Published in Dockwalk – May 2006

Rosé is making waves all over the place these days and with sales going through the roof last year and still rising, I thought it would be a good idea to have a look at what all the fuss is about.

Probably the most important two words to remember when sourcing pink wine are these: ‘banish blush’. OK, you may know of one or two exceptions but, as a rule of thumb, avoid them unless you know them. After all, they’re probably a bigger cause of rosé’s erstwhile – what shall we call it? – `image problem’ than anything else.

Rosé may be just about the hottest thing on the block right now but remember it should always, and I mean always, be well chilled. Perhaps not as much as we used to chill it in the bad old days of Mateus Rosé and Rosé d’Anjou, when half the point was to deaden the frequently less than fabulous flavours, but still a good hour in the refrigerator. (Bear in mind that while it’s easy to snigger at poor old Mateus, their sales went up by 42% between 2002 and 2004 and yet more last year. In fact, they went from very big to very, very big.)

There’s been a serious upturn in the quality of rosé across the board in the last few years and the fact that it is winemakers of the calibre of Jean-Luc Colombo who are turning their hands to producing them tells us that this looks like being more than a passing fad. His Pioche et Cabanon 2003 ($10) from Provence has a roundness and a complexity of red fruits and something more Rhône-like – black olives, perhaps – that would have been unthinkable in a rosé even a few years ago. Try it with something herby and tomatoey and garlicky and sort of … Provençal.

Of the big brand names, Jacob’s Creek Shiraz Rosé 2004 from Australia (around $12) is a perennially good bet when a deep draught of something cold enough to send trickles of condensation down the outside of the glass is what you want. It has good body and length and candied-fruit flavours with a nice tarry edge – there’s a splash of rose water thrown in for good measure.

Scotsmen excelling at making rosé wines in Bordeaux? In kilts? OK, I made the last bit up but if Château de Sours 2004 ($15) is the result then I’m all for it. The late, great Auberon Waugh described Esme Johnstone’s effort as ‘probably the best rosé in the world’ and its jammy nose, fleshy summer fruit flavours and general all-round yumminess certainly make it a contender.

The good folk of the Southern Rhône might, however, have a thing or two to say on that subject. Their appellation of Tavel is the only one in France to specify rosé as its sole authorised wine – as useful a wine-trivia question as I have up my sleeve, but I pass it on to you freely. The best producer in the appellation is generally thought to be Domaine de la Mordorée ($15-20), who also produce first-class Châteauneuf du Pape. Owner Christophe Delorme thinks the 2005 vintage is the best he?s made in his 20 years at the domaine and given that Robert Parker gave the previous year’s effort 89 points, I’m looking forward to sampling it with a juicy lamb steak.

Domaine Tempier ($28-32) has certainly booked its place on the podium with its spicy, beguiling Bandol – again from Provence, the spiritual home of rosé – made chiefly from the mourvèdre grape. Its long-lived, slight tarry and smoky flavours are ideal for outdoor eating.

The fact that Domaine de Limbardie 2004 Vin de Pays des Côteaux de Murviel from France’s Languedoc is stocked (at a mere $10 or so) by several of the UK’s leading merchants including Tanners, Adnams and Berry Brothers tells us that it’s a wine that can pull its weight. The flavours are of strawberries and Turkish delight and it’s very adaptable, with the body and depth to work well with barbecues.

Very much worth seeking out is Specogna Pinot Grigio 2003 ($20) from the Venezia-Giulia region of Italy. Although a ‘white’ grape, Pinot Grigio is a somewhat genetically confused scion of Pinot Noir and it has a pinky-grey skin which gives this wine its burnished auburn hue. It’s laden with Autumnal flavours like chestnuts and bay, sappy pine needles and herbs and smells of swirly bonfire smoke and pancetta so I’m not going to let the fact that it’s not strictly speaking a rosé put me off.

All these new-wave roses – to coin a phrase – are remarkably versatile food wines and the fuller-bodied examples, the Tavel and Provence wines especially, can go right through from canapés to cheese. A nice thought is a ?pink dinner? ? if you put your mind to it, you can come up with a menu consisting of only pink food, and maybe use pink tableware and linens too.

For sundowners on the after-deck, there’s no prettier thing to put in a glass than a rosé wine. Except perhaps a rosé champagne. For a large crowd, Moët et Chandon Brut Impérial Rosé ($50-60) is always a good bet, with overt strawberry and raspberry fruit and a nice tight mousse. Going upscale, Laurent Perrier Grand Siècle Alexandra 1997 ($100) has all the right credentials – crisp fruit with a nice warm briôche nose and masses of tiny bubbles. For best friends, Roederer Cristal ($350-450) always cuts a dash – 1996 is the preferred recent vintage if you can’t find the legendary 1985.

