Saturday, December 15, 2012

Red Wine Varietals. The Beginners Guide. [WINE 101]

Just like Granny Smith apples taste different from Golden Delicious or Pink Lady, each grape variety has its own flavour. In a blind tasting you would easily recognise each of those apples because you are familiar with them. It is just as easy to tell one grape variety from another, when made into wine, as long as you are familiar with their flavours and aromas. The fun side of this is that it requires more drinking and tasting to familiarise yourself! Although some Sauvignon Blancs taste different to others because of the area they were grown in or the time of year or even day they were picked – a lesson learnt in the last module – the basic characteristics of a variety always stay the same.

Here are the main red varietals, what they contain and what they taste like.

Real Time Wine & WineStyle present: Red Wine Varietals. The Beginners Guide.

In red wines, we refer to something called tannins, which is the same texture found in tea. When the tannins are strong, you get that rasping feeling at the top of your mouth that makes you pucker, as if you had drunk tea that has been in the pot for too long.

Some varieties have more tannins than others, for example Cabernet Sauvignon has more tannin than Pinot Noir. So experiment with some of these varietals, and try to move out of your comfort zone of drinking Merlot all the time. There’s an exciting world out there!

Cabernet Sauvignon
Pronounced: Cab-air-nay-sow-veen-non

Cabernet Sauvignon is the king of red grapes. It ages beautifully and forms the backbone of many red blends. It smells of blackcurrants, cigar box, pencil shavings, green pepper and sometimes cinnamon and usually is a very serious wine. Cabernets have firm tannins and therefore aren't easy to drink young. However, with age the tannins soften and the wine can become silky and smooth.

Merlot
Pronounced: Mer-loh

Merlot is the soft and feminine version of Cabernet Sauvignon. It sometimes smells a little like Cabernet too but has more soft red fruit flavours such as blackberry and cherry. It often has a chocolate aroma to it and can be told apart from Cabernet by its much softer tannins, even at a young age. It is because Merlot is soft and approachable and juicy as soon as it is released that it is so popular.

Cabernet Franc
Pronounced: Cab-er-nay-franc

Many people do not know this varietal and traditionally it was used in blends only. Warwick Estate was the first to bottle Cabernet Franc as a single varietal and its popularity has since grown tremendously. It tastes like a really good Bloody Mary with Worcester sauce. Less attractive examples can have a green sort of grassy character, so it's best to choose a Cabernet Franc from a good producer. Its tannins are softer than those of Cabernet Sauvignon and the wine can be drunk much earlier.

Shiraz
Pronounced: Shir-az

Shiraz has grown in popularity over the last few years, partly because South Africa has been making really good Shiraz. In cooler climates, it gets a beautiful floral aroma and in warmer climates, it smells like raspberry jam, musk and fynbos. It is also popular because the tannins aren't too strong and the wine can be drunk quite young.

Pinot Noir
Pronounced: Pee-noh-nwaar

This is a wine that appears very gentle but is known as the “iron fist in the velvet glove”. It is instantly recognisable by its colour, which is like that of pale blackcurrant juice. Because of its colour, many assume that Pinot Noir is watery and bland. But Pinot Noir can pack a punch and on sipping it, a stack of flavours, from berries and liquorice to mushrooms and truffles, can emerge. The palate is usually silky smooth and very attractive. The biggest reason why Pinot Noir is not very popular in South Africa is that the good examples are really pricey.

Pinotage
Pronounced: Pee-no-tage

This is a truly South African grape. It is not really grown anywhere else in the world, save a few vineyards in a few countries where it is grown as a novelty. Pinotage is a cross between Pinot Noir and Cinsaut (a French grape we will not be discussing) and often tastes like banana or plums with a touch of coffee and chocolate. It is very popular in South Africa as it can either be easy drinking or very serious.

Bordeaux blend
Pronounced: Bored-oh

This is any red wine that contains one of the following varietals: Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Malbec (not discussed here) or Petit Verdot (not discussed here). There are a few wines in South Africa that contain all five but most contain only two or three. A Cabernet and Merlot blend, for instance, is a Bordeaux blend. The reason why these wines are blended is because the sum is better than the parts. In theory, blending them creates a more complex wine. This certainly is true of the top examples in the country. A good blend should be like a symphony, one should not be able to hear individual instruments, just beautiful music, so you should not be able to pick out the Cabernet or the Merlot – it should just taste like fantastic wine.

Cape blends

A Cape Blend is any red blend that contains Pinotage. In theory, it should contain between 30% and 70% Pinotage but many winemakers ignore this rule. Some Cape blends also contain Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot or Shiraz, or all three. It is up to the winemaker to create something special.

