Wednesday 16 June 2010

MY IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY WINE COLUMN - JUNE 13, 2010

MAKING a good wine is one thing, selling it quite another.
Marketing might be a dirty word to winemakers but without it the results of their labour may stay on the shop shelf gathering dust.
Today much time and money is spent on presentation. And in the case of a very cheap wine the cost of the marketing, label and packaging can amount to more than the value of what is in the bottle.
Savvy wine buyers can tell quite a lot about the wine they are buying by examining the packaging. Wine labels can give up a lot of information. The two important tips are:
Alcohol level: By law, the alcohol content of your wine must be clearly visible on the label. It can tell you how ripe (and sweet) the grapes were. A very low alcohol wine (under 11 per cent) suggests that not all the sugar turned to alcohol during fermentation and the wine will taste a tad sweeter.
A low alcohol wine (11 to 13 per cent) will invariably be light bodied, a little more subtle and with more acidity and tanginess. Higher alcohol wines will be full of flavour, full-bodied - and strong.
Look of the label: Traditional - or old-fashioned - labels more than hint at old style winemaking techniques. It suggests a wine that has been made following a successful formula down the years.
Many new or modern-style label designs are only chosen after months of marketing research and are aimed at attracting a specific group - a young or female market for instance. 
A cartoon-based label may well attract a younger audience, introducing them to a fruit-driven, easy drinking wine in the bottle. Something a little more stylish with a vibrant colour scheme might attract a more female market and wines that are off-dry, fruity and low in alcohol.
Don’t forget to email with your wine queries to wine@mailonsunday.ie
Quinta Da Lixa Vinho Verde 2009
Minho, Portugal
€9.99 from good independents
Light, refreshing and low in alcohol, Vinho Verde is Portugal’s answer to Spain’s Cava. This fine example has the Trajadura grape giving it body and length and Loureiro its aromas of apple and grapefruit. Lively with nice minerality and a little sparkle.
Pouilly Fume 2008 Classic Collection
Loire, France
€12 from Superquinn
A nice golden yellow colour with distinctive smoky, gunflinty mineral notes on the nose and peach and mango flavours on the palate of this 100 per cent Loire Sauvignon Blanc. Great with grilled white flat fish or goat’s cheese. Excellent value. 

MY IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY WINE COLUMN - JUNE 06, 2010

WHAT have Mexico, Algeria, Serbia, the Netherlands, Denmark, Japan and Paraguay got in common? 
Answer: All  have reached the World Cup finals, which begin in South Africa on Friday next - and all produce wine. 
Indeed, of the 32 finalists, only seven don’t have vineyards and winemaking facilities.
Algeria is one of the oldest winemaking nations, tracing their vinous heritage back to the Phoenicians.
The Mexicans have made wine since the 17th century, the Japanese can trace limited wine production back to 700 A.D., while Denmark and the Netherlands have burgeoning wine industries, as does England.
But it’s the traditional Old and New World wine nations, the ones that  dominate the shelves of our favourite wine shops - that look set to do the same in South Africa this summer.
The finals give wine lovers the opportunity to introduce themselves to grape varieties they have not tried. I will be spicing up my enjoyment of the tournament from the couch with some new varietals and bottles.
By the time the last 16 in the competition has been finalised I will have said goodbye to wine-producing nations like Greece, South Africa, the U.S., Australia, New Zealand.
So that bottle of Teliani Valley, Tsinandali white 2008 from Greece, a Pinotage (South Africa),  a Californian Zinfandel and a fresh Sauvignon Blanc from New Zealand will have been polished off.
My quarter-final line-up gives me with the opportunity to open a Nyetimber 2005 Classic Cuvee, England’s most coveted sparkler from west Sussex, a dry German Riesling and a rich, full-bodied  Italian Amarone - as I say goodbye to these nations.
Surprise package in the last four - Uruguay - allows me to open a bottle of Tannat, the red grape from southwest France that has found a new home in south America.
My wine recommendations today represent my two finalists. May the best team win.
Catena Malbec 2006
Medoza, Argentina
€18 from good independents
One of Argentina’s great Malbecs. Dark violet in the glass, the nose has concentrated dark fruit aromas with and floral and vanilla notes. Nice soft fruit - cherry and blackberry - palate with spice, supple tannins and flinty finish. Drink with a nice, big steak
Marques de Murrieta Reserva 2005
Rioja, Spain
Around €20 in good independents
Classic Rioja with Tempranillo, Garnacha and Mazuelo grapes with characteristic strawberry and oak hints on the nose. Big, ripe red soft fruit flavours with a great balance of acidity, nice roundness and well integrated tannins. Roasts and hard cheese are the perfect match.

