mine

    The wines were:

    The Society’s Reserva Brut Cava


    Lemony & clean, some breadiness too - good persistent bead.

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.



    Bolo 2012 Godello

    Quite fat and appley, alcohol well integrated (not ‘hot’), good acidity, good with prawns we had to taste.

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.


    Vina Zorzal Graciano 2010

    Pink rim, lightish cranberry juice red with good acid/tannin balance, raspberry palate but not jammy.

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.



    Blau, Monsant, 2011

    Deep red/purple but tannins quite restrained, some red berry sweetness, nice now but perhaps delicious in a year under the bed (the bottle not me)

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.



    7 Fuentes Listan Negro 2011

    Good fruity cranberry nose, good acidity, would be good with food.

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.


    La Rioja Alta Vina Ardanza Reserva 2004

    Typical aged old-fashioned style red Rioja, rim not brick red yet, bouquet of tangerine peel with good ingering sweetness and acidity. Why did no-one bring a roasted leg of lamb?

    Putting our members before profit, we buy on quality and taste alone so you can enjoy wine at the fairest prices - For you and the people who make it.


    I enjoyed all these wines but as you can tell, the notes reflected how many I had sampled

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  • Hornspieler
    replied
    Originally posted by Tony View Post
    Well, if it is indeed as suave, complex and lovely as several of the Moldovan young lady violinists with whom I have been working recently, then we should all stock up with it without delay!
    "with" not "on" I hope, Tony.
    HS

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  • Barbirollians
    replied
    They have them in my local one bt it is a big ex Somerfield store .

    The Darting Estate Riesling in M and S is also good.

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  • french frank
    replied
    That sounds very authoritative and comprehensive as a reply - thank you!

    I'd never noticed any German in our Coopie, other than the mass market labels.

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  • Barbirollians
    replied
    Originally posted by french frank View Post
    I was remembering a long time back when, as a teenager, I was taken out to eat somewhere by my father (who knew nothing about wine, I should say). He usually chose a German wine and I remembered them as very good, and with a good reputation. Then there was certainly an era of Liebfraumilch, Black Tower, Blue Nun, but I seem to think even the rather more upmarket labels became unreliable? It could be that the Oddbins man was excusing the fact that they had nothing German, but if not, why not (this was about 10 years ago)?

    Last bottle here of Niersteiner Gutes Domtal Auslese 1976, £41.41 - that was another name I remember.
    Sugar water German wines are still out there but in retreat . German winemakers are returning to Riesling from the Muller Thurgau which was the backbone of Lieb etc .

    There are lots of quite wonderful German wines . I suggest that if you see anything from the Mosel from Dr Loosen it can be bought with confidence . The same would apply to Fritz Haag and JJ Prum, the awesome albeit expensive Mosels of Egon Muller and the Rhine wines of Gunderloch and Leitz . The latter and Dr Loosen's wines are available from Waitrose and Majestic .

    The Co-Op has also always sold good German wines from von Kesselstatt .

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  • french frank
    replied
    Originally posted by johnb View Post
    On the surface that seems an extraordinary statement. I don't know enough to recommend anything but I do know there are many knowledgeable wine enthusiasts who love German wines.

    (Many decades back though the reputation of German wines was "afflicted" by Liebfraumilch and, yes, poor quality Piesporter Michelsberg.)
    I was remembering a long time back when, as a teenager, I was taken out to eat somewhere by my father (who knew nothing about wine, I should say). He usually chose a German wine and I remembered them as very good, and with a good reputation. Then there was certainly an era of Liebfraumilch, Black Tower, Blue Nun, but I seem to think even the rather more upmarket labels became unreliable? It could be that the Oddbins man was excusing the fact that they had nothing German, but if not, why not (this was about 10 years ago)?

    Last bottle here of Niersteiner Gutes Domtal Auslese 1976, £41.41 - that was another name I remember.

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  • johnb
    replied
    Originally posted by french frank View Post
    I remember Oddbins saying a few years ago that they didn't stock any German wines because 'there was nothing good enough'. Is there anything worth looking out for?
    On the surface that seems an extraordinary statement. I don't know enough to recommend anything but I do know there are many knowledgeable wine enthusiasts who love German wines.

    (Many decades back though the reputation of German wines was "afflicted" by Liebfraumilch and, yes, poor quality Piesporter Michelsberg.)

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  • french frank
    replied
    I spotted a bottle of German wine in the Coop: a Mosel Piesporter Michelsberg which took me back to the glory days of German wines. I shan't buy another . I remember Oddbins saying a few years ago that they didn't stock any German wines because 'there was nothing good enough'. Is there anything worth looking out for?

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  • Beef Oven!
    replied
    Originally posted by Caliban View Post
    Tried any, Beefo?
    Not been that lucky.

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  • Nick Armstrong
    replied
    Originally posted by Tony View Post
    Well, if it is indeed as suave, complex and lovely as several of the Moldovan young lady violinists with whom I have been working recently, then we should all stock up on it without delay!

    Leave a comment:


  • Tony Halstead
    replied
    Well, if it is indeed as suave, complex and lovely as several of the Moldovan young lady violinists with whom I have been working recently, then we should all stock up with it without delay!

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Armstrong
    replied
    Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post
    Get ready for some cheap bottles of Moldovan wine coming our way. The Russians don't want it!

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-24061556
    Tried any, Beefo?

    Leave a comment:

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