Meanwhile, Sogrape, the Portuguese producers of Mateus Rosé, have just launched a new wine and it’s a … rosé from, er, Spain. Looking at the publicity blurb I was a little disconcerted to read the legend across the front of the bottle which proudly announces it to be ‘A Taste of Spam’. Well, it is pink, I suppose … but I was disappointed that a second look reveals it, in fact, to be a taste of ‘Spain.?

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Published in Home Plus Scotland – January 2006

They sell one in every five bottles of wine we drink. The total is knocking on a billion quid’s worth per year. They carry over 800 different wines in total, and 113 of them were on the table at the last press tasting. So we need to know what’s what at Tesco and we’re going to have to hurry.

Tesco Premier Cru NV Champagne (£14.79) has won more awards than Judi Dench and has just as much class. It’s creamy with toasty brioche flavours and a bit of grapefruit on the nose. Try it when you want a really good glass of champagne and don’t need to impress anyone with the label. It’s a bargain as it is, although for good measure there’s 5% off half-a-dozen or more of any wine at the time of going to press – but what about nice fizz for no money at all? It can be done. La Gioiosa (“the joyful one” – and at £4.99 we’re all smiling) is a Pinot Grigio Prosecco that costs £4.99 and has a gentle, lacy sparkle that flirts in a pouty, Gina Lollobrigida sort of a way with the apples and pears on the palate.

As you know, I’m Alsace’s biggest fan. Here are two to convert you too: “Finest” Riesling 2004 (£5.99) – the heady, blossomy nose and crisp, mineral palate remind me a little of some wines I know that cost three times as much. Its Gewurztraminer sister – for a pound more – is long-limbed, rich and pineappley. A good introduction if you don’t know this distinctively spicy grape.

Are you keeping up at the back, there?

A few years ago a 6-quid Burgundy would see me running for the hills. These days, “Finest” Oak Aged Red Burgundy 2004 (£6.99) is a revelation of summer pudding fruit soup with a crisp oak edge. As you know, it’s made from Pinot Noir whereas, up the road  in Beaujolais, Gamay is the only grape in town. Morgon 2004 (£5.99), made by Labouré Roi, is all fresh, red-cherry crispness – compare and contrast. Sticking with the lighter-bodies reds, the current 2004 vintage of Brown Brothers Tarrango (£5.99) has all the crunchy redcurrant and cherry fruit we always like so much.

Heading due South, and another clash of Titan grapes to grip us. “Finest” – are we sensing a pattern here? – Crozes Hermitage 2003 (£6.99) is 100% Syrah, 100% Northern Rhône and 100% licorice, spice and manliness. It comes from the excellent Cave de Tain co-op. Down in the southern Rhône, “Finest” Gigondas 2003 (£8.99) is 90% Grenache and is all about black cherries and soft, leathery tannins. Both wines are excellent examples of their regions and their grapes.

I mentioned Chianti Classico Riserva 2001(£6.99) in my last column. Surprise, surprise, it’s also in the “Finest” range and it’s still packed with almonds and bitter cherries. From the excellent 2001 vintage, it’s maturing nicely now.

Come on, keep at it – only a few more to go…

Good claret for six quid is always worth a look, and Château Pey La Tour 2004 fits the bill. It’s a big softie, really – a gushing mouthful of damson Merlot fruit. Upscale somewhat we have Château Reysson Reserve 2002 (£9.99) – full of big, black fruits and classy tannins. It’s classed as a “crû bourgeois” which means it would be ideal to impress a classy, bourgeois crew – or something like that, anyway.

I’ve got a bit of a thing going for Tawny Port as you probably know. Graham’s The Tawny is £14.99 and completely fab – all nuts and spice and elegance. It’s in a great bottle as well – in effect a rather nice simple decanter for free. If you like it, then spring £26.04 for their 20-year-old. My tasting note says: “Awesome, dreamy, long, smooth, restful …cheap, really.” Sounds good after a long day’s work at the grape-face, doesn’t it?

