Jump to content
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Recommended Posts

I posted this quote on another thread but I guess it properly belongs here:

 

I'm not sure that Dom Perignon is three times as good as Moet, but I will swear that Yquem is three times better than, say, Rieussec. If drinking Sauternes in general is a little like reading Walter Pater on Leonardo da Vinci, drinking Yquem is like being Leonardo. :D

 

Jay McInerney

Bacchus & Me

Link to comment
Guest templar

Greetings to MTC's wine gods and goddesses .... congratulations on a great thread! :D

 

Just wanted to share (if it hasn't been mentioned here) that there's a new channel on Dream Satellite called Wine TV ...... it's very informative and covers both old and new world wines!

 

Cheers!

Link to comment
Perfect description on Italian wines.  Just wanted to share that I discovered this resto along EDSA between Taft Ave. and Roxas Blvd. called "Mama Tine".  Excellent Italian wine selection and not too expensive.  The food was pretty good as well.  :thumbsupsmiley:

 

 

I haven't been to this place but if you're into Italian wines you may want to try Galileo Enoteca in Calbayog, Mandaluyong City. This place has a great selection of cured meats, cheese and other deli items.

Link to comment
thanks pare!

pareng masi, we got to try that place so that I  can finally comprehend that quote I posted :D

 

tokiojoe, if you want to explore naman Spanish wines try Barcino's at the Driving Range complex at Julia Vargas - excellent!

 

 

Thanks Bods, have been to this place and excellent choices as well. Sayang Spanish wines dito sa Philippines, under rated. Spanish wineries such as Mas Gil, Vinos Conrad and The Sadie Family are already at par with old world wineries.

Link to comment
technically, we can describe the diffence by alcohol content, still wines are usually from 5% ALC by Volume to 14%. Fortified Wines starts from the 14% barrier up to 25%. Beyond the 25% it's considered as spirit or liqour. this is being used by BIR for excise tax on wines & spirits. But there are several exceptions, like for example, smirnoff mule, vodka ice, breezer or twist, they are cocktail mixes ready to drink but with liquor/spirit as base ingredient, so they are taxed as spirit even if their alchol content is very minimal as per volume content.

 

You can be technical about it - or you can look at the methods of preparation and the resulting beverage, which I think is much more accurate than percentages.

 

For example, I have in my collection one last bottle of a truly awesome 1997 Lodi Zin from Noah Vineyards. Not a fortified wine, certainly NOT a dessert wine, but it's over 16% alcohol, and at least 1% residual sugar, which would qualify it, given percentages, as a "port"-style (fortified) wine. It is, however, neither that nor a dessert wine.. More accurately, it's just a wine made from grapes that were extremely rich in sugars that year, and in which the fermentation was stopped at just over 16% alcohol, leaving the residual sugar. It's not even a late harvest wine, just one made from very well-developed grapes. OTOH, I also have another wine, a dessert wine, with 3% resiudal sugar, and an alcohol content of just 4%. Should we then say it's grape juice and not wine?

 

Let's not get TOO technical here, guys. Wine is a variable beverage, and that's what makes it so mysterious and so challenging and so enjoyable. No two bottles from the same vintage are identical, no two vintages are the same, no two wines from the same vintage (and even from the same vineyard but made by different winemakers) are the same!

 

I'm an engineer by training and trade, so numbers appeal to me, but there is just something so wildly wonderful and unpredicatble about wine that no numbers can ever quantify. Stop measuring and start enjoying!

Link to comment
SO SORRY if I've been out for so long.  I've been very busy with office work.  It all has to do with this restructuring that's taking place.  My Jap principals have been barraging me with emails, phone calls and visits.  Too much talk, too much paper!!!!    :grr: September/October will be critical and milestone months.  These would be the time we'll put everything to motion.

 

I can only backread a few pages.  I tried getting onboard during office hours when work slackens abit but the board seems so full that I could hardly log in.

 

Can't do much after work which usually extends past dinner time and by the time I get home I'm completely wasted. :(

 

Keep in touch guys and don't keep those bottles too long! :lol:

 

Agxo, we still have the bottle of champagne chilling in my ref. :thumbsupsmiley:

 

Hey Masi! I can sympathize - I've had a rough month, but at least I have told everyone I am NOT going anywhere in july! Time to slow down a bit and enjoy a few weekends at home.

 

Keep that champagne well chilled, pare! I plan to be out there in August or September, weather permitting. No typhoons for me!

 

On the upside - I had a really great bottle this weekend. A 2002 Jessie's Grove Petite Syrah. Jessie' Grove is in Lodi, CA., and has vines that are over a century old! The petite syrah was outstanding. Plummy and juicy, full in the mouth, tannins lurking in the background, giving it structure and strength but not overpowering the fruit. Some spice (nutmeg maybe? or was it allspcie?) and a hint of black pepper. A tiny bit of licorice (or was it anise?) on the nose. Lots of ripe, dark cherries and berries! had it with a roast leg of lamb, done just medium rare with a mint sauce (not mint jelly, which i find too sweet).

 

For dessert, a 2001 Trentadue Old Vines Late Harvest Zin. Intense fruit, just a hint of sweetness. Some tobacco and some cola (!). chocolate and coffee notes. Yum!!!

 

Now THAT's the way to celebrate coming home from a two week business trip!

