Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 01/2005

Photo Albums

Copyright

  • Copyright
    All writing and pictures remain the property of winos and foodies and cannot be used without my permission

June 02, 2008

Pink Muscat From Margaret River

Stella5
I don't drink a lot of wine these days. It makes me sleepy. I'm not sure if that's my age or the result of the effects of my past sessions of chemo on my body.  So I have two choices - go for quality  - and that costs -  so naturally I'll drink less. Or look for a low alcohol wine.

Which is what I  like about Stella Bella Pink Muscat. It is only 7.7%. I can drink more than one glass and I can drink it with lunch and not spend the afternoon on the couch sleeping it off. It's pink, slightly sweet, slightly fizzy and very easy to drink. I drank it with a lunch of  Tortilla Espanola and Rocket Salad with Blue Cheese and Pears.

Recently I received a wonderful parcel of goodies from the charming  Chris at Mele Cotte. Amongst the carefully chosen pieces of yellow china and sweets was a packet of California Wine Wafers. If you haven't tried these yet you must. They look like a giant communion wafer.  If only communion wafers tasted this good! Chris had sent me the lemon vanilla flavoured wafers. I tried them alongside the pink muscat. Being sweeter than the wine the wine tasted less sweet.
Stellab1

Stella Bella Pink Muscat 2005
Grape Varietal: Muscat Blanc A Petits Grain
Price: Around AU$19 for 375ml.
Warning: Men are unlikely to enjoy this wine.

January 28, 2008

Support Febfast With An Alcohol Free Month

Champagne2
Can you go without alcohol for an entire month in support of FebfastFebFast raises funds to support organisations working with young people struggling with substance abuse. This  initiative is based in the state of Victoria in Australia .  I'd be interested to know if any other countries have a similar challenge.  Wherever you are in the world it won't hurt to go  without alcohol for the month of February.

December 11, 2007

Say Hi To My New Friend Olivier

Olivier
I laugh every time I watch Olivier. He is now the first blog I visit each morning when I turn my computer on. I love the rap intro at the beginning of each video. I apologise to any French girls that may find him offensive. I'm sure he is just joking.

Wine Rendezvous

September 13, 2007

Liqueur 44

Dsc_0137
44 coffee beans, 44 sugar cubes, 1 orange and 750ml vodka,  steep for 44 days. Whadda ya get? Liqueur 44, something that tastes remarkably like Grand Marnier . Not as syrupy as Grand Marnier,   Liqueur  44  is a well known  European home made aperitif.  I found the recipe in a Patricia Wells cookbook.

Not having access to 44 sugar cubes I replaced them with 9 tablespoons sugar. I also added a vanilla bean to give it another dimension. I put the vanilla bean in whole, next time I'll split the bean for a more vanilla flavour. The aroma is of orange with the coffee, smelling almost like chocolate,  following through.  On the palate the coffee taste hits first followed by an orange aftertaste.

To make your own liqueur 44 make small slits in the orange peel and stud with the coffee beans. Place in a large jar, spoon in the sugar and cover with  vodka. then leave to sit in a dark cool place for 44 days. Shake jar each day until sugar has dissolved.  After 44 days decant liquor into a bottle. Serve as an aperitif, after dinner liqueur or mixed with sparkling wine, for a long drink.
Dsc_0131

Others have been making their own booze too. Figs Olives  Wine  made creme de cassis. 18th Century Cuisine  has a recipe for cherry ratafia.....and here is a recipe for limoncello.  For the complete Liqueur 44 recipe  visit Food Downunder .

UPDATE: Cookiecrumb is at it too.

August 12, 2007

Wine Blog Discoveries

I've just discovered a  wine  blog using pictures instead of words to describe wine.

