Friday 24 April 2015

High Street Wine Challenge: Tesco Finest Pazo Torrequintans Albarino

Another supermarket, another Spanish wine.

Albarino (pronounced "al-bah-ree-nyo") is made in the Rias Baixas region of northwest Spain where cooling sea breezes enable winemakers to produce zingy fresh white wines. Unlike most other wines from Spain, Albarino is the name of the grape variety (not the region) which I believe has hugely helped this wine's popularity in the UK. You can also find the same grape from Portugal in the name Alvarinho.



On reading the back label, this wine is made by Martin Codax who is one of Albarino's most famous winemakers (you can find his wine being sold at Majestic for £12.99) so already I'm expecting a good quality product. My top tip would be not to serve it too cold, as if drunk straight from the fridge all you get is zingy citrus fruit and not much else. However once the wine warms up a touch you get lots of ripe peach, orange blossom and lovely mineral notes. Style-wise, if you like Sauvignon Blanc you should love this. For £7.49 this is a great value white and it was perfect with the fish pie that we had this evening.

Happy Swigging!

Sunday 19 April 2015

High Street Wine Challenge: Perez Burton Rioja 2012, M&S

Following on from my blog post on Spanish wines, I sent my husband off to our local M&S Simply Food with the instructions "buy something Spanish for less than a tenner." He returned with a bottle of Rioja for £8.79, evidently embarrassed for being so unoriginal in his choice as he explained that the only other option was a Tempranillo/Syrah blend for a fiver. So we'll let him off.


First observation is that this must be a Tinto Joven wine as there's no sign of any other classification on the label, however this is no bad thing and just means it's likely to be a fruity red.

And on tasting, my assumption was correct. Bags of ripe plum and blackberry fruit, very soft and smooth. As ever with Spanish wine, this may be classed as "young" but you can still taste that it has been aged in oak as you can taste the sweet spices. This is a nice, easy red wine, not very exciting but perfectly decent and would be delicious with roast lamb.

Happy Swigging!

Saturday 18 April 2015

Viva Espana!

Think of Spanish wine and what is the first thing that springs to mind? Rioja?

Spain is an enormous country with vast swathes of vineyards, a lot of which are situated in the baking hot centre of the country. As a result, it is their reds which they are most famous for and the best regions are situated in the cooler north of the country. However red Rioja is only part of the story.

Image thanks to www.alcoholbeverage.com

The three top quality red wine appellations in Spain are indeed Rioja, but also Ribera del Duero, and Priorat.

Rioja is by far Spain's most famous appellation. Rioja is situated in the north of the country, and produces reds, whites and roses. The dominant grape varieties are Tempranillo & Garnacha (aka Grenache) for the reds, and Viura, Malvasia & Garnacha Blanca for the whites. Rioja producers love ageing their wines in oak so you will find a lot of their reds show notes of coconut or vanilla. With the whites, producers are moving away from oak and concentrating on stainless steel so the wines are much drier and fresh - almost Sauvignon Blanc-like in taste. Also their roses tend to be quite rich and dry, the perfect accompaniment to a BBQ.

Ribera del Duero is the second top quality wine region. Situated in the northwest, it only produces red wines in which the dominant grape is Tempranillo (although here it is called Tinto Fino). This is also where some of Spain's most expensive, iconic wines come from such as Vega Sicilia. Tempranillo is often blended with Cabernet Sauvignon to produce powerful wines that age beautifully.

Priorat is made in the northeast, and what makes it different is its sparkly black slate & quartz soil called llicorella. Here Garnacha and Carinena are blended with Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah and Merlot to produce intensely dark and spicy reds - not for the faint hearted but a stunning alternative to Argentinian Malbec or similar.

If you are more of a white wine drinker, the two appellations to look out for are Rueda and Rias Baixas. Rueda's white wines are made mostly from Verdejo (rich, nutty, herby) and sometimes Sauvignon Blanc; whilst Rias Baixas up in Galicia produces stunning whites from the Albarino grape (if you like these, you can also buy Alvarinho from northern Portugal - same grape, very similar climate). All are dry and ridiculously easy drinking.

If you're looking for a bargain, try to spot wines from Jumilla, Navarra, Toro and Valdepenas - all of these are less well known but have had heavy investment in recent years so the quality of their wines is really rather good for the price (especially with the current Euro exchange rate).

NB: One of the big things that confuses people about Spanish wines is their classification system so here's a quick explanation: Joven is sold in the year after the harvest; Crianza is aged for two years (of which at least six months is spent in oak); Reserva means it is aged for three years (of which one year is spent in oak); and a Gran Reserva is aged for five years (of which two years are spent in oak). This is a big of a generalisation, but most producers will actually age their wines for longer and these rules are seen as the minimum amount of ageing their wines should receive. This also means that, unlike wines from Bordeaux, Burgundy, etc, Spanish wines are ready to drink as soon as they are released onto the market.

Happy Swigging!

Friday 10 April 2015

High Street Wine Challenge: Pecorino and Melnik

It's been a few weeks since my last post, so I thought that was the best excuse to buy two bottles to taste tonight. Yay it's Friday!


Pecorino Terre di Chieti (Waitrose £7.99)




Yes Pecorino is an Italian cheese, but it is also an Italian grape variety which nearly died out but is now facing a bit of a renaissance. This is the perfect white wine for Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Grigio drinkers as it is dry and refreshing. This version is soft and ripe on the nose, full of peaches and floral notes, but then when you taste it you get lots of green apple and citrus fruit, fresh & spritzy with lovely minerality. This would be delicious as an aperitif or with an antipasti platter. 


Sant Ilia Cabernet Sauvignon/Cabernet Franc/Melnik (Waitose £8.99)





Back in the 1980s, Bulgarian wines were hugely popular in the UK for being super cheap and easy to drink. Since then the quality has come on leaps and bounds this blend tasted delicious with our sausage & leek traybake supper. On the nose there's a strong caramel aroma, and then the taste is full of ripe, sweet blueberry and blackberry fruit, with a hint of vanilla and anise spice at the end. Very soft and easy drinking, I would never have guessed there was Cabernet in there! 


Happy Swigging!