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Published in N16 Magazine – Spring 2003

When I told my wife I was going to taste some of the wines at Yum Yum and Mesclun for this issue, she said ‘On mescaline? That’s nice, dear.’ I’m not sure which is more alarming, her insouciance or the bewildering prospects that flashed before my bleary eyes – a tasting at The Tup on crack cocaine, or a tryout at the Rose & Crown on benzedrine and LSD. Mind you, the permutations could keep me in column inches for years to come. Settling for my usual two-valium-and-a-barley-wine, as peyote seems unavailable in the local area, I pulled on my Afghan and tottered out into the world.

The liquids that swirled into view at Atique Choudhury’s stand-out Thai eatery, YumYum included a Côtes de Provence rosé 2001 from Chateau l’Aumerade. It’s a little timid, but in a doe-eyed, winsome, Turkish Delightful sort of way – it has a nice body and would go with anyone, sorry, I mean anything, for £14.90. Equally come-hitherish is Michel Torino Torrontes 2000 from Argentina’s Cafayate Valley (£14.95) – ripe guavas on the nose transform themselves into a steely, mineral finish. ‘Peppermint’, said His Rabness, who, once again, was in thirsty attendance. ‘Make that a high-pitched, super-green mintiness’, I flounced in reply as synaesthesia set in.

Atique is long established in Stokie, having started out at the much-lamented Spices with none other than Das Sreedharan of the Rasa conglomerate in attendance. He knows his market, and prices are generally modest – this may in part account for the surprising absence from the list of any Alsace wines, or Gewurztraminers, as the good ones don’t come cheap.

A good alternative might be Brown Brothers Late-Picked Muscat 2000 (£4.50 glass / £17.50 bottle) – unctuously sweet with smoky, ripe mangoes and caramel, this has enough body and clout to deal with a face full of chillies. In general I’m not a big fan of red wine with Asian food, but I’ll make an exception for Groot Konstantia Landgoed Pinotage 2000 (£21.50) from South Africa’s oldest estate – founded in 1685, by God. It has a lovely truffly nose and expensively toasty oak to complement the black fruit and cigar-box flavours. If someone else is paying, you could suggest a bottle of Champagne Moutard Cuvée Réserve (£27) which seems to go surprisingly well with the starters – it’s 100% Chardonnay, with that nicely rounded fruit and biscuityness we like so much.

Everything was getting seriously swirly by now, so we staggered through a door into another doorway within a doorway and…into Mesclun. The excellent wines here are largely provided by the knowledgeable Thibault Lavergne, whose Vinothentic operation is, in every sense, locally based. He lives in Stokey but, more to the point, his speciality is in finding small, old-established, family-run domaines making wines by traditional methods. One such is Les Anisses Blanc 2001, a Vin de Pays de Cassan made from Carignan Blanc and Terret (£2.90 glass / £10.50 bottle).

Versatile with food and excellent value for money, this has good length and body and bright, fresh fruit with hints of elderflowers – M. Lavergne suggests greengages in his tasting notes, and, not having tasted one since I was about six, I will defer to his judgement in this important matter. Vinothentic supply a number of Michelin-starred restaurants up West so we’re rubbing shoulders with the quality here, and you can see it in Henri Delagrange’s Bourgogne Aligoté 1999 (£18.00). I didn’t know Aligoté could be this good – fat, toasty and rich with excellent fruit and length – it kicks the majority of upper-end Maconnais and Challonais Burgundies into touch and would be fab with a grilled fish.

The owner Salih also buys wine from a big trade supplier, Enotria, including their classy Pinot Grigio delle Venezie, made by Veritiere, (£14.50) which is bone-dry up front but mellows out with a touch of honey and nougat – or should that be Torrone?

Les Anisses Rouge 2000 (£same as the white) is a smooth and well-made, crowd-pleasing sort of a wine with redcurrant fruit and enough body to stand up to some nice charcuterie or a coarse paté. Domaine Gigondan (£15.50) is not a spelling mistake, but could be, as it’s a spicy, peppery Grenache with all those Garrigue flavours of black olives and thyme and eucalyptus. It’s as classy a Côtes du Rhône as you’ll find and needs big food – a game pie would be good. At £17.50, Chateau Verriere Bellevue 1999 is claret for grown-ups which (probably) won’t break the piggy-bank. It’s made from fruit from 45-year old vines (Thibault knows this sort of stuff) of Merlot and Cabernets Sauvignon and Franc. It’s another big-food wine – roasts or grills would be the thing – with a good tannic backbone, some vanilla, oak and tobacco notes to the nose and ripe bramble and prune flavours. So we called out for another drink, and the waiter brought a tray …

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