Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

16
Nov
11

Australian Stickies Tasting

With a savoury budget due on December 6th, a touch of sweetness is in order to, as Mary P would say, make the medicine go down.

So Wine Australia are hosting a delicious sweet wine tasting in Cork on the 6th December in the Hayfield Manor Hotel, Cork City.

Affectionately known as “Stickies” Down-under, the story of the Australian wine world is steeped in fortified and dessert wine making. Often tricky to sell, the one time that they do find favour is around Christmas. So perfect timing for you to join us and try a range of these wines from Australia.

Joining us to lead the presentation duties is Chris Pfeiffer, owner and wine maker of Pfeiffer Wines in the Rutherglen. A regular visitor to Cork with a huge passion for these wine styles, Chris is the ideal person to take us on this sweet journey.

So whether you have a sweet tooth, are looking for a different present for the wine lover in your life or on occasion you’d just prefer to pour (instead of make) your dessert, this is the tasting for you.

The cost is €20 per person, which includes the tasting and tasty nibbles afterwards.

The tasting begins at 7pm, and with only 30 places, book your passage early.

To do so, please contact John at Wine Australia on ireland@wineaustralia.com or 065 7077 264.

 If you need any further information, please get in touch.

17
Oct
11

Beaujolais Nouveau, did you know?

Beaujolais-Nouveau

Who knows what about Beaujolais Nouveau? Have you tried it? Did you like it? Would you buy it? We’ve put together some facts about Beaujolais Nouveau:

Did you know:

  •  At the stroke of midnight on the third Thursday of every November, the new vintage of Beaujolais Nouveau is released.
  •  Beaujolais Nouveau, which is a young wine only 6 weeks old, comes from a region south of Burgundy in France. French culture practically dictates that the light-bodied and fruity wine must be finished by Christmastime and the French government has put regulations delaying the wine’s release until the third week in November.
  •  The region of Beaujolais is 34 miles long from north to south and 7 to 9 miles wide. There are nearly 4,000 grape growers who make their living in this picturesque region just north of France’s third largest city, Lyon.
  •  All the grapes in the Beaujolais region must be picked by hand. These are the only vineyards, along with Champagne, where hand harvesting is mandatory.
  •  Gamay is the only grape permitted for Beaujolais. While certain California wineries may label their wine “Gamay Beaujolais” this is not the same grape variety as what is grown in France, and is quite different in taste and growing habits.
  •  Beaujolais Nouveau owes its easy drinkability to a winemaking process called carbonic maceration—also called whole berry fermentation. This technique preserves the fresh, fruity quality of the wine, without extracting bitter tannins from the grape skins.
  •  Beaujolais Nouveau is meant to be drunk young-in average vintages it should be consumed by the following May after its release. However, in excellent vintages (such as 2000) the wine can live much longer and can be enjoyed until the next harvest rolls around.
  •  Serve Beaujolais Nouveau slightly cool, at about 55 degrees Fahrenheit / 12 degrees -the wine is more refreshing and its forward fruit more apparent than if you serve it at room temperature.
  •  Approximately 1/3 of the entire crop of the Beaujolais region is sold as Beaujolais Nouveau

 Festivals:

There are approximately 120 festivals to honor the arrival of this enticing young wine in the Beaujolais region alone.

The biggest of which takes place in Beaujeu, the capital of the Beaujolais region. This little city springs to life during this weekend in November, hosting a massive party called Sarmentelles. The party gets its name from the French word for cuttings from the canes of grapevines called sarments, which are burned in the center of town just prior to the grand midnight unveiling.

 Then the huge barrels are opened too much fanfare and party-goers indulge in the new wine for the festival’s 3 day duration. Other areas in France also boisterously celebrate the arrival of the Beaujolais Nouveau. Lyon hosts the Beaujolympiades (Beaujolympics), marking the release of the wine with music and fireworks followed by 2 days of sampling.

 In Paris, restaurants and bistros host their Beaujolais Nouveau parties, staying open through the night and uncorking hundreds of bottles after midnight.

So come Thursday 17th, we at Karwigs will be raising a glass to this age long tradition, will you?

26
May
11

Domaine Bourdic

The Couple:

Hans Hurlimann and Christa Vogel own Domaine Bourdic. Hans used to compose modern classical music in Basle and Christa was a teacher. Eleven years ago they came to live in the Languedoc “because it was raining in Italy.” That astutely-chosen holiday has borne fruit, literally, and their fourteen hectares of vineyard is now expertly cherished.

Hans and Christa are not what you’d call typically Swiss. They are meticulous, definitely, when it comes to their vineyard. There are three more members of the team. The Dutch footprints you’ll find at Domaine Bourdic belong to Henny Ebben who came for the vendange and decided to stay. She is our naturopath, therapist and linguist. Lizzie Betts-Gosling’s green thumbs nurture everything from broccoli to computers and Ali Ballantyne covers the paperwork.

