Annual Wines for Christmas Day article – 2017

CHRISTMAS DAY WINE RECOMMENDATIONS!

My annual Christmas Day wine recommendations article is one that I perhaps enjoy writing most. It puts me in the mood for Christmas a few weeks before it happens, plus it always makes me think of readers enjoying their Christmas Day Lunch/Dinner, heightened, perhaps by their enjoying one of the wines I’ve recommended! So on with the show!

With my involvement with the 50 Great Cavas competition this year, I guess it’s inevitable that I’d be recommending that we start proceedings with some sparkle! For me, Sparkling Wine on Christmas Day is obligatory – I like to start the day with fizz, and then enjoy some with canapés, perhaps when family and friends arrive. Before the main meal, be it lunch or dinner, I like fizz, too – usually something a bit special, to toast the efforts of the chef and to accompany such a wonderful repast! It’s also particularly good to continue with this sparkler to accompany the starter – this gives me the excuse to order a couple of bottles at least of ‘the special one’!

And after the banquet? Well what better way to revive a slightly jaded palate, than a glass of fizz!

The Cava I’ve enjoyed most this year has been Rovellats Masia Siegle XV Gran Reserva (http://www.cavasrovellats.com/es/productos-cava-y-vino/cavas/cava/13-masia-siglo-xv) and it’s this that I’d recommend for ‘the special one’! It’s not cheap, but it is soooo worth it!

For the cava to be enjoyed at canapé time etc I’d still choose a Premium Cava (meaning either a Reserva or a Gran Reserva) but one more moderately proced. The Dominio de la Vega range of Reserva Cavas is excellent, and so well priced! https://tienda.dominiodelavega.com/ – and some are available in Mas y Mas!

For white wine – I think this particular feast deserves a white with some body to accompany the freshness, so a little ageing will be good. However, this doesn’t necessarily mean oak ageing. This year I’m recommending Albariño de Fefiñanes III Año – it’s a wonderful wine with the fresh, white stoned fruit aromas and flavour of Albariño as well as a certain intensity, depth, body and slight creaminess following its 30 months in tank, 7 months of which have been with lees contact! (http://www.fefinanes.com/en/)

Red wine next, of course – but what with? Turkey, trimmings et al; Chicken; Goose; Duck; Beef ? Who knows, so we have to think of a catch-all, top quality wine when recommending just one. Now this is a rather difficult task here in Spain, which has been known for its excellent red wines for centuries. There is such an abundance of top reds that we can choose to pair with the main course of the Christmas feast!

I have thought long and hard about this – believe me, and it has been a very difficult choice, but I’m extremely happy with the wine I’ve chosen for this year – Bodegas Enrique Mendoza’s Santa Rosa is an excellent wine that perfectly fits the Christmas Lunch/Dinner concept! The flagship of the winery, this elegant Cabernet (70%) Merlot and Shiraz mix is a Spanish wine that, although the grapes are French in origin, would make lots of French wineries quite envious!

The Cabernet has obviously been picked at the optimum time – the grapes were fully ripened but retained their crucial acidity. Lots of blackcurrant aroma and flavour. There’s a touch of plum/damson in there with some stony minerality, a little smoky oak and some rich dark cherry with a touch of spice – it has great length and an admirable complexity, a really cracking wine! (http://www.bodegasmendoza.com/en/)

 

Out on a limb, for my choice of dessert wine? Well, you might think so, as I’m straying away from my traditional PX Sherry recommendation! But, taste the wine and you won’t think so! My favourite dessert wine of this year has been Finca Antigua’s Moscatel Naturalmente Dulce and I think it will go so well with dessert! There’s a touch of lemon zest freshness, which develops into orange blossom fragrance, with orange peel aromas and flavours with some bitter orange, almost marmalade, flavour and aroma too, with a candied dried fruit finish to remind you that this is a pudding wine! (http://www.fincaantigua.com/en/our-wines/)

Happy Christmas to you all!

Contact Colin: colin@colinharknessonwine.com  www.colinharknessonwine.com  Twitter @colinonwine  Facebook  Colin Harkness & you can find my Vlogs

on Youtube  Colin Harkness On Wine

Top Ten Spanish Wines Tasted in 2017!

THE COSTA NEWS TOP TEN 2017!

THE TEN BEST SPANISH WINES TASTED THIS YEAR

Yes, I know – I’ve said it before and will more than likely say it again next year too, but the fact is that choosing just ten Spanish wines out of the hundreds I’ve tasted for Cork Talk this year is a very difficult job!