Edited by agxo3
Link to comment
Greetings to MTC's wine gods and goddesses .... congratulations on a great thread! :D

 

Just wanted to share (if it hasn't been mentioned here) that there's a new channel on Dream Satellite called Wine TV ...... it's very informative and covers both old and new world wines!

 

Cheers!

 

thanks for the compliments!

we do try to be as informative and helpful as much as possible and we also learn along the way. Hey, amateurs lang kami lahat dito sir :D

 

thanks for the info about that channel - kaya lang naka-Sky ako - don't know about the others. Sayang!

there's also this channel in Sky about wine but it's on Sky Platinum which I think has a more expensive subscription.

Link to comment
Thanks Bods, have been to this place and excellent choices as well.  Sayang Spanish wines dito sa Philippines, under rated.  Spanish wineries such as Mas Gil, Vinos Conrad and The Sadie Family are already at par with old world wineries.

 

there's a proliferation of grocery-type Spanish wines here and most of them are really bad. The good ones are hard to find and they are mostly in specialty restos with hardly any advertisement. The distributors here of Spanish wines usually go for the cheap ones that can compete on grocery shelves with the more popular Aussie and California wines.

Link to comment
Let's not get TOO technical here, guys. Wine is a variable beverage, and that's what makes it so mysterious and so challenging and so enjoyable. No two bottles from the same vintage are identical, no two vintages are the same, no two wines from the same vintage (and even from the same vineyard but made by different winemakers) are the same!

 

I'm an engineer by training and trade, so numbers appeal to me, but there is just something so wildly wonderful and unpredicatble about wine that no numbers can ever quantify. Stop measuring and start enjoying!

 

Amen to that!

 

Anyway, what with the mini-heatwave that hit the Bay Area this past week (I got sunburned just walking around the Financial District on lunch breaks!), I stocked up a cache of various Prosecco (NOT of the Spumante variants, mind you) to chill n' sip on those hot days. Cracked open a few bottles of the Dolce Vita (only 7 bucks at BevMo - woohoo!); nice and crisp, clean finish, great for cooling down with some chilled watermelon or musk melons.

Link to comment

Recently opened a bottle of Stepping Stone Coonawara Cab Sauv 2001 of the Stone Haven Winery.

 

Mid-red and purple tones, long legs and vibrant nose of dark berries, hint of smoke and cedar,

 

Moderate elegance and complexity in the body with well balanced tannins.

 

Finish was smooth and wonderful.

 

I have this uncertainty with Australian Cab Sauv as I've been drinking mostly their Shiraz. It was a great feeling to have something different every now and then.

Link to comment
You can be technical about it - or you can look at the methods of preparation and the resulting beverage, which I think is much more accurate than percentages.

 

For example, I have in my collection one last bottle of a truly awesome 1997 Lodi Zin from Noah Vineyards. Not a fortified wine, certainly NOT a dessert wine, but it's over 16% alcohol, and at least 1% residual sugar, which would qualify it, given percentages, as a "port"-style (fortified) wine. It is, however, neither that nor a dessert wine.. More accurately, it's just a wine made from grapes that were extremely rich in sugars that year, and in which the fermentation was stopped at just over 16% alcohol, leaving the residual sugar. It's not even a late harvest wine, just one made from very well-developed grapes. OTOH, I also have another wine, a dessert wine, with 3% resiudal sugar, and an alcohol content of just 4%. Should we then say it's grape juice and not wine?

 

Let's not get TOO technical here, guys. Wine is a variable beverage, and that's what makes it so mysterious and so challenging and so enjoyable. No two bottles from the same vintage are identical, no two vintages are the same, no two wines from the same vintage (and even from the same vineyard but made by different winemakers) are the same!

 

I'm an engineer by training and trade, so numbers appeal to me, but there is just something so wildly wonderful and unpredicatble about wine that no numbers can ever quantify. Stop measuring and start enjoying!

 

right, pare! It's the very unpredictability of wine that makes it so appealing. When you indulge in something with a mind to having some room for error - buying and tasting different wines carries a stroke of luck with it - makes it all the more exciting :P

 

but people in the wine trade - doing business buying and selling wine - do sometimes have to suffer with all these technical and boring stuff in order to do business properly. I do hope pareng spurt is still sane and can still get to enjoy wine even after wading through all that technical stuff :D

Link to comment

ok if you don't mind, some more quotes from Jay McInerney from his book Bacchus & Me. His chapter about dessert wines is intriguing and a fun read:

 

On the fungus responsible for giving Sauternes that heavenly flavor:

Not since Baudelaire smoked opium has corruption resulted in such beauty. :D

 

On the perfect match of Sauternes with some foods:

Ham and Sauternes is excellent: ditto prosciutto and melon, either together or separately. Any time you can eat foie gras with Yquem is easily worth the three-week loss of life expectancy. :P

Link to comment

i learned from the book that the reason why Sauternes, especially Yquem, is so expensive, is that the grape pickers in the Sauternes have to make multiple passes through the vineyards because the grapes do not rot on the same day at the same rate. Even in the best years, the grapes rot unevenly, and the pickers select individual grapes rather than bunches. They say this process is expensive - the shriveled grapes yield less juice per acre than their healthy counterparts - as little as half to a quarter of the red-grape yields in the Medoc. The proprietors of Yquem even claim that an entire vine yields just a single glass of this decadently-rich drink.

Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...