Our Christmas tasting was on a December Friday in
Farnborough, courtesy of Ian and Kathryn.
They hosted fourteen of us Tongham Tasters for a fine evening of wine
food and conversation. The theme was the
Nativity and all wines were named after what you might find in your Nativity
scene. Being our Christmas party and as
there were fourteen of us we had eight wines and a bonus at the end for our dessert.
So that we could admire the names and pictures on the
bottles we did not taste the wines blind; I note that this is becoming a habit
of ours of late. We also did not use our
usual twenty point scoring system, as we wanted to be less serious than
usual. Apart from rating the wines our
challenge was to try and guess the price of each bottle.
Our excellent hosts |
Cous cous with chicken and preserved lemon |
The recipe for the gorgonzola, honey and chutney pannacotta is on Jane's blog Whyisthereair.com.
We had a real selection of ages at this tasting – everything
from under twenty to ninety!
So how did we rate our Christmas wines? They are presented below in descending order
of preference:
1. L’Etoile de Romanin, 2007, Les Baux de Provence, Denis
Dubourdieu, French Red 14%, Marks & Spencer £13.99.
L’Etoile was the star of the evening, not surprising
considering its name in French means star.
This interesting Provencal blend of Mourvedre, Cabernet Sauvignon,
Grenache, Syrah, Carignan and Cinsault got nine of our votes as the best wine
of the evening. A big full-bodied wine
with bags of flavour – a lovely Christmas hug from the South of France. Highly recommended by most of our team who
also thought it great value.
Almost everyone had this wine in their top three wines of the
evening, even if it wasn’t actually anybody’s favourite. This Aussie Shiraz had both big fruit
flavour and complexity. It was the
most expensive wine of the evening and thus not surprisingly was well
received. Although we all liked it, none
of guessed it cost anything like its price tag and thus we couldn’t rate it as
good value. This could be one for lovers big Australian Shiraz and are willing
to pay nearly £20 for it.
3. Hewitson, Baby Bush 2010, Barossa Valley Mourvedre,
Australian Red, Berry Bros & Rudd £17.25.
Our third favourite wine was also a red, this one a single
varietal Mourvedre from cuttings of very old stock. It has that typical Mourvedre taste, very
similar to a French Bandol made with the same grape, but it was a touch sweet
and also a little thin on my palate.
Nevertheless it got two of our teams vote as top wine and half of us had
it in our top three. However, we again
didn’t get anywhere close to the price tag when guessing how much Ian paid for
it. The days of good value Australian
wine is long gone with current exchange rates.
4. Shepherd’s Ridge, Sauvignon Blanc 2011, Wither Hills, New
Zealand White, Marks and Spencer £9.99.
The top white wine of the evening was a very well received
New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc made for Marks and Spencer for Wither Hills. I thought it was an OK New Zealand white but
not spectacular; some of the team disagreed as two of them voted it their
favourite wine of the evening.
Certainly, not bad value at this price but I think M&S have sold out
of this one.
5. Cave de St Desirat Saint Joseph, Northern Rhone 2009,
French Red 12.5%, Marks and Spencer £13.99.
The reds were so good that this nice little Rhone number
came bottom of the pile. 100% Syrah, it
lacked the oomph of the other wines above it.
It went nicely with the food. Not
sure we could recommend this one at this price as most of us guessed it was
under £10.
6. Villa Maria Lightly Sparkling Marlborough Sauvignon
Blanc, New Zealand Sparkling White 2011 11.5%, Vickis in Chobham £8.00
This is a wine that has only recently been imported into the
country. I have heard wine experts like
Jancis Robinson say that you should never put bubbles in Sauvignon Blanc. The jury is probably still out on this one,
although two of our team voted it in their top half of the wines we tasted. It certainly was not bad; it was dry but
perhaps lacked any real flavour. The
frizzante style fizz was however appealing.
This was our most controversial wine of the evening with
three of us quite liking it and the others absolutely hating it. This unfortunately seems the fate of most
Chardonnay wines at our evenings. I
quite liked its taste but it had no smell and no length. It was at least the cheapest wine of the
evening and probably reasonable value if your like New World Chardonnay.
8. Migual Torres, Las Mulas 2012, Cabernet Sauvignon Rosé,
Chilean Rosé, Waitrose £8.99.
Our least popular wine of the evening with no top 5 votes
was this Chilean rosé. Most of us disliked its
colour, it was also a little bit sweet and had what some of us described as a
cheap synthetic cherry taste. It did
however add the mules or donkey to nativity scene! An organic wine it didn’t resemble the description
on the Waitrose website for us.
We ended the evening with a sweet Greek dessert wine sold by
the Wine Society that was very pleasant.
After nine wines, thankfully we had a taxi to take us back to Tongham. Thanks to the Stuarts for a great evening
and especially for the lovely red wines and accompanying food and all the
effort with the crackers etc. Lets hope we can all keep this standard up in 2013 - now there's a challenge!
The pouring of our dessert wine |
A yummy dessert |
Clive |
I end the year with a poem!
O star of wonder, O star of the night,
The reds were wonderful, the rosé a fright,
The Wisemen cometh but dost disappoint many,
The food was lovely and platefuls a plenty,
So thanks to the Stuarts for hosting so well,
Lots of wines to view, taste and smell,
So it’s just left to wish you all a Christmas great,
See you all again on January 11th at eight.
WE WISH YOU A HAPPY AND VINOUS NEW YEAR.
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