MY IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY WINE COLUMN - MAY 30, 2010

TOUCHING on the subject of en primeur a couple of weeks ago, I never thought I would be returning to the subject again so soon but there has been tremendous interest from our readers. 
En primeur is the process of buying wines before they are bottled and released onto the market. In a good year - and 2009, particularly in Bordeaux, has been been described as nothing less than outstanding - you can make anything up to 40 per cent savings.
All the talk right now is about the classed growths, your Château Latours, Lafite, Mouton Rothschild and Margaux. But top châteaux only account for around 3 per cent of the wines produced in the region. 
And if conditions were perfect for making fines wines at these superstar houses, then it had to be the same at many of the lesser known vineyards.
But remember en-primeur prices are based on the tastings and judgements of a team of experts - who have been wrong in the past - and that the value of the wine might only show a small appreciation over the coming years - or none at all.
If you want to take a punt on the 2009 vintage then seek out a reliable broker or importer, like Stuart Smith at FromVineyardsDirect (01 845 6745) or check out their website www.fromvineyardsdirect.ie where a selection of solid wines from reliable châteaux are on offer right now at excellent prices.
Château Maume 2009, a predominantly Merlot based wine, is offered at €72 a case. With taxes, duty, and delivery charges paid,  the wine will be delivered to your door in late 2011 or early 2012 at around €8.60 a bottle.
I tasted the supple Château Maume 2004 recently and it was still drinking well. My notes record that it cost €12.65 when it was bought at a Dublin wine shop in 2007. So you can see the savings that can be made.
Grand D’Arte Touriga Nacional 2008
Estremadura, Portugal
€12.99 and available in good independents
Touriga is Portugal’s greatest red grape. This excellent example comes from a region influenced by the Atlantic, making for a wine that retains that characteristic violet nose with a wonderful soft texture, well integrated tannins and excellent length.
Jacob’s Creek Reserve Chardonnay 2007
South Australia
€12.89 (€11.35 on promotion) widely available
Believe me, Jacob’s Creek make excellent wines - and the quality just gets better, particularly in the reserve range. Peach and citrus aromas with generous hints of oak, white peach and citrus flavours on the palate which is soft and has nice length.

Cork? Screwcap? What about Bag In The Box?

Here is a very interesting piece by U.S. wine economist Mike Veseth


Wine’s Future: It’s in the Bag (in the Box)