CHATEAU PETROGASM

November 17, 2006

Chalet Fleur de Lys Zinfandel

Dsc_0021_1
I'm really back into drinking wine again. When Elise  visited New Zealand back in June we got together for lunch.  She kindly brought me a couple of bottles of Californian wine.  This week we opened the Zinfandel from Chalet Fleur de Lys .  The Zinfandels I've tried in the past, and that is not many as there isn't much around in New Zealand, have been pretty ordinary. This bottle from the Sierra Foothills in California has changed by view. We drank it over two nights. The first night I served it with lamb backstraps which I pan seared, then splashed  some verjuice and merlot jelly into the pan to make a sauce.  A perfect match.  Not such a good match the following evening with a Beef Strogonoff.  It clashed with either the chili or the sour cream.  I found the wine a good balance between fruit and oak with some nice berry flavours. Thanks Elise for introducing us to a lovely Californian Zinfandel.   

October 06, 2006

Dry River Craighall Amaranth Riesling '98

Dsc_0001_2
A glass of '98 Dry River Craighall Amaranth riesling and suddenly my day improved.  It started out badly, very badly. I decided to get a couple of tickets for  Cirque de Soliel  to give to Chris for Christmas.  From time to time he earns his living doing this

Portraits_003

....that's him in the blue shorts....and this

Portraits_070_1

..him again in the black outfit.  (Click on the photos to get a larger picture.)

So you can see getting really good seats was important. Sadly I was too late for the best seats and had to settle for Row G.

Then I noticed a major store had a 30% off women's clothing for the day.  I gathered a few items together and went to the changing rooms.   As I was removing a shirt over my head the swing tag flicked back and the corner hit me in the eye.  Wow that hurt I said to myself and continued with the next outfit.  My eye felt a little watery as you would expect. When I looked up to see my reflection in the mirror this creature from a horror movie stared back at me. The white of my eye was completely red.  More than a little concerned I hurriedly got back into my own clothes and walked down the street to my doctor.  Seems the tag hit a blood vessel which caused the eye to bleed. Apparently it is like a bruise and will go purple and then yellow before I look normal again.

Back home and I managed to burn the first batch of crostini I was preparing to serve with a topping of sour cream and salmon.

So how was the riesling you ask. Brilliant. I'd invited a wine industry friend and his wife over because I knew he would appreciate it.  He always brings great wines when he visits so he deserved to be rewarded.  I was given the honor of tasting the first mouthful.  Bliss. I felt a smile spread over my face. Thankfully it wasn't corked. It took alittle while for the aromas to come through and when they did they were quite minerally. The taste was citrusy with lots of lime and  lemon flavours with a hint of honey and a long finish. A little too dry for Bryan but the rest of us loved it.

Visit the winery web page and read the production notes here.


August 21, 2006

Elderton Barossa Shiraz 2001

Dsc_0003_5
After 8 months without a glass of wine last Saturday night I opened this bottle Elderton Barossa Shiraz 2001 .   I can tell you it was worth the wait. 

The colour was intense, I swirled the wine around the glass releasing some nice aromas of chocolate, vanilla, plum, a faint touch of liquorice and finally the taste was a good balance between oak and fruit.

I'm packing a bottle to share with friends in Brisbane on Wednesday.

December 11, 2005

Christmas Gifts for Winelovers

Dsc_0022
If I didn't already have a  set of Riedel  tasting  glasses it is what I would want for Christmas.  Last year I  was lucky enough to attend a Riedel  wine tasting when a member of the Riedel family was on a visit to their  New Zealand distributor

Four wines were presented for tasting.  Each wine was poured into three glasses  - a regulation wine tasting glass, another wine glass and finally the glass designed for that particular wine.  The differences in taste were markedly different.  I'm not a big  fan of chardonnay, but in the correct glass I could drink it without pulling a face.

Check out the Distributor's page  of the website for your local supplier.  If you are really lucky you might even find a tasting session in your city.  This would be a great gift for a loved one with an interest in wine.  The four glass tasting session is ideal for anyone wanting to learn  more about wine.

November 01, 2005

WBW _ Small Production Wines

Imgp5122
This is the platter of food we were given (that's right no charge) when we visited Vin Alto vineyard in Clevedon a couple of weeks ago.  We hadn't had this point even bought any wines.