Rhône blends

A Rhone blend contains one of the following varietals (many of them won't be discussed here): Shiraz, Grenache, Cinsaut or Mourvedre. Some even contain a little Viognier, which, despite being a white varietal, is traditionally added by winemakers in the Rhône valley to give their blends a more aromatic quality.

Italian blends

This blend contains any Italian varietal such as Nebbiolo, Sangiovese or Primitivo. Italian blends are becoming popular in South Africa and are often blended with other varietals like Cabernet Sauvignon or Merlot.

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The Wine 101 series is a collaboration between Real Time Wine and WineStyle Magazine. Content originally produced by WineStyle. Subscribe to their great newsletter and wine deals here. And whatever wine you're drinking, it's better to share it with your friends using Real Time Wine, the wine app for everyone who enjoys wine, not just those who understand it!

Friday, December 14, 2012

Top 10 Trending Wines [South Africa] 14 December

The year. She is almost a whisper in the background. Which sounds awfully poetic. But hell, holidays are DUE! Happy XMAS to everyone! Our Top 10 list will continue in the New Year, but we know you're going to be doing piles of holiday wine shopping, so we couldn't let you go without one last Top 10 for the year. As always, a fascinated collection of trending wines - as made popular by you - SA's Real Wine Fans :)

At least 8 out these 10 wines make PERFECT gifts. Go read the scores and reviews to find out!

TOP 10 TRENDING WINES

#1   Fusion V by De Toren (2008) R283
#2   Pinotage by Diemersfontein (2011) R79
#3   Sauvignon Blanc by Pecan Stream (2012) R43
#4   L'Amour Touhours by Allee Bleue (2008) R150
#5   The Chocolate Block by Boekenhoutskloof (2011) R165
#6   Classique by Rupert & Rothschild (2010) R106
#7   Sauvignon Blanc by Diemersdal (2012) R75
#8   Cabernet Sauvignon by Raka (2008)
#9   Chardonnay by Durbanville Hills (2011) R112
#10 White by Vuurberg (2010)


Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Wine Fan Harry Haddon's Top 9 El Cheapo Wines for Xmas! [GUEST POST]


We challenged him. He rose to the challenge. Mighty in his cheapness. Here's a real shopping list for ya, just in time for the Silly Season :)

Make sure to click through to read the full post (Harry is one of the best wine writers in the country). He gives an entertaining run down on each choice. All White Wines on the list are under R60, all Red Wines under R80.

WHITES UNDER R60:

Perdeberg Chenin Blanc 2012 (Everywhere really)
Stellenrust Chenin Blanc 2012 (Most Pick ‘n Pays)
Van Loveren Sauvignon Blanc 2012 (Supermarkets)
Paul Cluver Woolworths Gewürztraminer (Woolworths)
Antebellum Chenin Blanc 2012 (Wine Cellar, Vino Pronto)

REDS UNDER R80:

MAN Vintners Shiraz 2010 (Various Bottle Stores)
Tobais Red 2011 (Wine Cellar)
Vins d’Orrance Simply Red 2010 (Carolines, Wine Cellar)
Reyneke Shiraz/Cabernet Sauvingon (Pick ‘n Pay)


Why 9? We don't know. Ask Harry :) Plenty at Pick n Pay, Woolworths, various bottle stores and online retailers. Go shopping Wine Fans!

Read more: http://www.2oceansvibe.com/2012/11/30/top-ten-el-cheapo-wines-for-christmas/

Explore Harry's Profile on Real Time Wine.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

White Wine Varietals. The Beginners Guide. [WINE 101]

Just like Granny Smith apples taste different from Golden Delicious or Pink Lady, each grape variety has its own flavour. In a blind tasting you would easily recognise each of those apples because you are familiar with them. It is just as easy to tell one grape variety from another, when made into wine, as long as you are familiar with their flavours and aromas. The fun side of this is that it requires more drinking and tasting to familiarise yourself! Although some Sauvignon Blancs taste different to others because of the area they were grown in or the time of year or even day they were picked – a lesson learnt in the last module – the basic characteristics of a variety always stay the same.

Here are the main white varietals, what they contain and what they taste like.

Real Time Wine & WineStyle present: White Wine Varietals. The Beginners Guide.

Even though most people these days seem to drink Sauvignon Blanc like it's water, there are actually other varietals out there. Below is a list of some of the main white varietals in South Africa. Give them a try; many are really good value for money as they are not well known and therefore harder to sell. They are all totally unique and will really enhance your wine drinking experience.

