Chinese wine is going to be a big deal in a few years. Lots of vines being planted, and by some highly regarded names, like Rothschild. When I saw this bottle in my local Wine Rack I just had to try it... is Chinese wine any good?
Smells like petrol, but in a good way. Like you're going on a road trip, pulling into the petrol station and wondering what overpriced snacks you'll purchase for the journey. It's actually quite good! Black cherry jam, and clove. Lingers on the sides of the mouth. Unusually for a Cabernet Sauvignon it finishes with red cherry, a light fruity tone. The road trip was better than expected, with some ups and downs, through unfamiliar territory, and got lost, but found our way home.
Would go great with peppered steak or roast duck with plum sauce.
Worth a go for £10.99 from Wine Rack.
To find out more about Princess and the Pinot and our pop-up wine bars please visit www.princessandthepinot.com
My wine tasting notes and tips for helping you to choose wines that are good value for money
Friday, January 20, 2017
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
#wineshowxmas Wine Advent Calendar
Here is my review of all the wines featured in the Wine Show Christmas advent calendar:
1st Dec advent wine: Balbium, Terre di Balbia 2011 Calabria Italy. Soma notes: sitting in a warm pub in a leather chair at an oak table that has that slight tackiness from the days pint and wine glasses. It's raining outside, enjoying the quiet before friends arrive. Interpretation: almost purple in colour with a heady aroma of dried prunes. Spicy and warming from the alcohol, definitely a wine to be enjoyed in front of a fire, a great start to the advent. Tannins are teeth-coating but velvety. Enjoy with a cheese platter accompanied with the trimmings of celery, walnuts, and fig chutney.
2nd Dec #advent wine from The Wine Show Benufet, Herencia Altes 2011 #wineshowxmas. Soma notes: Hot summer, sitting on a bench in a busy city square with heat reflecting off the pavement and sun reflecting off a fountain, as passers by chatter. Interpretation: An aromatic fruit-driven Garnacha with floral and melon notes with a long finish. It has had early harvesting which has preserved the acidity (some Spanish wines can get too flabby from over-sun exposure), and has had 2 months on its lees (sediment) to add texture and complexity. A very lovely wine (I want to find out where I can buy it) and would go well with roast pork or chicken casserole.
Estate Carmenere, De Martino Estate, Maipo Chile 2015: 3rd Dec #adventThe Wine Show #wineshowxmas. It tastes of cardboard, well, red-wine soaked cardboard, but still... I'd have said mines corked except it's from a bottle which has no cork! Lovely purple colour though. Sorry no appropriate tasting notes for this bad boy 

4th Dec #advent wine: Rioja Reserva Bodegas Ondarre 2010 The Wine Show #wineshowxmas. Soma notes: Sitting in a sauna on a white fluffy towel after a long swim in an indoor pool. Feeling relaxed, invigorated, slightly achy, warm, with a tingle in the nose. Interpretation: beautiful oak on the nose, soft and fruity with lovely caramel. On the palate there are black cherries and spiced plum. Don't serve it chilled, it needs to be room temp so it tastes mellow.
5th Dec: Bacchus, Kenton vineyards, Devon 2014 #wineshowxmas#advent #wine The Wine Show. I'm not a fan of Bacchus generally. It's naturally a low acidity wine meaning the flavour flees from your palate leaving you wondering if it was ever really there. It's a German varietal that a lot of UK vineyards grow because it's hardy, doesn't mind what soil it grows in, and our crappy climate allows the grapes to retain their acidity. It has been dubbed "UK's Sauvignon Blanc". Bacchus can have deep and complex flavours, but only when it's allowed to fully ripen. So is this wine unripe with high acidity, or complex but fleeting? Let's find out... Aromatic with citrus and elderflower. Tastes almost like a sorbet. Good acidity, not very complex. Will go well with oysters or scallops. Worth a try, see if you like it.