October 4, 2009
One of my favorite globalization books is The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger by Marc Levinson. It is the story of how the invention of the standard shipping container (those 20-foot steel boxes you see on ships, rail cars and truck beds) made international trade much cheaper, more efficient and more secure. Now it looks like another kind of box is about to shake up the wine world.
Cheap and Nasty
I’m talking about box wines or bag-in-box (BIB) wines (the Australians call them cask wines) that feature an airtight wine-filled plastic bladder inside a cardboard box. You use a built-in spigot to get to the wine. They can be found on the bottom shelf of the wine wall and behind the bar and out of sight at your local restaurant. They come in several sizes — 3 liter and 5 liter containers are the most common.
Box wines have a bad reputation. They first appeared in the 1970s and were filled with generic bulk wines.  They were one step down from the popular 1.5 liter “magnum” bottles of  “Burgundy,” “Chabils” and the notorious “Rhine” wine. Box wine was cheap, nasty stuff that acquired a frequently deserved bad reputation.
[Re]-Thinking Inside the Box
It’s time to reconsider box wine. Screw caps had a bad reputation, too, until quite recently. We associated them with low grade swill until fine wines appeared under screw cap (the New Zealand producers were in the vanguard) and we began to appreciate that that screw caps have many advantages. Now screw caps are actually associated with quality for some types of wine, especially youthful whites, and no one expects to pay less or get less because of the screw-top closure.
The technology of box wine is very solid. The airtight bladder is a neutral container that is well suited to holding wine for relatively short periods of time. (Don’t cellar box wine — consume within a year of production — check out the “drink by” date on the box.) The bladder and spigot do in fact protect the wine from oxygen in the short run, so it will last longer once opened (especially if the box is stored in the fridge) than similar leftover wine in bottles.
Bladders are so good at the particular thing that they do that they have become an industry standard technology for bulk  imported wines, which are shipped in huge bladders inside steel shipping containers(big bag in big box) and then bottled in the import market. So you may already be drinking box wine and not know it.
The Box Also Rises
The most recent Nielsen retail wine sales figures (reported in the October 2009 issues of Wine Business Monthly) suggest that box wine sales are growing. Wine sold in 3, 4 and 5 liter containers (most of it is box wine, I think) accounts for just under 10 percent of US supermarket wine sales, according to the Nielsen data (compared to 65% for standard bottles with the remainder in 1.5 liter and other formats). Sales are rising in this category, with 3 liter packages up 8.7% in the last year on a dollar basis, for example, and 5 liter packages are up 9.3% by value.
The total market for box wines rises if we include on-premises sales. Recent data (see previous posts) indicate that box wines (served to customers in carafes and by the glass) are strong sellers in casual dining establishments.
The rise of box wine is part of the trading down effect, clearly, since most box wines fall into the two price categories that are experiencing the highest growth. Sales of wines that are less than $3 per 750ml bottle equivalent have risen 7.1 percent according to Nielsen and by 10% for wines between $3 and  $5.99. Supermarket sales of $20+ wines, on the other hand, have fallen by 3.4%.
Nasty, Brutish and Short?
Does this mean that Americans have traded down all the way to the bottom, back to the nasty box wines of the 1970s? The answer, incredibly, is no. Or at least not necessarily, according to the October 15 issue of Wine Spectator.  You can’t miss this issue on the newsstand — it features a cover story on “500 Values for $20 or Less” and includes a set of box wine reviews that make interesting reading.
Wine Spectator purchased 39 box wines in packages that ranged from 1 liter to 5 liters. Twenty seven wines were rated as “good” (a score of 80-84) and ten “very good” (85-89). The names of the 2 wines that scored below 80 were not reported.

The top box wine, going by the rating numbers, is a white: Wine Cube California Chardonnay, which sells in Target Stores for $17 per 3 liter box, which is $4.25 per standard bottle equivalent. It earned a very respectable 88 points. Wine Cube is a partnership between Target and Trinchero, the maker of a wide range of wines including Sutter Home.
The best red wine (at 87 points) is the Black Box Cabernet Sauvignon Paso Robles 2006, which costs $20 for 3 liters or $5 per standard bottle equivalent. Black Box is a widely distributed Constellation Brands product.
Good and Cheap?
Some box wine, apparently, is both pretty good and pretty cheap. Perhaps just to show that they really do rate wines blind, Wine Spectator gave a pretty good 84-point score to a non-vintage Carlo Rossi Cabernet Sauvignon California “Reserve” wine. Five liters for $13, in case you are interested,  That’s $1.97 per standard bottle equivalent.
How can decent wine be this cheap? One answer, of course, is that you can choose to make the wine itself less expensive by economizing in the cellar in many ways (less oak or none at all for red wines, for example). But to a considerable degree the box itself is responsible for the savings.
The bag in box container costs less than $1, according to the Wine Spectator article, which automatically saves $4 to $8 compared with a similar quantity of wine in standard glass bottles and the box they come in. Shipping costs are also less since the boxes weigh much less than glass bottles for the same quantity of wine and are less likely to be damaged in transit.  There are environmental benefits too, especially in areas where glass bottle recycling is problematic because the sour economy has undermined the market for recycled glass.
Is box wine the future of wine? No. The wine market is too complex to be dominated by any single trend. But with better wine in better boxes (and with consumers embracing a more relaxed idea of wine) box wine deserves to play a bigger role in the future of wine. Another triumph for The Box!

Saturday 5 June 2010

Fridge lengthens Sauvignon's life!


Auckland scientists have found that cold storage of sauvignon blanc can triple its shelf-life.
The University of Auckland's Wine Science Programme, which has been studying New Zealand sauvignon blanc, found keeping sauvignon blanc cool reduces the loss of fruit aromas over time.
Associate Professor Paul Kilmartin says the study shows temperature is more important in retaining fruity characteristics during storage than oxidation.
"Our results show that wines in cold storage retain these desirable characteristics for much longer, and this has important implications for how producers, exporters, retailers, and consumers handle their wines."
He says well-managed refrigeration could help to improve the consistency of quality wines sold in New Zealand and overseas and allow the wine industry to cope with changes in supply and demand from year to year.