However, here goes, traditionally in reverse order:

TEN:

Finca Antigua Moscatel Naturalmente Dulce, DO La Mancha:

I believe this is the first DO La Mancha wine that has figured in the Costa News Top Ten. There’s a touch of lemon zest freshness, which develops into orange blossom fragrance, with orange peel aromas and flavours plus some bitter orange, almost marmalade, flavour and aroma too, with a candied dried fruit finish to remind you that this is a pudding wine!

NINE:

 

Haragán, Pago Los Balcines, DO Ribera del Guadiana:

(another first!) 50% Garnacha Tintorera/50% Tinta Roriz (aka Tempranillo). Wild dark berry fruits from old vines harvested at night by hand. Juicy, mature, elegant, but with the grip of power too. After 15 months in French oak there’s some black pepper mixed in with the brambly fruit and some undergrowth, some mushroom compost, but always the fruit to the fore.

EIGHT;

Tío Pepe Fino en Rama, DO Jerez:

This is Fino without all the clarification and filtration to which regular sherries are subjected. En Rama is bottled almost without filtration at all. Hence En Rama Sherry is in its most natural state, and with a wholly different, soft golden colour! Yeasty, almost patisserie notes, along with a slight whiff of sea breeze, and then some blanched almond aromas and flavour.

SEVEN:

Otoman, Bodegas Sierra Cantabria, DOCa. Rioja:

White Rioja, made with 49% Sauvignon Blanc and 51% the traditional white Rioja varieties Viura and Malvasia. Glossy on the palate, rich and full, for a white wine, but retaining that crucial acidity which makes whites so fresh. There are herbs on the nose with a hedgerow quality and on the palate there are nutty elements combining rather well with some refreshing citrus flavours.

SIX

 

Santa Rosa, Bodegas Enrique Mendoza, DO Alicante:

Cabernet (70%) Merlot and Shiraz. The Cabernet has obviously been picked at the optimum time – the grapes were fully ripened but retained their crucial acidity. Lots of blackcurrant aroma and flavour. There’s a touch of plum/damson in there with some stony minerality, a little smoky oak and some rich dark cherry with a touch of spice – great length and an admirable complexity.

FIVE:

 

Verum Malvasía, Bodegas y Viñedos Verum, VdlT de Castilla:

Floral fragrance – white rose petals and a touch of magnolia with tantalising wisps of honeysuckle. On the palate, the zest from citrus peel – that’s lemon, lime and grapefruit, plus, curiously, though positively, a slight touch of white pepper. A slight minerality comes through and there’s a good mouth-feel with an understated creamy element from its time spent on its lees.

 

FOUR:

 

Sabaté i Coca Reserva Familiar, Bodegas Castellroig, Cava de Paraje Calificada, DO Cava:

Xarel.lo vines with part of the base wine fermented in oak. Fennel and mountain herbs (thyme and laurel) and slight toasty notes with blanched almonds, a little hazelnut nuance and some distant pear and apple fruit. It’s rich and full, yet personifies elegance with a long and joyous finish.

THREE:

Juan Piernas, Bodegas Jorge Piernas, ‘Red Wine from Spain’:

A wine labelled solely as ‘Red Wine from Spain’, can’t be this excellent – can it? 100% Monastrell from 800 metres above sea level in the Bullas area were fermented in steel then placed in French oak barrels. It celebrates the perfect harmony of elegance and power. Lots of dark plums, some juicy blackberry and picota cherry in there too. An element of spice and a little earthiness.

TWO:

Verum Tempranillo V Reserva Familiar,  Bodegas y Viñedos Verum, VdlT de Castilla:

There’s a little liquorice on the nose, with big, mostly dark, forest fruit, joining the party on the palate too. You’ll detect a little French oak, bringing with it complexity and a pleasing roundness to the wine. Pair it with your turkey – the dark meat particularly. Lovely wine, following their white above!

ONE, THE BEST SPANISH WINE TASTED FOR CORK TALK 2017:

 

GRAN RESERVA MASIA S.XV BRUT NATURE 2008, Cavas Rovellats, DO Cava.

So, a Cava that heads the list this year – and what a Cava! It’s elegant, first and foremost, with brioche and patisserie notes as well as a hint of toasty smokiness, and, after a huge seven years ‘en rima’ it is still as vibrant as a puppy – large breed, because this is also a powerful wine. Drink this with canapés, with fish, seafood and white meats – and you’ll be enthralled!

 

Contact Colin: colin@colinharknessonwine.com Twitter: @colinonwine www.colinharknessonwine.com Facebook: Colin Harkness Youtube: Colin Harkness On Wine.