6th Dec wine #advent: Paper Road Pinot Noir, Wairarapa New Zealand 2014 #wineshowxmas The Wine Show. Soma notes: you're actually in the vineyard, you can smell the solid earth and the green canopy of the vines. Nibbling at wild strawberries that grow with the roses at the ends of the rows of vines. Interpretation: an honest, delicate, fruity wine that is a true joy to drink. A pale Ruby colour, with fresh earthy tones on the nose, and luscious strawberries on the palate with a spicy finish. It doesn't need food, but if you must, serve it with a mushroom risotto or chicken chasseur, something that's equally grounded and honest. Available for £14.99 from The Dorset Wine Company
Soave Classico Pieropan Venetian Italy 2015. Gorgeous. Like you're walking through a field of wild flowers. Soave can often come across as watery, but this is full of flavour from the combination of Garganega and Trebbiano di Soave grapes which develops the complexity of the wine. It is wonderfully fragrant, with flavours of grapefruit and honey.
Cedre Heritage Cahors 2014. This tastes like you're at a farm that uses old fashioned farming practices, a horse and cart ploughing a field. It's a wine that is packed full of blackcurrants and clove. If you like Argentinian Malbec you should try this, or another French Malbec (or Cot) to see how they differ. The French version tends to be a bit more rustic.
9th Dec #advent #wineshowxmas Limoux Toques et Clochers Languedoc Chardonnay 2012 The Wine Show. Wowsers! This is a pretty full on Chardonnay. If you're an ABC (anything but Chardonnay) this is not the wine for you. Having been matured in new oak I got cheese and pineapple on the nose! Very oaky and needs to be drunk with food, a cheese soufflé or smoked fish, or something with full flavour that can battle it out with this powerhouse.
Chardonnay Bogle Vineyards California 2013: Lovely honey, lemon and vanilla to start with mango and coconut. Sitting on a beach in the Caribbean drinking a mango smoothie, wearing oversized sunglasses having just applied Malibu coconut sun cream.
Hochar Pere et Fils, Chateau Musar, Beckaa Valley, Lebanon, Cinsault Grenache 2011: Black cherry, black pepper, chocolate, not much tannin, very fruity, and has a sweetness to it. It's quite high alcohol but you don't notice it. I'm sitting at a bus stop... I'm waiting for something...
Selezione Greco, La Guardiense, Sanrio, Italy 2015: Peach and almond on the nose, complex and intense. Full bodied, with lime and green olive on the palate. Walking along a brick road in Ohio on a hot late-summers day at corn harvest.
Ad-Hoc Avant Gardening Cabernet Malbec, Larry Cherubino, Western Australia 2014: Deep black cherry, eucalyptus, charcoal and chocolate. Hiking through a forest with an increasingly heavy backpack making shoulders ache, but feeling a sense of achievement. Looking forward to putting my feet up!
Pinotage Groot Constantia South Africa 2014: Very juicy black currants and plums, surprisingly easy drinking. Earthy, brave, strong and friendly. I am Groot.
The Apple Doesn't Fall Far, Matias Riccitelli, Mendoza Argentina, Bonarda 2014: Deep purple, spicy on the nose with Black Forest fruits and chocolate, a bit rough around the edges. I'm standing outside a chocolate factory made of red brick. Would be a good wine to accompany a cheeseburger.
Torrentes Coloma Salta Argentina 2015: Pale lemon yellow, powerful Peach and melon on the nose. Almond, Apple and cinnamon on the palate. Visiting a rural countryside cottage, inside has a cool breeze, contemplating the energy for a bike ride. Homely, fresh, exploration.
Waitrose has named wines in their house range with one word, so I'm going to try the same...
Vina Almate Alfredo Maesto Valladolid Tempranillo Spain 2014: FRUITY
Albente, Feudi di San Gregorio, Campania, Falanghina, 2015 Italy: AROMATIC
Bourgogne Aligote, Domaine du Corps de Garde, Burgundy, France 2014: CRISP
Teroldego Rotaliano, Foradori, Trentino Alto-Adige, Teroldego, Italy 2013: DEEP
Good enough descriptions? Do you actually need any more??