Friday 4 June 2010

Philip Shaw wines on the way

GREAT news. Master (and I don't say that likely) winemaker Philip Shaw has a range of truly marvellous wines - and they will be available in Ireland very, very, soon.

Had the pleasure of tasting many of them at the London International Wine Fair earlier this month. Will put my notes up here over the weekend.

The wines should arrive in Ireland over the coming weeks so watch out for them.

Thursday 3 June 2010

Max on his way to Dublin





HE is one of Chile's finest winemakers - and he's coming to Dublin to promote the wines he makes at Viña Maipo.


I had the pleasure of tasting Max Weinlaub's wines on a hilltop overlooking his beloved Syrah vines close to the town of Maipo, in Chile's  Maipo Valley last October.


The big man's passion for what he does is infectious - and the obvious love and care he puts into what he does shows in the wines he makes.


A Universidad de Concepción student, where he graduated as an Agricultural Engineer, Max went on to pursue a degree in winemaking at Universidad de Chile.


He recalls: 'During the last semester of the Agricultural Engineering degree I took some subjects about microbiology and winemaking.


'Immediately I felt making wine is what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. For me, winemaking is a blend of science and art, where talent, skills, scientific knowledge and sometimes instinct, all together lets me create unique wines.'


Max took part in  the 1999 and 2000 California harvest seasons, at La Crema Winery (Santa Rosa) and Franciscan Estates (Oakville) respectively.


He arrived at Concha y Toro, one of Chile's largest wine producers in 2000 and until 2007, he works as Assistant Winemaker of the Casillero del Diablo, Trio and Marques de Casa Concha ranges.


He is now head winemaker at Viña Maipo - and he has real job satisfaction.


Max says: 'I love the fact I can turn up to work wearing just old jeans and a polar fleece. Not worried about mud or dust in my shoes. To spend part of my time in the vineyard, hearing birds singing and breathing good air is priceless.


'Other parts of my time that I also enjoy is to travel to different countries to learn from other cultures especially through their local food.'


He added: 'I think that wine-language is universal. What somebody could consider soft, deep, rich, concentrated, ripe or fruity in a wine will be understood by consumers in Mexico, China, UK or Angola. So, wines have the ability to break barriers and to open minds.'


Viña Maipo wines are available in Ireland exclusively through Dunnes Stores. Both the entry level end reserva wines are fine - but the class act are the 'Gran Devocion' series. They are 'normally' on sale for around €14.99 in Dunnes but can be bought 'on promotion' regularly for under €8.


Try them, you won't be disappointed.


(Picture shows Max, with glass in hand, and myself in Chile last October)



Wednesday 2 June 2010

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - May 30, 2010

TOUCHING on the subject of en primeur a couple of weeks ago, I never thought I would be returning to the subject again so soon but there has been tremendous interest from our readers. 
En primeur is the process of buying wines before they are bottled and released onto the market. In a good year - and 2009, particularly in Bordeaux, has been been described as nothing less than outstanding - you can make anything up to 40 per cent savings.
All the talk right now is about the classed growths, your Château Latours, Lafite, Mouton Rothschild and Margaux. But top châteaux only account for around 3 per cent of the wines produced in the region. 
And if conditions were perfect for making fines wines at these superstar houses, then it had to be the same at many of the lesser known vineyards.
But remember en-primeur prices are based on the tastings and judgements of a team of experts - who have been wrong in the past - and that the value of the wine might only show a small appreciation over the coming years - or none at all.
If you want to take a punt on the 2009 vintage then seek out a reliable broker or importer, like Stuart Smith at FromVineyardsDirect (01 845 6745) or check out their website www.fromvineyardsdirect.ie where a selection of solid wines from reliable châteaux are on offer right now at excellent prices.
Château Maume 2009, a predominantly Merlot based wine, is offered at €72 a case. With taxes, duty, and delivery charges paid,  the wine will be delivered to your door in late 2011 or early 2012 at around €8.60 a bottle.
I tasted the supple Château Maume 2004 recently and it was still drinking well. My notes record that it cost €12.65 when it was bought at a Dublin wine shop in 2007. So you can see the savings that can be made.
Grand D’Arte Touriga Nacional 2008
Estremadura, Portugal
€12.99 and available in good independents
Touriga is Portugal’s greatest red grape. This excellent example comes from a region influenced by the Atlantic, making for a wine that retains that characteristic violet nose with a wonderful soft texture, well integrated tannins and excellent length.
Jacob’s Creek Reserve Chardonnay 2007
South Australia
€12.89 (€11.35 on promotion) widely available
Believe me, Jacob’s Creek make excellent wines - and the quality just gets better, particularly in the reserve range. Peach and citrus aromas with generous hints of oak, white peach and citrus flavours on the palate which is soft and has nice length.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - May 23, 2010

