Tuesday 22 August 2017

KCCWS Chateau Beaucastel Dinner


We went to the KCCWS Chateau Beaucastel Wine Dinner over the weekend. Chateau Beaucastel is a well known estate in Chateauneuf du Papes, which uses all the 13 permitted grapes in its wines. (Since the change in AOC laws, which separate the gris and blanc varieties and increased the cepage count to 18, we will have to check if the wines now contain all eighteen varieties!!)

Six vintages were presented on the night spanning 20 years from 1988 to 2008, and these were 1988, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2006 and 2008.The dinner provided an opportunity to explore the evolution of a wine over the years, though (truth be said) even with the same estate, there are both vintage variations as well as the differences in the blend to try and bring out the best in any vintage.

Monday 14 August 2017

Rothschild vs Rothschild in Chile


As can be seen from the picture, this was something I spotted in the supermarkets whilst scouting for some Chilean wines for a South America themed gathering for the doctors of my hospital, but as I had rearranged the bottles for this juxtaposition, please ignore the prices because the positions are wrong. Both the Rothschild families have extensive overseas holdings and Chile is one country in which they are both present. Apart from these premium level offerings, both also do more affordable entry level wines 

As I was trying to highlight the particularities of the different South American countries, I was more interested in their Carmenere then their Bordeaux lookalike blends, which do include very un-Bordeaux grapes such as Syrah in their blends. You may well ask - why not Mouton vs Lafite for the title? Showing my age, I refer to an Award Winning film (Kremer vs Kremer) which I saw whilst at university.


Saturday 12 August 2017

An impromptu tasting at lunch



We went to lunch with a friend at which he was bringing some wines. When my wife arrived, someone else had been tasting wines which they were thinking of importing and brought along the unfinished bottles for everyone to chip in with their comments. Levorato is based in Riviera del Brenta between Padua and Venice and produces a large variety of wines from Sicily to Veneto.

Four wines were tasted, a Pinot Grigio della Venezia, a Merlot from Veneto, a Nerod'Avola from Sicily and a Primitivo from Salento. All were IGT wines. The Pinot Grigio was fair, but the Merlot was nothing to write home about. Both the Nero d'Avola and Primitivo were well wooded with enough fruit and acid to make the wines fairly well balanced. Just goes to confirm that indigenous grapes are a good bet for less known wines and appellations.

Sunday 6 August 2017

Bags for blind tasting


When we had the Garnacha vs Tempranillo dinner, we did a blind tasting of the red wines, and the Grill Room staff put the wines in these bags, which belong to the KCC Wine Society. Now I had been rather busy these last couple of years or so and had only attended their dinners very intermittently and I had not seen these before and so I cannot tell for how long they have been using these bags. Blind tasting the wines had been something they have been doing right from the very beginning; I recall what might have been the inaugural dinner in 1998, and we blind tasted 6 clarets. Before these nice bags, I recall we used to wrap everything in aluminium foil, but these bag bring extra class to the proceedings.

Friday 4 August 2017

Staiway to Heaven


No this has nothing to do with the 1970s Led Zeppelin song (for those who are old enough to remember it), this is about a Spanish winery, Scala Dei, whom some have nicknamed stairway to heaven  (Scala Dei is literally God's ladder in Latin). The winery can trace its origins back to the 12th century when Carthusian monks started growing vines here. The name of the monastery owes itself to a legend about a shepherd dreaming of angels coming down a ladder from the sky to the top of a tall pine tree here. A working monastery till the mid 19th century when Church properties were confiscated, the buildings have been reduced to ruins but the vineyards have passed down different families, who bottled the first Priorat wine in 1878 and presented it at the Paris World Fair. Wine making was modernized in the 1970s and the Cordoniu group acquired a part share in the 2000s.