Valle Hermoso, Carmenere, Valle Central, Chile 2014. Sorry but this wine only gets one word too: MEH. I think maybe I'm tasting too many special wines in the run up to Xmas I'm being spoiled 

22nd-24th Dec #advent The Wine Show #wineshowxmas
Dry Tokaji, Chateau Dereszla, Hungary 2014, Furmint Muscat Kabar: Licking a gooseberry fool in a cafe next to a glass window... zingy, balanced with body and low acidity so good with spicy food like a Thai green curry.
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano Riserva, Carpineto Tuscany Italy 2011, Sangiovese: Elegant and soft, light but with layers of flavour. A very Xmas wine, packs a punch to counteract cola-glazed ham, pigs in blankets with cranberry sauce and turkey with stuffing and gravy.
Gruner Veltliner Terrassen, Huber, Traisental, Austria, 2015: In a scented garden, touching herbs and smelling wafts of fresh aromas as you brush past bushes. Green on the tongue, slight spritz.
Chianti Classico, Sangiovese, Nittardi, Tuscany, Italy 2012: Sitting on the sofa under a rug, fireside with logs burning in a brick hearth, a copper coal bucket containing paper kindling. Lights down low. Lovely blackcurrants and raspberries, an unusual combination, with soft tannins. Smoky aftertaste, complex, well-balanced, fruity yet dry. Spot on. Cheers!
To find out more about Princess and the Pinot and our pop-up wine bars please visit www.princessandthepinot.com
To find out more about Princess and the Pinot and our pop-up wine bars please visit www.princessandthepinot.com
☺️
😒
Friday, November 25, 2016
Xistos Douro
Soma notes: playing basketball / netball / rugby on a sunny but cold day when you catch the ball and your fingers feel numb but invigorated. It passes through your mouth like the wind across your face.
Interpretation: Smells full on with a fruity bang and alcohol fumes (its 14%) getting the juices going. Full bodied and punchy on the palate (thanks to the alcohol and tannins), there are some lovely jammy red berries and a short fruit finish but has a lovely caramel oakiness that lingers for a long time. I let this wine warm up to room temperature (I keep my reds at 16'), but it still feels cold, so not a comforting in front of the fire wine, and not complex enough to accompany a juicy steak. Drink on it's own or with beef stew, cottage pie, or cheese.
I feel Portuguese wines are often overlooked, we buy the port so we know they have good vines, and we go on holiday there so we know they get sunshine, so it makes sense they should make good wines. And they do. Most reds are made with the domestic grape Touriga Nacional which is intense with high tannins. This is used for port and reds in Douro and Dao, so although this bottle doesn't say Touriga Nacional it's probably a blend with Tinta Roriz. It's made from very old wines and grapes were pressed using traditional lagares (treading on grapes in open stone tanks).
If you're not keen on reds I urge you to try Portuguese Vinho Verde (this will always stay in my heart because in my WSET exam I thought this was a grape but it's a region!). It's a gorgeous light white wine with citrus flavours but what makes it special is a slight sparkling sensation on your tongue, which is just delightful.
I bought mine from a Portuguese shop called Exquisite in Marlow for £12, sorry but I can't find it in mainstream stores, please let me know if you spot it!
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Christmas Wines
In my family we have traditionally opened presents with
Champagne, accompanied smoked salmon with Chablis, had a Burgundy pinot noir
with the turkey, Sauternes with mince pies, and passed the port with cheese,
all traditional, all classics, but when you serve what’s expected it doesn’t always
turn heads. This year I want my guests to talk about the wine, so my Christmas
wine list is going to be anything but traditional.