A THANK you this morning to all of you who have emailed with wine queries and seeking advice on wine selection.
Most of you will have already received my suggestions for those special occasions you are planning for and today I want to answer some of your more general questions.
Maureen Gibson from Dublin 9 asks: Does the vintage year on the bottle indicate quality? The short and simple answer to this is that only a small proportion of wines age gracefully and improve.
Well over 90 per cent of the wines bottled each year are fruit-driven and meant to be drunk young - the whites are best within the first two years of bottling, the reds within three. 
Wines from the southern hemisphere (Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Chile and Argentina) where the weather tends to be uniform from one growing season to another, the vintage, or years means little.
In the northern hemisphere where there can be a lot more fluctuations in temperatures and conditions the vintage play a more  important role.
I have been told that jumbo teabags with oak chips are often added to wines to add flavour, please tell me this is not true, writes Geraldine Breen from Swords, Co. Dublin.
Unfortunately it is true - but usually only in cheap, mass-market wines that need the added flavour to disguise bad fruit. 
Before we had stainless steel and plastic, oak was seen as the perfect material to store wine while it matured.
Winemakers then discovered that the oak, particularly French and American, imparted to the wine certain flavours that were desirable. 
Winemakers did become a little heavy-handed with wood and we began to move away from over-oaked wines. However, when used properly it certainly adds to a wine’s flavour profiles and pleasure.
Keep your emails coming. If you have a question, or are looking for a bottle for a special occasion email me at wine@mailonsunday.ie 
Mooiplaas Langtafel White 2008
Stellenbosch, South Africa
€11.99 from good independents
Almost 50-50 blend of Chenin Blanc and Sauvignon Blanc from this highly regarded producer. The Sauvignon adds wonderful freshness and a nice citrus tang while the Chenin adds some body and length on the palate and some tropical fruit flavours. 
Torres Gran Vina Sol,
Penedes, Spain
€12.99 and widely available
Chardonnay forms the backbone of this aromatic wine with local grape Parellada giving it a lift on the back palate. Gentle oak hints on the nose with notes of ripe peaches. Soft, pleasant palate with some weight and a nice vanilla finish.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - May 16, 2010

TWO words dominate the wine world right now - en primeur.
Put simply, en primeur is the business of buying wine early, while it is very young and still in barrel, taking a chance on its quality and getting it at a knockdown price.
You pay upfront for the wine, up to 18 months before it is bottled and released. The advantage is that it is considerably cheaper - and you just might be getting a great vintage at a knockdown price.
Wines from Burgundy, the Rhone, Bordeaux, and Port, are the ones most commonly offered en primeur. 
Every spring the great cru classé or first growth Bordeaux houses sample barrels from the previous harvest. 
After the tastings, the wine trade release a limited amount of their wines at an opening (the en primeur) price. This is sold in strict allocation to wine brokers in Bordeaux, known as negociants. 
Before a grape was picked back in September, the 2009 Bordeaux vintage was seriously being talked up by these negociants.
And after the spring tastings it was compared favourably with the 1947 vintage - rated one of the greatest of the last century.
 Rewards can be huge if the wine matures as predicted. Chateau Latour has topped the ratings. Back in 1982 (another excellent vintage) a case of this first growth wine cost €300 en primeur the following year. 
The same case last year was selling for in the region of €13,000. A nice return in anyone’s book.
The chances are the 2009 vintage will be exceptional. But it also means that the rest will be very drinkable - and affordable - Bordeaux.
Do you have a question about wine, or are you looking for a bottle for a special occasion? They why not email me at wine@mailonsunday.ie and see if I can help you.
Motueka River Sauvignon Blanc 2009
Marlborough, New Zealand
On offer at €7.99 in Tesco outlets
There is lots of light, flavourless Kiwi Sauvignon around right now. This, however, has refreshing tropical fruit, lemon-lime and grass aromas and a clean, dry lemon and pear palate with  medium length. A great value wine.
Aranleon Crianza 2007
Utiel Requina, Spain
Around €10.99 from good independents
Rich blend of organic Bobal and Tempranillo grapes (with 10 per cent of Cabernet) from the exciting Spanish region of Utiel Requina, 100km inland from Valencia. Intense red colour with a floral and spice nose. Ripe cherry flavours with a hint of oak.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - May 09, 2010

