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Wine Merchant Profile: Peter Green, Edinburgh

Winemaker Profile: Gerard Gauby

The Saint-Bacchus Wine Competition

Thursday 4 August 2011

TOM CANNAVAN'S TOP 50 PORTUGUESE REDS



The Wine Gang's Tom Cannavan held a trade tasting in Edinburgh recently of his Top 50 Portuguese wines. It took Tom 8 months, many visits and much tasting, to narrow down his selection to 50. He was looking for freshness and elegance and good representation from Portugal's many indigenous grape varieties and wine regions. If you are bored with Bordeaux reds, do try those from the Douro in particular.

Here are the stars of the tasting:

WHITES:

DRY: Esporão Private Selection 2009, £17.95, Great Grog, Edinburgh

A lemony, juicy, buttery white with a hint of oak; made by the talented Australian, David Baverstock.
SWEET: Quinta do Ameal, Special Harvest,2007, £44.99, contact Raymond Reynolds for stockists (www.raymondreynolds.co.uk).
Rather like a vin santo; nutty with hints of apricot and barley sugar.

REDS:
Mouchão 2006, £28.99, Forth Wines, Milnathort
A lovely, spicy, full, fruity red with a long, sappy finish and ripe tannins. Made - surprisingly - with grapes from old Alicante Bouschet vines.
BTT 2009, Luis Pato, £22.99, Raymond Reynolds
An elegant, well-balanced, meaty, stony red, with a touch of mint.
Quinta dos Roques, Touriga Nacional, 2008, £28, Raymond Reynolds
Floral character (violets), some tannin, cherry fruit flavours; very stylish.
Quinta do Portal, Touriga Nacional, 2009, £26,50, Great Grog
Aged for 9 months in new oak; wonderful nose; good acidity; bursting with luscious fruit.
Chryseia 2008, £50, Tanners, Berry Bros & Rudd
A long-time favourite Douro red; inky nose; minerally notes; long and well-balanced.
Pintas 2008, £50, Corney & Barrow
Another Douro red, from a single vineyard and 70-year-old vines; velvet smooth, fragrant; very elegant.

THE LATEST 'BESPOKE' MUST-HAVE


The wine cellar is apparently the latest 'status room' and a sure way of adding value to your home. But what do you do if you live in a modern house or don't have the space or the right conditions? Several companies now offer a bespoke service which involves drilling down under your house to form a cylindrical cellar, complete with spiral staircase to access your wines easily. This type of cellar can also provide the perfect conditions (stable year-round temperature and humidity, darkness etc.).
For more information, visit the following websites:
www.bespokecellars.com
www.spiralcellars.com

If you don't want the expense of creating your own cellar, but would still like to invest in wine long-term, it is much easier nowadays - and surpisingly reasonable - for private customers to use dedicated wine storage facilities in the UK, such as Vinotheque (www.vinotheque.co.uk) - see also Majestic entry below - and Octavian (www.octavianvaults.co.uk).

MAJESTIC LAUNCHES FINE WINE PLAN


I have written about the benefits of Fine Wine Plans in the past and am pleased to see that Majestic Wine has just launched its own, in conjunction with mail order and en primeur specialist, Lay & Wheeler, which Majestic acquired in 2009. The Plan is an affordable and simple way to build up your own fine wine collection, based on monthly contributions, from as little as £50. You can also take advantage of good-value wine storage at Vinothèque, an exclusive bonded storage facility in Burton on Trent and advice from Lay & Wheeler's dedicated fine-wine team. As a member of the Fine Wine Plan, you are sent regular, exclusive offers, have on-line access to your collection, free delivery (UK Mainland) when you decide to withdraw a case, a £25 voucher at the end of your first year and a free 6-bottle case of Croix de Beaucaillou 2009, worth £150, added to your reserves, when you commit to a monthly direct debit of £100 or more. Members can stop subscribing when they wish and get a full refund of any outstanding credit. This is a great idea for those wanting to invest in wine who don't have the time or knowledge to do so.
For more information, visit: www.majestic.co.uk.

Two great buys from Majestic - both from New Zealand's Marlborough region - for drinking now:

Southbank Estate Sauvignon Blanc 2010
Wither Hills Chardonnay 2010

Both £7.49 per bottle or Buy 2 save 20% (£5.99)

WINE GANG HITS EDINBURGH


The Wing Gang, is a fraternity of well-respected wine writers (currently - L-R in photo - Tom Cannavan, Joanna Simon, Anthony Rose, Jane Parkinson and David Williams) who've set up a members-only website with news and reviews from the world of wine. They also put on the occasional wine fair and, for the first time, are holding one in Edinburgh on 12th November, at The Merchant Hall. Basically, they invite a range of wine retailers and you come along and taste your way through the wines on offer - some 300 in all - which will often be discounted on the day. The Gang is also offering free, conducted Wine Walks and a series of Masterclasses. The list of those exhibiting is available on The Gang's Events page (see below for details of the website). Tickets are £15 per person at 'Earlybird' prices, but members pay £14. Masterclasses cost £10. In these, Anthony Rose will be showing some of Argentina's best Malbecs and Tom Cannavan some of his finds from Portugal, while Jane Parkinson will demonstrate Chile's regional diversity and Burgundy guru Martin Strauss will feature a range of Chablis.
Tickets for the Fair and Masteclasses are available from : www.ticketsoup.com/tickets/the-wine-gang-christmas-fair-2011-2011-12925/default.aspx.
For the list of exhibitors and more information on The Wine Gang itself, visit: www.thewinegang.com.