Christmas is a special occasion so it deserves some special
wine. Instead of Champagne, I have splashed out on Nyetimber Tillington Single
Vineyard, which I got when we visited the beautiful Tudor winery
in the summer. Made from a blend of 78% Pinot Noir and 22% Chardonnay,
Tillington is the first Single Vineyard sparkling wine from England with all
grapes specially selected from a single vineyard site. The 2010 vintage is pale
gold in colour, with gentle, fine bubbles that fill the nose with aromas of
redcurrant, wild raspberry and toast. On the palate, the wine shows elegance
and complexity, balancing rich notes of almond and brioche with a fine
minerality and a persistent finish. You can read more about this special single vineyard site and the wine it produces HERE but unfortunately I can't find anywhere that sells this, so unless you can arrange a visit to the winery, why not try Nyetimber Blanc de Blanc from The Champagne Company (£34) instead.
To partner smoked salmon with an assortment of toasts and blinis
and a dill cream cheese, I will need a wine that will cut through all that
creaminess. I love a lemony and peppery Austrian gruner veltliner, such as the Rabl
Gruner Veltliner Kamptal (£9 M&S), a wonderfully easy-drinking unoaked
white with hints of apples and elderflower.
The red, oh the red, you have to have red at Christmas.
Turkey can be paired with a light red anyway, but when served with pigs in
blankets, sage and onion stuffing, gravy, and cranberry sauce, then it
definitely should be. The red I will be serving with the turkey this year will
be Sicilian Frappato, a lovely alternative to pinot noir, such as Santa Tresa
(Ocado £9.99). Often a revelation to wine drinkers, Frappato is elegant and
refreshing - surprisingly more delicate than many of the muscular reds of
Sicily, yet full of character. Santa Tresa Frappato is smooth and elegant, with
wild strawberries and touches of spice. It’s an organic wine and should be
served slightly chilled. Visit santatresa.com to explore where this wine is
made.
To accompany the mince pies I recommend a sweet Madeira, and
for the cheese a Riesling. This may sound the reverse pairings to what you’d
expect, a dessert with a fortified wine and cheese with a dessert wine, but
trust me these both work. You could even try a little of both with each and see
which you prefer. Try Blandys Single
Harvest Malmsey with your Christmas pudding (£13.99 from Waitrose 50cl). Amber
colour with golden green reflections and a characteristic bouquet of Madeira
with dried fruits, tea, toffee and spices. Rich and full bodied with notes of
vanilla, honey and chocolate. An added bonus is you can also use the
Madeira in a sauce for leftover turkey, use THIS Madeira sauce recipe.

Alternatively, buy a Tokaji which will pair excellently with any sticky dessert as well as with cheese. Don't know what Tokaji is? Read my blog HERE
I have chosen unconventional wines to partner traditional
dishes, but if you would like suggestions for other food pairings this Christmas,
please comment below.
To find out more about Princess and the Pinot and our pop-up wine bars please visit www.princessandthepinot.com
To find out more about Princess and the Pinot and our pop-up wine bars please visit www.princessandthepinot.com
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
What is Tokaji?
Tokaji is a wine region in Hungary, which produces some
wonderful dry wines, but you really should look out for their sweet wines. They
can be pricey, but definitely worth it for accompanying a sticky toffee
pudding. It was Tokaji that opened me up to dessert wines, before thinking there
was not much point to them.
I pronounce Tokaji as “To-Kai” with “To” as in Top and “Kai”
as in Kite. Although I’m not sure this is exactly right it gets me passed the
sommelier!
Tokaji is made from grapes that have been infected by a
fungus called botrytis. This mould grows on grapes in areas that have damp
mornings and warm sunny afternoons. This process of rotting and drying causes
the grapes to shrivel up and lose water, causing the juice inside to become
concentrated. Additional flavour compounds often develop in botrytis berries,
such as apricot and ginger. The grapes that are affected by botrytis in Hungary
are called Aszu berries, which are carefully selected at harvest to be made
into the Tokaji dessert wine I love.