SULFITES get a bum deal from some wine drinkers. They are blamed for bad tastes, headaches and, increasingly, for that ‘morning after’ feeling.
But sulfites, which occur naturally in wine, are vital in the winemaking process and also in its preservation. Bad tastes are more often caused by oxidation or cork taint.
Minute amounts of sulphur dioxide are added during the wine-making process to stop fermentation at the right time. It can also be added as a preservative to stop any spoilage and possible oxidation.
The introduction of sulphur dioxide also protects the wine from bacteria - and without it the freshly pressed grape juice would quickly turn to vinegar.
Developing a headache after drinking wine might easily be explained by the amount you have consumed. That ‘oh well just one more glass’ syndrome could have been the measure to upset your system.
You might get headaches after drinking wine by itself. If that is a recurring problem then try it with some food. That will definitely make a difference in how it effects you.
Histamines, which also occur naturally in wines, may give you a headache brought on by an allergy to them. The histamines are more prevalent in red wines. Switching to whites might bring you relief.
Those who are highly sensitive to histamines might try a proprietary anti-histamine allergy treatment. They work well for many sufferers. 
But take all the necessary precautions. Seek advice from your doctor and follow the medication’s instructions.
And don’t get too worked up about the sulfites in wine. Most bottles on our shelves contain less then 10 parts per million.
Do you have a question about wine, or are you looking for a bottle for a special occasion? They why not email me at wine@mailonsunday.ie and see if I can help you.
Domaine Des Lauriers Picpoul de Pinet Prestige 2009
Languedoc, France
€11.99 from good independents
The white wine of choice for locals on the French Med. Heavenly with oysters and mussels, the Picpoul grape makes wonderfully refreshing, crisp, tangy, lime and pear flavoured wines with nice mineral hints and excellent acidity. Keep it a secret!
Pink Elephant Rose 2009
Estremadura, Portugal Rosé
€6.99 and widely available 
This rosé blend from Portugal is becoming the wine of choice with spicy, Asian food. The vivid pink colour leads into a nose of raspberries and cherries. The fruity palate has lively acidity and a little sweetness. Bring on my curry please.  

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - May 02, 2010

 MANY of the most common grape varietals - Cabernets, Sauvignons, Merlots, Chardonnays and Syrahs for instance - are referred to as noble grapes.
They are the backbone of some of the most recognisable wines produced. But Riesling, the most noble of all white varieties, struggles for recognition.
In Germany’s Rhine region, where the grape originated 700 years ago, Riesling is seen as the most versatile of grapes, capable of producing spine-tingling dry wines or the sweetest of dessert wines.
The wines have sweet, fruity flavours, aromas of flowers and fruits, high acidity and petrol notes when aged.
Its those petrol or kerosene notes that tend to turn wine lovers away from the grape. How can a wine have such an off-putting aroma as petrol?
This characteristic develops with age. When young the best Riesling has aromas and flavours of green apples, pears and minerals, with great acidity and freshness. That acidity allows the wine to develop.
Riesling grapes are also very terroir expressive, soaking up through its roots flavours (that minerality for instance) from the surrounding environs.
For those who have been ‘put off’ by those German styles I recommend the great south Australian Rieslings from the Clare and Eden Valleys.
The grape variety has been grown in these two regions for over 170 years. The warmer climate helps develop thicker skinned grapes that have a slightly oily texture with beautifully balanced, fresh  lemon and lime fruit flavours when young.
The two regions, within comfortable driving distance of Adelaide, are reasonably close but produce two markedly individual styles.
The Clare Rieslings are elegant, with lemon zest aromas great minerality and green apple flavours. Eden Valley wines are characterised by lime zest on the nose, steely dry on the palate with lime juice flavours.
Petaluma Hanlin Hill Riesling 2009
Clare Valley, Australia 
€17.99 from good independents
A golden hue in the glass with characteristic floral and lemon notes on the nose, along with hints of ripe mango and lychees. Lovely flavours of honey, orange blossom, apricot and delicate spice on the palate and a lingering finish.
St Hallett Riesling 2006
Eden Valley, Australia
€15.99 from good independents
Great structure yet delicate wine. Still quite light on the palate with a wonderful lime tang and fragrant blossom aromas. Lingering flinty and lemon finish. This wine is a real stayer and will develop over the next five years.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - Apr 25, 2010

