Originally posted by amateur51
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What Was Your Most Recent Bottle of Wine?
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amateur51
Originally posted by cloughie View PostThere is/was a nice Chilean Chardonnay/Viognier on offer at £5 from Sainsbury's - yes that grocer that sells CD box sets at a reasonable price on line! The main problem I find nowadays is deciding whether to splash my cash on a bottle that should really be half the price. I frequently see old favourites drifting up above my price range - rarely see Gigondas under £10 and I reckon I'll really have to save up if I want Condrieu. Maybe we golden oldies should heed the health warnings and just go for less but better!
Both Wine Society and Yapp Bros are good sources of wines from the Rhone
Stock up your wine rack from the outstanding selection of top quality wines available now from the Wine Society. Exceptional prices with free delivery options.
Stock up your wine rack from the outstanding selection of top quality wines available now from the Wine Society. Exceptional prices with free delivery options.
Browse our comprehensive range of French wines by region, and buy wine online with a quality guarantee from Yapp Brothers - an award-winning independent wine merchant.
Browse our comprehensive range of French wines by region, and buy wine online with a quality guarantee from Yapp Brothers - an award-winning independent wine merchant.
Yes some saving up will be required for Condrieu but Wine Society's Exhibition gigondas 2006 is 'just' £12.50
Other stockists and wine merchants are available
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Originally posted by Bax-of-Delights View PostVieux Telegraphe Chateauneuf-du-Pape
A magnum of same accompanied a round-number birthday dinner a while back, and the bottle is still upon the hearth as a memento. Phenomenal stuff.
You've made me thirsty now...
"...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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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
A magnum of same accompanied a round-number birthday dinner a while back, and the bottle is still upon the hearth as a memento. Phenomenal stuff.
You've made me thirsty now...
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Originally posted by Bax-of-Delights View Postthere is a lower quality wine offered by the same winery - Vieux Telegram - which, I have to say, is so-so.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostA bottle of the 1989 Vieux Telegraphe that I bought when it was far too expensive for my impecunious state in 1992 was magnficent when drunk in 2009...
Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe Châteauneuf du Pape 1989: Deep mahogany red. Rich fruit on the nose, with spicy cloves. Tannic palate, but carrying loads of fruit and sweet toffee oak. Full bodied, spicy. Warming alcoholic finish. Excellent length. 18/20
Château de Beaucastel Châteauneuf du Pape 1989: Bags of fruit on the nose. Tannic palate, awash with fruit, not showing its age at all. Some spicy notes. Quite alcoholic. Finishes well with good length. This wine still has great potential. 17.5+/20
Domaine du Pégau Châteauneuf du Pape 1989: Rubbery note on the nose mars the overall impression of this wine, but it is still superb. Loads of fruit on the palate, with a soft, silky textured that is so appealing. Less aggressive alcohol than the other wines, impeccable balance, finishes just beautifully. 18/20
Château Rayas Châteauneuf du Pape 1989: A soft, forward fruity nose. Raspberry and vanilla notes. Lower in acids on the palate, nice alcohol, overall much more approachable than the other wines, but doesn't have their structure. Finishes well. 17/20
[source: winedoctor aka Chris Kissack]
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Anna
I know it's all down to personal taste but can I pick your brains? I don't know a lot about wines and I know the traditional red + red meat, white + fish, chicken, etc., is not adhered to now but what would you suggest to accompany guinea fowl, being as it's more strongly flavoured than a chicken, would a soft red be more appropriate than a chilled white?
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Roehre
Originally posted by Anna View PostI know it's all down to personal taste but can I pick your brains? I don't know a lot about wines and I know the traditional red + red meat, white + fish, chicken, etc., is not adhered to now but what would you suggest to accompany guinea fowl, being as it's more strongly flavoured than a chicken, would a soft red be more appropriate than a chilled white?
It is IMO even questionable whether it should be a soft red. I obviously wouldn't advice a claret (bordeaux) but a nice Rioja or Barros would IMO be a good and tasteful (literally) combination.
Btw, a dry Rosé would do well too.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI know it's all down to personal taste but can I pick your brains? I don't know a lot about wines and I know the traditional red + red meat, white + fish, chicken, etc., is not adhered to now but what would you suggest to accompany guinea fowl, being as it's more strongly flavoured than a chicken, would a soft red be more appropriate than a chilled white?
I've never actually believed in the white with white meat thing - always prefer red with a bird.
FYI, here are two French sites for food-wine matches, and for guineafowl ('pintade') all their suggestions are red...
Another site suggests these for pintade: Chenas - Santenay - Côtes du Rhône-Villages - Côtes de Provence rouge
So I'd say Red Red Red!!
Bon appétit!"...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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Anna View PostI know it's all down to personal taste but can I pick your brains? I don't know a lot about wines and I know the traditional red + red meat, white + fish, chicken, etc., is not adhered to now but what would you suggest to accompany guinea fowl, being as it's more strongly flavoured than a chicken, would a soft red be more appropriate than a chilled white?
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Postcertainly a red for me.
Depending how grand or otherwise the meal was going to be I might go for a beaujolais (yes, a chenas wd be nice... ) - a Loire red - a modest burgundy.
Think pinot noir - gamay - cab franc...
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Thropplenoggin
Ye gods!
Just picked up a few bottles of this chez Carrefour (€8.50): Château Dasvin-Bel-Air 2009 Haut Medoc. This vintage won a gold medal at the Concours de Bordeaux 2011. A lovely bottle - nice nose, quite complex though lacking that leathery tobacco element that exceptional Bordeaux wines have (Pomerol et al), all at a great price and available, it seems, chez Aldi: http://www.aldi.co.uk/uk/html/offers...uys3_27929.htm £9.99!
It'd probably be even better if laid down in the cellar for a few years.
Eminently quaffable, especially to accompany beef (saignant) followed by an odiferous hunk of Roquefort and dried figs.
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