Wine Related Christmas Presents – 2017

WINE RELATED CHRISTMAS PRESENTS 2017

I’m often asked about any wine related presents I might recommend for the lady who wants to surprise her man, and indeed, vice versa for the man who is keen to please his lady. And, as it’s the 1st of December – here they are!

Many of us love wine and all that’s associated with it, so here are some recommendations for you to buy as stocking fillers and/or full-on presents. Not forgetting, of course, that often, with wine presents, the giver and the recipient both benefit in equal measure!

Let’s start with the paperwork. This year I had the great honour and pleasure to travel to Bucharest, Romania to join the judging panel of the International Wine Contest Bucharest 2017. A fantastic trip, judging excellent international wines with likeminded eminent wine judges – and indeed, socializing with them too, at the various scheduled events and visits.

I was part of a super group of friends of various nationalities – East and West Europe and even an Aussie! Mike Mazey is an Aussie wine-maker and English teacher now living in the Czech Republic (it’s a long story!). He is the Lead Author of an impressive small group of wine orientated scribes whose book ‘Wine Words’ I would highly recommend. ‘Wine Words’ can be bought online (www.winewordsthebook.com/en/).

Although written with a view to help those for whom English is a second language progress in the professional wine world it is also a great read for people who are native English speakers who want to learn more about wine in a fun way. It includes an online video library and looks at the world’s wines as well as focusing on specific wineries in both hemispheres. There are plenty of contributions from Masters of Wine and Wine-Makers themselves.

 

Perhaps one of the testimonials on the cover sleeve says it best: “The Wine Words bookand online  video library is a wonderful collection of wine insights and clear explanation of wine terminology, that will enlighten and delight those wanting to build on their wine knowledge. . . . . .” Nick Butler, Bottle Green LTD, England. I have a copy and really enjoy it!

 

Then there are the guides. By far the most comprehensive is the Guía Peñín (the Peñin Guide) whose tasting panel tastes around 20,000 wines each year for inclusion in the guide. Originally in Spanish only, it has proved so popular that it is now printed in English and in German and it also has an online version. www.guiapenin.wine . You’ll find that it is well organized with interesting sections extra to the huge list of wines and their marks out of 100. Considered by many to be the ‘bible’ of Spanish wines.

The 2018 Guía Peñín is now available – in English! A super present for those interested in Spanish Wine!

Don’t forget Señor Andres Proensa though – the Proensa Guide is for me indispensable. Los Mejores Vinos de España is always on my office desk – it’s smaller than the above, restricting itself to just those which the panel considers the top 500 wines in Spain. www.proensa.com . It is also online.

The 2018 edition of this excellent guide to the top Spanish Wines is now available!

Now what about wine accessories? I have two possibilities for you. Lazenne, specialises in wine travel accessories; and Avina in wine tools.

www.avina.com makes beautiful corkscrews which really will be ideal presents. They work perfectly, suiting all preferences. Their designs are as sensational as the wines whose bottles they open, effortlessly and with style. You’ll also find bottle stoppers (including for Sparkling Wine), and more, with still more products being developed. The presentation and packaging is excellent too! I use them exclusively!

www.lazenne.com specialises in protective, airline approved luggage to keep your wine bottles safe in the hold of the aircraft. It’s simple but effective – airport security won’t bother you and when you arrive your bottles will be in one piece, ready for you to enjoy them as you did when tasting before you bought, in any of the world’s wineries! There are a number of different fashionable designs to cater for varying numbers and sizes of bottles, including sparkling wine bottles. I use one!

Now, wine tourism – Enoturismo, whose humble beginnings contrast dramatically with what’s on offer now! Many wineries have their own boutique accommodation, Casa Rural style, which is of course perfect as there are no drink-driving restrictions.

If it is sheer luxury you are after, not too long a journey from the Costas and making medal winning wines I’d highly recommend Casa Boquera (www.casaboquera.es), Yecla, Murcia. A small, family owned boutique luxury hotel whose restaurants are overseen by a Michelin Starred Chef, Casa Boquera sits amongst its own vineyards and is beautiful! I’ve been, of course, as well as friends to whom I’ve recommended it.

So, several suggestions for wine related Christmas presents – and I hope you enjoy any that you choose!

Bobal – How did this grape variety get its name?

WHAT HAVE THE ROMANS EVER DONE FOR US?

You’ll remember the classic Monty Pythons sketch, I’m sure, though you might not have realised at the time that there is an oblique reference to the subject of today’s Cork Talk.