THE mistake we make when trying for a wine and curry match is that we tend to pair them all with a single favourite varietal whether it be red, white or rosé.
Think about it - matching half of the world’s cuisine with just one wine - and you soon realise how ridiculous that proposition really is. 
Thai green or red curries, robust or subtle Indian dishes, spicy Chinese fare or Vietnamese food all need to be treated differently when choosing a wine.
Think about the intensity of the spices in the dish before making your selection. One word of warning, trying to find a match for a meal with a high level of heat from chillies is nigh on impossible.
With lightly flavoured curries and subtly spiced dishes, chilled, aromatic, off-dry whites (like gewürtztraminer) are a safe choice. Simple, fruity reds or rosés (lightly chilled beaujolais perhaps) work well. 
The abundant acidic flavour of vinegar and yoghurt found in many Indian curries can make them difficult to pair.  
Years of ‘experimenting’ has left me pairing mild curries such as a Korma with a cool Viognier - low in acidity but with enough body to stand up to strong-ish flavours.
Spicy and medium flavoured curries I match with a soft, fruity, low-tannin Merlot, and for a highly-spiced, powerful curry I head for a Zinfandel, a red packed with juicy fruit and some spice that can stand up to even a Vindaloo.
The Thai New Year arrived recently and the most popular wine on many restaurant lists was Pinot Gris from France’s Alsace region. Thai food flavours are sweet, sour, hot and salty. Gris has a touch of sweetness (residual sugar) and muskiness that can match the spices used in this cuisine.
And before you ask, a simple match for fish and chips (minus the vinegar) is a chilled Cava!
Hugel Gewurtztraminer 2006
Alsace, France 
€13.30 from good independents
A nice golden hue in the glass with characteristic floral notes on the nose, along with hints of ripe mango and lychees. Lovely flavours of honey, orange blossom, apricot and delicate spice on the palate and a lingering finish.
George Duboeuf Beaujolais Villages 2008
Beaujolais, France
Around €12 and widely available 
Delicate cherry colour with a wonderful ripe strawberry and raspberry nose. Light, soft berry fruit flavours - dominated by crushed strawberries - on the palate with gentle tannins and a pleasing freshness and clean acidity. Nice, soft finish.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - Apr 18, 2010

WE start with a question today: What countries are the largest wine producers in the world?
I doubt you would have trouble naming the top four - France, Italy, Spain the the U.S. - but the fifth? Germany, Australia, Chile, South Africa and New Zealand are all possibles. But it’s Argentina that rounds out the top five!
The south American nation has a wine making tradition stretching back five centuries. Way back then the grapes (Criolla Grande) were planted by missionaries to ensure a supply of communion wine.
Later, as the country’s population increased with mass emigration from Italy and Spain, domestic wine varieties arrived from Europe and Argentina developed a real taste for wine.
But what was produced was high volume, low quality wines. Domestic demand for these table wines sustained the industry and so high-yield vineyards for bulk production developed with the red Criolla Grande and Bonarda varieties being the largest plantings.
Then, about 40 years ago, domestic wine consumption - as high as 90 litres per person, per year - began to fall dramatically. The wineries looked to Europe for new markets.
Vineyards began to pull out old vines and plant international varieties like Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Syrah and Malbec. But it wasn’t until the 1990s, when massive financial input helped modernise the wineries, that Argentina became recognised as a producer of quality wines.
Reds remain their top wines, led by single varietal Malbec or blended with other international varieties. There has also been large plantings of Cabernet, Merlot, Syrah and Tempranillo in recent years and they are beginning to produce interesting wines.
Torrontés is the most popular white variety, capable of making clean  and refreshing wines. But red is where its at in Argentina and they remain some of the best value wines available. 
Norton Privada 2006
Mendoza, Argentina
Currently €16.39 at O’Briens Wines
One of Argentina’s high-end wines - and a bargain at €16.39. A real treat with that Sunday beef or lamb roast. A powerful blend of Malbec, Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon with lashings of black fruit and spice  flavours. Well structured and with a lengthy finish.
Michel Torino Coleccion Malbec 2009
Mendoza, Argentina
Under €9 and widely available.
Malbec’s growing reputation in Ireland has been spearheaded by this excellent entry-level wine. Distinctive plum aromas on the nose with hints of oak. Fruit flavours on the palate are underpinned by generous spicy notes. Well integrated wine with soft tannins and a nice round finish. Best choice to accompany steak.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - Apr 11, 2010