When Gastronomie announced the theme for this months Wine Blogging Wednesday I thought it would be all too difficult to find a wine with production of less than 250 cases.  Then I remembered, amongst the bottles we had bought at Vin Alto that day was an Amarone style wine. Maybe it was only made in small quantities.  A quick phone call to Vin Alto and I was right. They  only made 50 cases of the Retico 1999 .

It was ready for drinking so WBW became the excuse for opening it.

 
Eyes:                        Red with brick around the edges
Nose:                        Chocolate
Mouth:                 Soft tannins, a bit too much oak for me, but a nice hint of chocolate.
Verdict:                Not  bad for a New Zealand amarone style.

Vin Alto is open for wine tasting luncheons on the weekend. Check out the current menu. It's worth the drive out to the Clevedon hills as there are now several cellar doors open to the public. Margaret and Enzo at Vin Alto will make you feel like you're a family friend.  Our last visit was only to taste wine but it is such a lovely dining room we are going back for lunch. 

Thanks to Gastronomie  for hosting this months Wine Blogging Wednesday.  Drop by to see the final round up next week.

October 06, 2005

WCB #1

Hey Whitey .  Look at me.

Imgp5130

October 05, 2005

Wine Blogging Wednesday - New World Pinot Noir

Imgp5145
Akarua Wines are from Bannockburn in Central Otago. Which also happens to be the home of my  favourite  New Zealand Pinot Noir. This particular bottle of Akarua was a  gift from  South American friends who visited us earlier this year.  Their schedule only allowed time for  one vineyard visit while driving through the South Island.  I  suggested they call at  Akarua where they could  lunch at the Lazy Dog restaurant and taste some wines at the cellar door.  They arrived just before midday to discover it was closed due to it being a public holiday.  Through the cellar door window they could see movement inside and knocked on the door.  A woman came to the door and informed them the restaurant would open at 1.00pm. They asked if they could wander through the vines while waiting. The woman happened to be the viticulturist and was about to drive through the vineyard doing whatever viticulturists do on a public holiday. She offered to give them their own personal tour of the vineyard.

For my friends, it was the highlight of their week in the South Island.  And to show their appreciation of my suggestion I was the lucky recipient of three bottles of wine presented in wooden boxes.

Akarua Pinot Noir 2003
Details:             From the Winemaker
Eyes:                    Polished rubies.
Legs:                   So long you can still see them above the second A.
Nose:                  Cherries and violets.
Mouth:             Elegant and lingering.
Buy:                     NZ$40 .  World distributors  page.
Verdict:        I wish I'd left it in the cellar for another couple of years.      

Thanks to our host this month at Cincinnati Wine Garage.  Call by there for the round up next week.

September 20, 2005

Meme with Two Tails

Portraits_339_1
Cat lover Clare over at Eat Stuff  has tagged me for the Meme  with two tails - The Best in the Last 30.  This latest meme began life with Beau at Basic Juice .   Follow the meme here  .

It is a two part meme and I get to tell you about the best wine I've had in the past 30 days. Catherine at Food Musings  will be sharing the best meal matching wine she has enjoyed in the past 30 days.

I don't even need to think about this.  Actually I do.  As  it is exactly 30 days since we drank our one and only bottle of  Penfolds  Grange 1990.   That obviously was the best, but I'm going to exclude it for this meme as it is such a rare occurence. 

I'm selecting the first New Zealand Pinot Noir I've really enjoyed.  My first glass was when a friend brought it along  to  this  party.   I loved it so much I went out and bought some for this  event.  With a few contacts in the industry I rarely pay retail for my wine.  This is the one wine I won't think twice about paying the retail price.

It is the  - drum roll please -Food_016




Olssens  Jackson Barry Pinot Noir 2003.

And now I'm tagging Caroline, the lovely Irish lady at  Bibliocook  for the foodie tail,  and for  the wino tail  - Ben at Pinot Island  who knows all about wine in Tasmania. 

Check out Beaus  post on the difference between the two tales tails.

September 10, 2005

Ze Round Up from Clotilde

Wine Blogging Wednesday round up is out.  Read about  it  over at Chocolate and Zucchini.
Thanks to Clotilde for hosting this month.

