Walls: Tasting Château de Montfaucon - 'Lirac's finest wines'
Fantastic verticals of a red and white wine worth seeking out...
Increasingly popular as the world wakes up to its qualities, this robust, thick-skinned Mediterranean variety with its funky, animal-like character is most widely planted in Spain where it’s known as Monastrell.
It’s at its intense, blackberryish best where it gets lots of sunshine, often close to the sea, hence its ascendancy in Bandol on Provence’s Mediterranean shoreline. On the back of the Rhône revival in California and Australia, it performs well in blends with other Mediterranean varieties, especially Grenache and Syrah.
Mourvèdre is a darker, thicker-skinned variety than its Mediterranean counterpart, Grenache, producing a firm-structured, often tannic, brambly, blackberryish red with notable funky, meaty and animal-like characters.More often than not it’s blended with other southern French varieties. It can be spicy and as it ages, develop the aged meat character of game or even wet fur.
Food matching with Mourvèdre: Tarte a la tomate – Tomato tart recipe
Fantastic verticals of a red and white wine worth seeking out...
A cooperative success story...
The best to drink up and those to keep cellared...
Three predictions on grapes, style and farming...
'Tradition is the wisdom of the many'
Multiple vintages of sublime Châteauneuf tasted and rated...
An in-depth look at this exciting region plus the names and wines to know...
Winemaker César Perrin explains the changes afoot at Château de Beaucastel...
Wallet-friendly whites, reds and rosés...
Among Australia's most collectable wines…
Drinkable and age-worthy wines worth seeking out...
Top great red and white buys to try....
Always pick the lightest...?
Châteauneuf-du-Pape and much more...
What to buy from the 2017 vintage...
Good value, chunky reds ideal for the winter months...
Including five vintages of rare Hommage à Jacques Perrin...
Although Château La Tour de l’Evêque wine is a classic Provence rosé, it does have a touch of Bordeaux in its DNA. It was created by Régine Sumeire after she visited her friend (and then estate manager) Jean-Bernard Delmas at Château Haut-Brion in 1985
A few weeks ago, a friend from Hong Kong sent me the two ‘mind maps’ for grape varieties shown below.
Something is changing. The evidence is probably lying quietly in cellars around the world. Here, though, is a little homage to Catalonia, since that was where I recently saw it at first hand for myself.
Washington State Syrah is coming under the spotlight in a new transatlantic joint venture involving Chateau Ste Michelle linking the Pacific north-west with the Rhone Valley.
Increasingly popular as the world wakes up to its qualities, this robust, thick-skinned Mediterranean variety with its funky, animal-like character is most widely planted in Spain where it's known as Monastrell.