 

The Romans also came to Spain, bringing with them their aqueducts, sanitation etc and, unknowingly, would ultimately leave the enduring legacy of the Bobal grape variety! The story, in fact, isn’t so well documented – Wikipedia, will give you the vaguest reference to the Romans, without at all capturing the romance of the true story. For this, please visit www.colinharknessonwine.com/articles/, where you can scroll down a little and see it as I wrote it a few years ago!

 

Recently a select group of wine cognoscenti on the Costa Blanca attended a wine Masterclass whose somewhat grandiose title, ‘All You Need To Know About Bobal’, may, I admit, have been something of an exaggeration! But then, as a features journalist of 20+ years standing you might expect a little overstatement from me!

Not many people realise the versatility of this variety, indigenous to the Valencia region, where it is the darling grape of DO Utiel-Requena and DO Manchuela as well as being grown in DOs Valencia and Alicante too. Historically, Bobal had been used in blends. Prized for its deep colours and ripening certainty, in such areas, it has been exported to add a Spanish dimension to wines of Northern Europe.

 

But it is only in, perhaps the last decade, that Bobal has been recognised as a stand-alone variety with the necessary characteristics to make fine, red wine. And, there are a large number of producers who are using it for their flagship wines, often mono-varietals, as well as giving Bobal the lion’s share in their blends.

So, you might think it a bit odd to start this Masterclass, in fact, with a Sparkling Wine, made, like all the rest of the wines tasted, from 100% Bobal! Well, you might – if you hadn’t tasted Pago de Tharsys (www.pagodetharsys.com/en/) Único Blanc de Negro Vino Espumso – which is excellent!

 

Blanc de Negro, of course, refers to a white wine made from black grapes. The Bobal skins are extracted from the juice before releasing their colour. The second fermentation, which produces the bubbles, occurs by virtue of the Traditional Method, and after some 36 months ‘en rima’ (which easily would place this fizz into the Gran Reserva category, were it Cava [it’s not Cava because it uses Bobal which is not permitted for Cava production]) this 2014 wine is perfectly ready to meet its public!

 

There are some patisserie notes on the nose as well as some forest fruits. On the palate the wine has presence and a long finish with a fruit reference of both dark and lighter cherries. Its weight, mature notes and depth make it a sparkler for all occasions and many different dishes – try this with your turkey!

Also, this black grape of note can make some splendid rosado wines. Bodegas Sierre Norte (www.bodegasierranorte.com/) goes for the crowd pleasing, Provencal-esque pale shade of rosé, like a maiden’s blush whilst imagining moments of passion! It certainly looks pretty, but this isn’t the only attribute that Pasión de Bobal Rosado 2016 wine enjoys.

 

There’s a lovely raspberry first, then ripe strawberry fruit nose, coming from the 900 metres above seal level where this Bobal is grown. The fruit combination is amplified in the flavour of the wine, which also maintains elegance and a very slight earthiness. For a rosado it’s quite substantial on the palate, credited, no doubt, to the 40 year old vines.

Juan Antonio Ponce’s P.F Bobal 2016 is made from 88 years old Pie Franco vines grown, organically, and indeed biodynamically, at altitude in DO Manchuela. Whole bunches are foot trodden in large oak vats, as indeed they would have been centuries ago! Fermentation also takes place in oak, but, in a very successful attempt to retain this integrity of the fruit, the whole time in oak for this classic, highest Peñin Guide scoring Bobal wine, is just 8 months! www.do-manchuela.com/paginas/bodegas/id30-bodegas-y-vinedos-ponce-s.l.html

 

Rayuelo 2014 is also from DO Manchuelo, but this time from Bodegas Altolandon (www.altolandon.com/en) , about whose wines I’ve written, in glowing terms, before. This, their flagship wine, is made with 100% Bobal whose vines are clearly loving the microclimate at their altitude of around 1,100 metres above sea level!

This wine has a subtle oak nose blending, in the background, with the classic black cherry fruit notes, so typical of the variety. There is also a mineral quality to the wine which leads me to believe that the roots go well down into stony soil. It’s intense in colour and flavour too with a long finish.

 

Well, not quite ‘All You Need To Know About Bobal’, so I recommend  some more research! Enjoy!

 

NB Two excellent wine related events have some places left: Sat. 25th Nov at Moraira´s Club Nautico, Four-Course Dinner with paired wines and music from Claire-Marie www.clairemarie.es, 40€ ; and Friday 1st December at Bodegas Blasco, Teulada – five wines being tasted with nibbles too, just 10€! Please call me to reserve 629 388 159!