September 07, 2005

WBW _ Like Wine for Chocolate

Imgp4988
When this months Wine Blogging Wednesday host Clotilde  set the challenge Like Wine for Chocolate , my plan was  to drink outside the square.  I would find something other than sparkling  or dessert wine to match the very delicious melt in the mouth chocolate  cake recipe   Clotilde had posted.

I must say this is the easiest  flour less (well almost) chocolate cake recipe I have baked.  Just melt the butter and chocolate, add the eggs, a spoonful of flour, pour into the tin  and bake.   And it was best made the day before, which suited me as I had a very busy day before planned.

The previous weekend I'd been drinking the Olssens  Jackson Barry Pinot Noir '03 and I'd done a little taste test with a  Baci chocolate.  Maybe  this would be my "outside the square" wine.  Also included in my tasting were bubbles and a late harvest semillon.

Sunday afternoon and my invited "to offer their opinion" guests arrived.  My friend the French Horn player had brought along a Nevis Bluff Pinot Gris '02 to add to the table.  The wines were poured into glasses and everyone was  instructed to taste a mouthful of wine,  eat a little cake then finish with  another mouthful of wine.  I wanted them to notice the changes in the wine before and after the cake and then decide their preference.

We started with sparkling, then the pinot gris, next the pinot noir and finished with the late harvest semillon.   Everyones preferences were  noted one to four and the one with the most votes would be the winner.

The French horn player wanted more instructions as he felt he might have a different preference if it was lunch or dinner.  His final choice was for the pinot gris at any time of the day.  I suspect all that horn blowing has damaged his taste buds!   His wife thinks he chose it  because he has shares in the company.

As much as I desperately wanted my Pinot Noir to be the winner of the chocolate match it only came in second.  It was a great match with milk chocolate but today we were eating dark chocolate. It was voted best wine of the day though.  It is a stunning wine and  here is a link to the distributors page.

I expected the Sileni   Estate Selection Late Harvest Semillon  '03  to be a more suitable match than it was.   Clearview  Sea Red Dessert Wine 2004,  a cabernet franc/merlot blend from Hawkes Bay, would have been a better choice.

There are shiraz or syrah wines that will go with chocolate and I'm sure other bloggers will go down this path.  There isn't a  shiraz in my cellar I was confident would match this chocolate cake.    I thought about opening my last bottle of Masi Amarone '95 but that is marked for a special meal coming up soon.

Finally we all voted the sparkling as the best match.  Not expensive sparkling either.  The  Italian Riccadonna Asti.   The slight sweetness of the wine allows  the chocolate flavours to shine without overpowering them.   

I like this description of Riccadonna Asti  from the 2003 edition of  Drink Drank Drunk by Ben Canaider and Greg Duncan Powell - Think of a bowl of strawberries that have been dressed with a sprinkle of caster sugar, a dash of tokay, and a few drops of balsamic vinegar. 

 Doesn't that sound like something you'd like to drink with  chocolate cake? 

September 01, 2005

Post for Cork Dorks

Imgp4972
Benjamin over at Wine by Benito  put out a challenge for bloggers to gather their corks and sort them out. I resisted the urge to sort them into countries.

655 - wine bottle corks   
34 - champagne corks    
97 - Sparkling                      
   8 - Synthetic corks            

This tally doesn't include all the screw caps  or the wine we drank in restaurants ,  on holidays overseas  and at friends. Add in another 200 or so for the  corks used for making cook boards. I once made a cork board for a friend with corks from the bottles we had shared over  12 months.

This collection represents 5 years of wine drinking and a quick play with the calculator tells me we spend about $100 a week on wine.

 

August 23, 2005

Max Schubert - You're the Best.

Imgp4815
It was worth the wait. ....and it was good. 

So good in fact we sat for 15 minutes with our nose in our glass enjoying the aroma.   There was coffee, liquorice, plum,cassis, flint and even a faint hint of eucalyptus.  The colour was intense - a ruby red still showing plenty of blue tinge.   On the palate it was well balanced, soft tannins, complex and a looooong finish.  Two days later and I can still taste it. 

