Thursday, December 23, 2010

Tawny Port for the Holidays


I love Tawny port for the holidays. Named Tawny, because long periods in barrel render it a tawny hue, several styles exist. A Tawny of Indicated Age comes in 10, 20, 30 and 40+ year designations. The number on the bottle reflects the average age of the wine within. Date of Harvest or Colheita Tawny is from a single year and will show that year on the label. In both styles, the year of bottling must appear somewhere on the package. Tawnies are extremely elegant with lots of toffee, raisin, nutty, figgy, date-like flavours. Older versions are like sipping liquid, Kraft caramels and are to die for. Great on their own or with desserts, nuts and stinky cheese, they’re absolutely scrumptious.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Bringing Wine to Dinner


With the holidays, come dinner invitations and one usually likes to bring along a bottle of wine. However, more often than not, the wine you bring doesn’t get opened as the host already has another few in mind to match the meal. This proves frustrating as you may have pulled something special or rare from your cellar or purchased a specific bottle for the event that you really want to taste. What to do? To ensure your wine is opened at the dinner, the “Good Doctor” suggests this. Call ahead and ask the host what the menu is because you want to bring a unique bottle to match a dish. This subtle gesture is viewed as considerate almost always ensuring that the wine you bring will be consumed.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Unusual Icewine


There was a time here in Canada when Icewine was only produced from Riesling, Vidal and occasionally Gewurztraminer. Today, however, Icewine is made from many grape varieties. Whites include Seyval Blanc, Chardonnay, Kerner, Chenin Blanc, Pinot Blanc, Semillon and Ehrenfelser. Some work better than others because of their fruitiness. Even more astonishing are the reds: Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Sangiovese and even Syrah/Shiraz. It’s hard to envision the tannin and earthy notes of many reds translating well to this naturally frozen nectar, but somehow they do. Either way, you should try some of these odd, varietal Icewines. They’re an unusual delight.

Friday, December 3, 2010

Niagara 2010 Vintage Report


Wondering what the 2010 Niagara wines will be like this coming year? Just look at the summer we had and it tells the story. Spring was mild and summer was sunny and hot with just enough rainfall…a great growing season indeed. In fact, it was the earliest grape harvest since the 1980s. The resulting fruit was superb with gobs of sugar. When the 2010s are released in spring of 2011, the wines, in general, should be rich and fat with great fruit structure and higher alcohol because of the heat. Insiders are calling this one of the best quality years ever, similar to 1991, ‘95 and ‘98. Maybe even better than the acclaimed 2007! We should be in for a treat when they start to make the scene.