Sauvignon Blanc
Pronounced: Sow-veen-non-blanc

The flavour can vary from very grassy to tropical, depending on where the grapes were grown. Cooler climate versions such as Buitenverwagting Sauvignon Blanc taste like cut grass, freshly cut green pepper, asparagus and granadilla. Warmer climate wines like Thelema Sauvignon Blanc taste like tropical juice, tinned pineapple and sometimes even tinned peas. The palate is light and fresh with a clean acidity and the wines are best enjoyed in hot weather with light, fresh food or on their own, without a meal. They are best enjoyed when young and are not commonly considered wines for ageing.

Chenin Blanc
Pronounced: She-nin-blanc

Chenin Blanc also comes in two very distinct styles. The first is light, fresh and easy drinking and the flavour is reminiscent of freshly cut guava with a hint of grass. The second style is wooded and is rich and round. It tastes like honey on toast with baked Granny Smith apples and is a wine that can age for several years. Light Chenin Blancs are best drunk young, with or without a meal. The wooded style is delicious with rich food like creamy seafood soup or even rich cold meats like Parma ham and salami.

Chardonnay
Pronounced: Shar-don-nay

Chardonnay can be unwooded or wooded but the unwooded style is not very popular since people looking for unwooded wines generally drink Sauvignon Blanc or Chenin. So let’s concentrate on the wooded style. It can vary from lightly wooded, which is fresh and breezy and can be enjoyed with or without food, to more heavily wooded wines that taste like buttered toast with hints of citrus peel and marzipan. After an uncool period, Chardonnay is back in fashion now that winemakers have greater control and make wines that are wooded yet fresh and palatable. The old-fashioned examples sometimes tasted as if you were chewing on a matchstick.

Riesling
Pronounced: Reece-ling

Although this possibly is one of South Africa’s least popular grapes, it is one of the world’s most versatile. The reason is simple: our Rieslings often aren't great. Furthermore, it is confused with another variety called Cape Riesling or Paarl Riesling that are best left alone. Riesling and Weisser Riesling refer to the same thing, a German grape variety that tastes like lime cordial with a hint of gunpowder or kerosene and is quite delicious.

Viognier
Pronounced: Vee-o-nee-ay

This fashionable grape variety has been made popular by the fact that it is very easy to recognise and has a kind of sweetness to it that many people enjoy. It smells of peaches, lychees, rose petals and orange blossom. Despite the deceptively sweet aroma, it usually is dry and the palate is rich, round and just as fragrant as the nose. It is best enjoyed with food as the complex aromas can make it difficult to drink more than a glass without food.

Sémillon
Pronounced: Sem-ee-on (Please note that both l's are silent.)

Sémillon is the unsung hero in many South African white blends. It can be made in one of two styles. Unwooded it is fresh and grassy and smells a little like Sauvignon Blanc but is richer and more velvety on the palate. It is often secretly blended into Sauvignon Blanc to make the wine taste a little more serious. Winemakers are allowed to do this with any wine without having to declare it, provided no more than 15% of another variety has been added to the varietal named on the label.
Wooded Sémillon is rich and heady and smells like candied oranges and lanolin. It is not that common to see a wooded Sémillon on the shelf as not many consumers know it, making it a hard sell. Most wooded Sémillons are used for blending with Sauvignon, either silently or to make a white blend (discussed next).

White Bordeaux blends
Pronounced: Bored-oh

A white Bordeaux blend is a blend of Sauvignon Blanc and Sémillon. The Sémillon component can be wooded or unwooded. Right now, white blends are seriously trendy and South Africa is producing some amazing ones. They age beautifully, up to 10 years, and have a delicious mineral quality that is not found in any single varietal. They are quite big, serious wines and are best enjoyed with a meal.

White Rhône blend
Pronounced: as it is written

While you may not have heard of a white Rhône blend, it can be any white wine that contains Viognier, Marsanne, Rousanne, Grenache Blanc and sometimes Chenin Blanc or Chardonnay. Such blends tend to be aromatic and rich and are best drunk with food.

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The Wine 101 series is a collaboration between Real Time Wine and WineStyle Magazine. Content originally produced by WineStyle. Subscribe to their great newsletter and wine deals here. And whatever wine you're drinking, it's better to share it with your friends using Real Time Wine, the wine app for everyone who enjoys wine, not just those who understand it!

Friday, December 7, 2012

Top 10 Trending Wines [SOUTH AFRICA] 7 December

Is the year winding up or winding down? We can't quite tell. Anyhoo. Wine helps. It really does. With that pearl of wisdom... into this week's Top 10! Oh, wait. Is it an ALL RED Top 10? Seems so. Interesting...