While Peter put the finishing touches to the Osso Buco, we chatted over a glass of Riesling.   I was relieved I wasn't the one required to come up with the menu. Peter and Linda decided on the Osso Buco  with polenta and green beans and it was a great match.   

There was an entrée and a dessert and Lynda's signature dish of  ginger and almond cake, coffee and Lindt chocolates, pinot noir and Sauternes  - and everything was fabulous -but all I really remember about the evening was The Grange.

Grange was conceived by Max Schubert  when he was the winemaker at Penfolds back in 1950 .  Wine Spectator magazine named the 1990 Grange "The Best Red Wine in the World".  Read the official winemaker notes  here .

We could have waited another 6 or 7 years to open the Grange and I still think it would have been as good as it was on Saturday night.   I have worked out it  will cost around what I usually spend on wine every 6-8  weeks to purchase another bottle of the 1990 vintage.

August 20, 2005

Penfolds Grange 1990

Imgp4792
Tonight we drink the Grange.    This morning I removed the bottle from its cradle on the bottom  shelf of our cellar where it has waited quietly for this day.  After 6 or 7 years there it  is suitably covered in a layer of  dust.  It would no longer be needing the little  note it has worn around its neck all these years. The little note reading DO NOT TOUCH. 

I confess there have been days where I have been in the cellar and touched the bottle of Grange. I would carefully take the Grange out of its bed and hold it lovingly, imagining the day we would carefully remove the cork and pour this great juice into our glasses.

I can't remember the exact year we won the Grange - 98 0r 99.  It was the top prize in a Wine Options competition at the Auckland Club.   We came away with several of the wines that evening after we won 5 out of  the 6 rounds.  I don't wish to boast -  but -  back then we won the Wine Options two years in a row.   

Around seven this evening we will drive over to  the home of our team mates from the  evening, Peter and Linda, where they will have prepared a feast fit to accompany this great wine.  Please Lord, don't let it be corked.  Our back up wine is no where near as exciting.

August 18, 2005

WBW12 Roundup

Lenn  has written his round up of the 43 or is that 45 entries in the latest Wine Blogging Wednesday. Check it out here .   Who would have thought - they make wine in Tennessee.  With the theme drink local we get to hear about many  US wines but Australia, France and Spain also get a mention.

August 13, 2005

Alder presents The Wine Comedy

Check out this brilliant piece of writing from  Alder  at Vinography.

August 11, 2005

Wine Blogging Wednesday - Drink Local

Food_447
Sorry Lenn I've cheated a little with this months Wine Blogging Wednesday.  On the anniversary of this great event, I'm hoping our founder and host Lenn   will forgive me.  Our mission was to drink local....and I did....but I went back in time a little to do so.

From my home in Takapuna I could have gone west to Henderson  - but most cellar doors there grow their grapes elsewhere.  Or maybe south to Clevedon  , across the water to Waiheke  or possibly the nearest of all - north to Matakana.

But I decided to step back in time and drink locally from where I used to live.   Where I grew up actually  -  Margaret River .  This is not just any wine from any vineyard.  This is wine from the Wine Company that bought our family farm and turned it into a vineyard.  The grapes in this bottle, aren't actually from the old farm that is now the vineyard. These grapes are from further down the road, but still near enough to be considered local.

Xanadu Cabernet Sauvignon 1999

Details:            From the Winemaker  (for the 2001 vintage).

Colour:           Red, with a brick colour around the edges.

Legs:                  Long enough for me.

Nose:                  Savoury, earthy and a hint of chocolate.

Taste:                 Soft tannins, a hint of cassis, chocolate on the finish.

Verdict:            Oh dear,  I should have bought more back on that 2001 visit.

Buy:                     Here

Trivia:               My father named our farm (as you do in Australia), Jindawarrabelle.  Xanadu have retained the name Jindawarra for a range of their wines. Go  here  to read what they have done with the property this year.