When you order a Tokaji sweet wine you will notice that it has
a number of puttonyos. This is a very interesting part of Hungarian winemaking…
Once the Aszu berries are picked, they were traditionally collected in baskets
called Puttony. The number of baskets of sweet Aszu grapes that are added to
the non-botrytis grape juice (also known as must) were counted and labelled on
the wine. The system uses 3-6 puttonyos for Tokaji sweet wine, and these days actual
sugar content is measured. The number of puttonyos is regarded as a level of
quality and in 2014 the labelling changed to just “Tokaji Aszu” and only 5- and
6-puttonyos wines can be made under this label. However, I still find it cute
to see the puttonyos on the label as it provokes evocative mental imagery of
aged Hungarian men and women carrying large baskets of shrivelled up grapes. Wine
that is made entirely from Aszu grapes is called Eszencia. Tokaji Eszencia is a
syrupy wine that is so sweet it is typically served in a tablespoon, and
because of its high sugar content can age for over 200yrs.
You may have already tried the sweet wines of the Sauternes
and Mosel Riesling which aim to copy the nectar properties of Tokaji dessert
wines. Some producers in Alsace France and Friuli Italy use “Tokay” or “Tokai”
to attract attention, so don’t get tricked, you really should try the traditional
Hungarian Tokaji Aszu wine.
If you’re not keen on dessert wines, then I would also
recommend seeking out Tokaji dry wines, such as the dry white wine single-varietal
Furmint. These wines are typically off-dry with high acidity, and although they
are often aged in Hungarian oak you wouldn’t know it to taste it. A good
alternative to a NZ Sauvignon Blanc and can certainly generate discussion
around the dinner table.
To read about my review of a Furmint wine go to http://princessandthepinot.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/firmint-royal-tokaji-2010.html
Thursday, October 13, 2016
Harvest with Harrow & Hope
I was lucky to be invited by Kaye Laithwaite to join the harvest of Pinot Noir grapes on the Harrow & Hope vineyard this morning. I have to say it is back-breaking work and I am amazed at the seasoned pickers who work from 7am-7pm, but I left with a sense of achievement that comes from hard work and a full stomach thanks to the gorgeous Barbara Laithwaite who served a delicious lunch.
H&H hand pick their grapes allowing selection of prime grapes with minimal damage, which is important for this small vineyard. Hand-picking grapes is also important for regions with steep aspects, such as Mosel, Duoro, and Northern Rhône. Mechanical picking can't be used for wines that require whole-bunch grapes, such as Champagne and Beaujolais. As you would expect, machine harvesting is cheaper and easier, but can also be valuable for night-picking which is required for Sauvignon Blanc grapes which over-ripen very quickly once picked.
The juice that was pressed this morning by Henry Laithwaite was like no grape juice I've ever tasted, it was intense, refined, and like nectar. I can't wait to try the Harrow & Hope English sparkling wine that my grapes make!
If you would like to find out more about the story of Harrow & Hope and the wines they make, take a look at their website www.harrowandhope.com
If you would like to learn how to grow vines or make wine, you can take courses at Plumpton College in Sussex www.plumpton.ac.uk
If you want to work in vineyards in the UK, or need help setting up your own vineyard, get in touch with Vine Works www.vine-works.com
Monday, July 18, 2016
Lay of the land
I've been drinking three Lay of the Land wines and I'm finding them very interesting and very drinkable. The NZ Pinot noir is full of strawberry and delicious, the Sauvignon blanc has the characteristics of a NZ Sav b but with the full roundness of an unoaked Chardonnay (not quite sure how they did that, need to look into it), and the Nahe Pinot Gris well bloody hell a German wine that has the NZ/ Aussie / UK requirements of "I just want to enjoy drinking it", thank you LotL I'm thoroughly enjoying your wines... But not sure who you are!
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