TOP 10 TRENDING WINES IN SOUTH AFRICA

#1   Chocolate Block by Boekenhoutskloof (2011) R160
#2   Sauvignon Blanc by La Motte (2012) R54
#3   Wolftrap Red by Boekenhoutskloof (2011) R36
#4   Classique by Rupert & Rothschild (2010) R106
#5   The First Lady by Warwick (2011, Cabernet Sauvignon) R74
#6   Goshawk's Chant by Diemersfontein (2010) R78
#7   Railroad Red by Graham Beck (2008) R52
#8   Cabernet Sauvignon by Alto (2009) R157
#9   Noble Savage Cab Sav Merlot by Bartinney (2009)
#10 Pinot Noir by Glen Carlou (2010) R110


Thursday, December 6, 2012

Bouchard Finlayson - The Muse [GUEST POST]

By Ricardo Gouveia.

It has been a while since I have posted to my blog, as I have been busy setting up a property valuation company. I guess this will be a good time to punt such, so if you require a property valuation, be it a wine farm, commercial or residential property, visit:  www.valuetec.co.za! (Editor - SHAMELESS self promotion!)

All I needed was a little inspiration to get back into the swing of things and Bouchard Finlayson, which I have now dubbed my Muse, did exactly that!

I attended a Bouchard Finlayson tasting held at Great Domaines in Johannesburg, which was superbly presented by Jessica Saurwein. It was an enjoyable evening with delicious canapes and humorous banter about smoked chicken, or should I say gerokte kiep, to be more precise ;)

The entire flight consisting of numerous Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay wines were exceptional. Scores were high and characters of the wines between the 2005, 2007 & 2009 vintages were varied.

It was extremely interesting to experience, that although the wine making style remained unchanged over the aforementioned vintages, the changing annual climatic conditions influenced the characteristics of the wines with great finesse, from green and fresh to fruity and complex.

I guess you could say the lady in the photo above, visually describes the flavours of the wines to a T - elegant, impressionable and clean with a great depth of character.

As difficult as it is to chose, my favourites of the night were:
  •     2005 Bouchard Finlayson Sauvignon Blanc
  •     2005 Bouchard Finlayson Sans Barrique Chardonnay (unwooded)
  •     2009 Bouchard Finlayson Missionvale Chardonnay
  •     2005 Bouchard Finlayson Missionvale Chardonnay
So hopefully the inspiration continues and you will be hearing from me more often!

Until next time... Cheers!

Ricardo Gouveia is The Wine Oak and the Oke likes wine! His blog reveals his wine experiences, from wine Reviews, tastings, events, wine-Making, South African wine & related regions, interesting facts, wine courses and MORE! Follow The Wine Oak on Twitter or visit his blog, www.thewineoak.com.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

5 Tips for Identifying Faulty Wine [WINE 101]

Most people try a wine and either say ‘yum yum’ or ‘it’s yuck and I can’t drink it’. Below are a few points to help you if you come across the latter. Sometimes a wine is actually faulty, and it’s not just that you don’t like it. So if you can identify the fault, you can then ask the waiter for another bottle, or return the faulty one to the place you bought it and they will replace it.
Real Time Wine & WineStyle present: 5 Tips for Identifying Faulty Wine.

1. Cork
Many people think a corked wine is one that contains bits of cork. This is not the case. The culprit is a type of fungi that occurs naturally in cork and that affects wine. It could suppress the fruit flavours, something that is easily overlooked, or it may result in cardboardy, musty, dank aromas and flavours, rendering the wine unpleasant to drink.
 
2. Oxidation
Wine oxidises when it has absorbed oxygen. Oxidised white wine smells like honey, cider or in extreme cases like sherry, while reds get a vinegary smell. Most oxidised wine has a brown tint to the colour.
 
3. Over the hill
If a wine has been left to age for too long and is past its prime, it is said to be over the hill. At this stage, red wine turns slightly brown and starts smelling like old port without any fruit aromas. White wines start turning dark yellow and begin to smell like tinned peas or cooked vegetables.
 
4. Volatile
A volatile wine is a seriously flawed wine. Acetic bacteria can spoil a wine during production or it may be from excessive oxidation. The wine smells like vinegar or nail polish remover.
 
5. Brett
Brettanomyces – Brett for short – is a yeast infection on grapes in vineyards and cellars, mostly from old barrels that contaminate wine. Affected wines are said to have a Brett profile – farmyardy, horsey, sometimes metallic – and are generally unpleasant, although some people like it when the character is not too dominating.
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The Wine 101 series is a collaboration between Real Time Wine and WineStyle Magazine. Content originally produced by WineStyle. Subscribe to their great newsletter and wine deals here. And whatever wine you're drinking, it's better to share it with your friends using Real Time Wine, the wine app for everyone who enjoys wine, not just those who understand it!