Showing posts with label Dom Perignon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dom Perignon. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Valentines Day-It doesn't have to be shit.

Valentine's Day. Shocking day of commercialism where rough blokes and serial cheaters buy their better halves giant cards and even bigger teddy bears. 

So what do you do if you a) like your partner too much to spend it with a hundred other couples or b) are currently without a better half?

Well I have a little suggestion that may sound a little more tempting. Invite people you like/love over to your home for dinner. Before they arrive go shopping and buy some really tasty ingredients to cook a spectacular meal but before you get home stop at the local wine merchants or cellar door if you're lucky enough to have one of those around that makes the bubbly stuff.

Maybe something like this for a cheeky welcome drink...

Domaine Chandon Etoile Tete de Cuvee


And then something from these guys, perhaps...
Camel Valley. Obviously.
or maybe this guy...

Dom Perignon
By now you should be laughing, chatting and very possibly finding an old 80's/90's CD and singing (badly!) along to the Eurythmics. I have never done this, me? Nooo! Far too sensible and restrained to sing badly in a friends lounge in between laughing like a drain. Classy and sophisticated me!

When you are all just about but not quite ready for tea and bed, a sneaky, slightly sweeter glass of Taittinger Nocturne is a lovely way to round off the evening.

From the Taittinger caves


So coupled up or not, falling into bed after a joyous evening with those you love and some delicious champagne can make Valentine's Day a day to look forward to can't it? Not shit in the slightest.





Friday, 26 November 2010

Holiday homes of the champenois

Being a very lucky girl, the sparkling tour this year has taken me to Taittinger in the Champagne region and Taittinger in the Napa Valley. In the guise of Domaine Carneros it is still pretty easy to spot which is Domaine Carneros if you've ever been to Taittinger's Chateau de la Marquetterie



Top: Domaine Carneros, Bottom: Ch de la Marquetterie

Domaine Carneros is home to one of the First Ladies of sparkling wine Eileen Crane. She has created a range that holds its own identity whilst retaining the classic elegance and finesse of Taittinger. Head hunted by Claude Taittinger himself, Eileen's appointment was a shrewd move in developing world class sparkling wines.

One thing the Americans have down pat is a great winery tour. I was fortunate enough to have the sole attention of Bruce Stirling who took me through a physical tour and also a tasting tour. I tried the Brut 2006, Le Reve 2004, Rose 2006, Demi-Sec 2006, Late Disgorged 2004 and the Blanc de
Noirs 2006. Across the board the wines were an impressive balance of ripe Californian fruits with crisp and refreshing acidity alongside some complex developing flavours.



Being a very English girl I was particularly enamoured with the older sparklers, Le Reve 2004 and the Late Disgorged Brut 2004. The hints of complexity and age that had come through on the 2006 had opened up a little more , showing richer bready and yeasty notes alongside the still ripe fruit flavours.

Although both wines had the capacity to age longer, the extra couple of years had made a real difference and I thought at the time how interesting it would be to see just how old it is possible to go with New World sparklers. The oldest I tried on this trip was a 1999 from Gloria Ferrer that showed some real class and sophistication without being tired. I think the goal for the next trip will be to see how old I can go and see if the fizz will hold up.

Sadly this year did not bring the opportunity to visit Louis Roederer in France but the long drive out to Philo to visit the Roederer Estate is well worth it (fill up before you go though, limited petrol stations). As you pull up the long drive to the winery on top of the hill then you are not only rewarded with an amazing view but a cracking selection of wines that are not readily available outside the US.



In a sleek and simple tasting room I tasted my way through Brut Rose Multi-Vintage, L'Ermitage 2002, Brut MV Magnum, Extra Dry MV and three still wines; Chardonnay 2007, Pinot Noir Rose 2009 and Pinot Noir 2007.  Back at the Majestic ranch in York we would always recommend the Louis Roederer Magnum mainly because it's a great Champagne but also because it adds a little something extra in a large format.

The same is definitely true of Roederer Estate in magnum. If you're celebrating anything Stateside, get your sweaty little paws on one of these gems. I love alternate format bottles anyway, there's nothing like a little half bottle of fizz and a good book for a long train journey and a magnum or jeroboam for big celebration (train journey not necessary).

I'm going to go off piste for a moment and recommend a still wine, it's OK I'll have a lie down shortly. I am something of a Francophile; I love France as a place, as a people and as a provider of wine to me. Thankfully Roederer Estate have taken some of that French style and skill in creating a Pinot Noir Rose that would give most Sancerre's a run for their money. A delicate salmon pink with crunchy red fruit flavours, cherries, raspberries and red apples with hints of vanilla, this wine is crisp, fresh and great drinking. The lightness of touch and skill in winemaking shows that California can produce very good still rose that is completely alien to the terrifying day-glo sticky sweet nightmares they are better known for.

Aside from the joy of a magnum, my sparkling recommendation from Roederer Estate has to be the L'Ermitage 2002. 52%Chardonnay and 48% Pinot Noir this wine is complex and interesting with hints of baked apple, lemon, almonds and toasty notes. Slightly honeyed with hints of white flowers its youthfulness betrays the eight years ageing it has had.



Roederer Estate was a fine end to my sparkling tour of the Napa Valley. Well not quite the end. I went for a sneaky glass of Dom Perignon 2002 at Napa Style. Sat next to the roaring fire, surrounded by enormous squash and pumpkins I wasn't drinking a local fizz but at that moment I couldn't have been anywhere else in the world and nor would I want to have been.

Wednesday, 18 August 2010

The word on the street

I've just read a great article from Liz Palmer a wine writer based in Canada about the man who brought Champagne to the rap fraternity, Branson B. .http://lizpalmer.wordpress.com/

Now let it be known now before things get any further that despite looking like Naomi Campbell's chunky little sister, I am unsure of the word on the street. I'm not entirely sure where it's at nor how it is hanging. I don't have any homies, a crib, a ride or beef with anyone. I'm not even massively sure what I've just written but I do know that where there is champagne there are rappers and it turns out the man to thank for that is a chap named Branson B.

Branson, being based in New York, was in prime location to hang out with P Diddy/Diddy/Puff Daddy/Mr Coombs/Sean and the Notorious B.I.G at the end of the 80's and since then Branson has ensured that Taittinger's Comtes de Champagne, Dom Perignon, Louis Roederer's Cristal and its replacement Armand de Brignac have all been introduced to hip-hoppers. These days he's in proud posession of his own champagne range http://www.bransonbchampagne.com/ 

The real question for me here is, do other music categories have such strong links with particular drinks? I mean obviously for goths it's anything that looks like blood and nothing that could possibly cheer them up but do country musicians only drink bourbon and then sing about it? Do pop bands only drink luminous soft drinks and Red Bull? 

Back in the day it was Jack Daniels for rock bands (now this is more my area of knowledge, I still have a bottle of J.D given to me by Samuel L Jackson) although I can't see kids walking around the streets wearing T-shirts with Veuve Cliquot on them somehow.

As for house music, that is still eejits shovelling down narcotics in a dark room and listening to repetitive beats isn't it?