July 08, 2005

Wine Oz

Food_206click to enlarge
We found a terrific wine store on the Gold Coast (Queensland) - The Liquor Superstore.   Armed with a list of Australian wines from Wine Waves   and Cam  we managed to find all but two wines on my list.  No Black Chook Shiraz Viognier '04 but Dave the Wine Manager did recommend the Zontes Footstep Shiraz Viognier.  It turned out to be the favourite of them all.  Dave's other recommendation we also  enjoyed was the O'Leary Walker Polish Hill River Riesling 2004.

Next time your on the Gold Coast go see Dave at the Liquor Superstore, corner of  Ferry Road and Cotlew Streets, Bundall.

July 06, 2005

Wine Blogging Wednesdays - Get Off Dry

This months host Basic Juice  has given us a mission to drink a less dry wine.  A mission I think I may have failed.

Akarua Pinot Gris 2004

Details:
    From the Winemaker

Eyes:          Soft lemon

Nose:         Imagine a bunch of violets and a bowl of nectarines on a sunny bench.

Legs:          Hard to see in the candlelight.

Mouth:    Long lingering aftertaste.

Food:        We drank it after dinner but I'm thinking salmon.

Buy:         NZ$25. Check here  for a distributor near you.

Verdict: Loved it. On a scale of 1 - 100  with 100 being very dry 1 being sweet I'd put it at 60.

Trivia:     Akarua Vineyard is in Central Otago, which at 45 degrees south is the worlds  southernmost  winemaking region.

Thanks to Basic Juice for hosting.  Check out his site  for the final round up.

June 08, 2005

Wine Blogging Wednesdays - Pinot Gris

Food_177_2
I bet you thought there were two names for this grape varietal - pinot gris and pinot grigio.  There are actually  16  ways to say pinot gris.  I once read pinot gris came about from a cross between a  chardonnay grape  and pinot noir grape.   Perhaps some one else can confirm if there is  any truth in this.

Details:        From the Winemaker

Colour:        Pale straw

Nose:              Peaches

Legs:               I've seen longer

Mouth:         Sweeter than most.  Try it alongside a T'Gallant Juliet  Pinot Grigio and it will be obvious.

Food:              Great with our salmon at lunch

Music:            Easy listening

Buy:                This bottle was a gift from a friend at the winery , but retails around NZ$18.  Check here  for a distributor near you.

Verdict:        So easy to drink even my mother would enjoy it. Bloggers under 35 should serve it to their grandmothers - they'd love it.

Trivia:         Pinot Gris grapes were first brought into New Zealand by the missionaries in the 1800s.

Thank you to Alice at My Adventures in the Breadbox   the host of this months Wine Blogging Wednesday.  Check out her blog in a couple of days for her roundup.

May 10, 2005

Wine Blogging Wednesdays - Rosé


Food_104_3






Kingsley   looked at me a little oddly when I said I was looking for a Rosé wine. He politely informed me, that here in Auckland,  we stop drinking rosé at the end of March and pointed me in the direction of a meagre collection of lonesome rosés -  a couple of Spy Valley , a few Ata Rangi  ....and what have we hiding at the back - an Esk Valley.   Not just Hawkes Bay's finest, but New Zealand's finest Rosé, Kingsley informs me.    I was won over as soon as I saw the grape varietals were actually listed on the front of the bottle and not hidden away in the fine print on the back.   


Details:   
from the winemaker 

Colour:
    Gorgeous.

Nose:        Strawberries.

Legs:         Longer than Mel, shorter than Elle.

Mouth:    Fruity, some spice, crisp finish.  Pour me another please.

Food:       Perfect  with our chicken salad at lunch.

Music:     Cesaria Evora 

Buy:          NZ$19.95.  Check here for  international distributors.

Verdict:    Nice, but not as good as my favourite rosés from Western Australia.

Trivia:      Not one New Zealand rosé has ever been awarded a gold medal.

Thanks to this months host Becks.  After May 10th check out the final round up over at her site Becks and Posh 
 

Daring Bakers