A COLLEAGUE received a rather expensive cut glass decanter as a present last Christmas.
The container has pride of place in his cabinet - but doesn’t spend much time there because every bottle that has crossed his door since January has been decanted.
He has been very democratic about this practice. A supermarket special costing less than €6 or a Bordeaux costing five times that have all got equal treatment.
They are decanted and left to ‘breathe’ for the same amount of time before being poured. Watching him go through the motions, I can’t force myself to tell him that modern wines rarely need decanting!
Winemaking methods in the winery have changed so much over the past two decades that the need for decanting - to remove any sediment from the bottle - is rare these days.
The sediment is the solid material that settles to the bottom of the bottle. It is harmless and can be a sign that the wine is of an older vintage, has been hand-crafted - and not filtered before being bottled.
It might not be the prettiest thing to look at in a glass but sediment is perfectly okay if you happen to drink it but it can taste quite bitter.
To decant an old wine pour it slowly from the bottle into a decanter - or any another clean bottle or receptacle. Stop the procedure when you to see the sediment enter the neck of the bottle.
Wines made to age in bottle can throw a sediment. It evolves as the tannins and pigments in the wine start to break down and thus create the particles.
Decanting your wines before drinking only exposes the liquid to its biggest enemy air and it will start to oxidise and die. So leave it as late as possible to open your bottles.
Gavi 'la Battistina' 2009
Piedmont, Italy
€9.95 from O’Briens Wines
A dry, crisp and aromatic unoaked white made with the Cortese grape. The zesty is all apples and pears with a hint of lime. The palate is dry but quite zippy with stone fruit flavours, great minerality and good length. Perfect with a plate of steamed mussels.
Cranswick Estate Shiraz 2008
South East Australia
€13.99 in good independents
A medium-bodied (not in your face) Australian Shiraz that is lightly oaked with characteristic ripe blackberry fruit flavours, and nice undertones of spice, black pepper and vanilla. The wine has some complexity and a lengthy finish. Great with roast meat dishes or with a selection of mature hard cheeses.

Irish Mail On Sunday Wine Column - Apr 04, 2010

LET’S set the scene - a nice restaurant with a superb menu, exciting young chef in the kitchen, good company, and a lengthy wine list.
Food has been ordered and time has been spent poring over the wine list. Then the wine waiter arrives with your selection. The bottle is opened with all the usual ritual, and a sample presented to you for approval. 
You taste it - and immediately realise there is something wrong. But what? You can’t send the wine back just because you don’t like it only if there is a genuine fault. 
The biggest peril is cork taint, or TCA (2,4,6-trichloroanisole), the serial killer of wine, which accounts for more than 80 per cent of the problems after a bottle has been opened.
TCA only forms in the wine after bottling. It cannot be detected until the cork is pulled. Its then when you get the characteristic musty, moldy or wet cardboard smell.
The fault is a set of very undesirable aroma and flavour characters that are imparted to the wine following contact with the cork. Six chemical compounds have been found to contribute to cork taint.
How to avoid it? Think screwcap - particularly for whites and everyday wines. This closure provides a very good seal and is easy to open.
How good are they? I recently tasted some whites from Australia that were bottled under screwcap in 1985 and they still tasted fresh. Even some French winemakers have switched to closure.
I still like cork. I believe that the complex red wine aging process is better served by this closure. The trace amounts of oxygen that get through cork play an important part in the wine’s evolvement.
But for everything else it’s screwcap. They have helped reduce the number of faulty wines from almost one in ten bottles to almost zero.
Vieux Chateau des Combes 2007
Saint Emilion, France
€14.95 at O’Briens Wines
Excellent Bordeaux at a great price. Based on Merlot, with a good dash of Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc, this blend would go perfect with roast lamb. Very approachable with red berry fruit flavours and a hint of oak. Easy drinking with nice, soft tannins and  good length.
Vega Real Roble 2007
Ribero Del Duero, Spain
€14.99, widely available
AN enticing ruby red colour leads to an nose of ripe raspberries and hints of oak. This great value Ribero Del Duero offering is made with the Tempranillo grape and has a deep red with an intense raspberry nose. Palate is bursting with soft berry fruit flavours with nicely integrated tannins and a balanced finish.