The Domaine:

Domaine Bourdic, surrounded by vineyards, is in the lower foothills of the Cévennes, and near the historic town of Pézenas in the Languedoc-Roussillon region. The buildings, on the lower slopes of a small but steep hill, date from the 18th century. They were restored at the beginning of the 1990s, and reequipped the cellars completely. The house and cellars are at the centre of our 16 hectares of vineyards (about 40 acres). In this wonderful region of France, helped by the soil and the warm Mediterranean climate, the aim is to make wines that are wholly typical of the south, with a subtle character and an incomparable taste.

A Respect for nature
The basis of our viticulture is a vineyard soil of elements that are in balance, composed of adequate organic matter, and well-structured as a result of microbiological activity.

This outlook obliges us to reduce to a minimum the amount of fertiliser and sprays that we use, and to renounce absolutely the use of chemical fertiliser.

Sustainable viticulture
In the year 2000 we started to work in full accordance with the agreed standards laid down by Vitealis for “viticulture raisonnée contrôlée”. These state, amongst other things, that the plants must be regularly inspected for disease and infestation. At every check the number of diseased plants and other observations are formally recorded, and no treatment may be made until a certain threshold is passed. There are also limitations on the use of agrochemical products and the levels of use. An independent organisation, Vitealys, keeps an independent check on conformance with these rules.

Vinification
We do not harvest until the grapes are fully ripe. Besides checking on the acidity/sugar level balance. The grapes are destemmed and crushed, and very quickly poured into the fermentation vats. Each variety is handled separately and with the greatest care. The normal time for maceration and fermentation is between 25-30 days at a low temperature, to yield the maximum extraction.

Maturation
At this point, in terms of its vinification, the young wine is now in its final phase. Some 60% of our production is set aside to mature in barrel. For the varietal wines we use barrels of French oak (from the Allier).

The Wines

Spanish and Italian grapes grown in French soil? Bourdic grows Tempranillo and Vermentino, while mixing in some traditional French varieties: Cinsault / Syrah / Rousanne / Merlot

From this vast selection of varieties here’s a selection of their wines:

Density - Vermentino Roussanne Blend

Rose -  Cinsault Grenache 

Zappa - Syrah, Grenache and Tempranillo

Octrandre - Cinsault/Grenache/Cab/Syrah/Tempranillo/Roussanne and Merlot

Merlot – French Oak

Tempranillo – French Oak

The Bourdic wines where recently featured in the Irish Examiner newspaper, see what they had to say:

11
Nov
10

South African Sale

 

To celebrate this amazing country, we are offering a whopping 25% off all our South African wines for the next 2 weeks, all of which are available to taste in our shop in Carrigaline.

South Africa is an important wine-producing country, with most of its major wine regions occupying the southernmost tip of the African continent. The heart of the country’s wine industry lies in and around the Cape Peninsula and the Coastal Region, both of which are exposed to the maritime influences of the Atlantic and Indian oceans. Overall, the climate can be termed as Mediterranean, which is marked by dry heat and intense sunlight. These features, along with other growing conditions and a long tradition of quality winemaking, are reflected in South Africa’s wine styles.

 South Africa is one of the few wine-growing countries which demonstrate a mix of Old and New World cultures when it comes to the styles of wine produced. While its sparkling wine and the majority of it’s still wines follow New world winemaking practices, there are many well-known fortified and dessert wines which are more in line with their Old World counterparts.

 A diverse range of grapes are grown throughout South Africa’s wine-producing regions. Chenin Blanc (locally known as Steen) and Chardonnay top the whites list whereas Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Syrah are notable reds. Pinotage is another important variety that produces a signature style in South Africa.

 We are offering a whopping 25% off all our South African wines for the next 2 weeks, all of which are available to taste in our shop in Carrigaline. We hope to see you soon ….

01
Nov
10

Mosel – Saar – Ruwer

Mosel – Saar – Ruwer

We were asked on Saturday what wine producing area of Germany would Joe Karwig choose over all the others. After a long discussion he settled on the Mosel region, for their outstanding wines.  

The wine region is defined by the hauntingly beautiful and eerily still Mosel River, which cuts a deep snakelike gorge through the land, winds back and forth for 145 miles northeast until it empties into the Rhine near the town of Koblenz. The Saar and Ruwer are small tributaries of the Mosel.

The grape of the Mosel is Riesling. The vineyards are among the steepest in the world. This would be one thing if they were located someplace warm and sunny. But the vineyards of the Mosel are also among the most Northern in Germany. Steepness in a cold, northern wine region means the sun is in contact with the vines for limited hours of the day. The total number of sunlight hours during the growing season is also modest (the Mosel gets in a good year about a third of the sunlight hours that Provence does). As a result of this, the river is used to its full potential. The Mosel’s vineyards hug only South facing slopes. At each turn of the river where the banks face north, the slopes have no vines.

With sugar low and acidity high you would expect the wines to be tart and thin. There are miraculously two underlying factors: first, the amazing resourceful Riesling which can produce wines of great finesse even if the grape has not fully ripened, and secondly the slate. The famous gunmetal grey slate of the Mosel is highly porous and both heat retaining and heat reflecting, these qualities help the Riesling to ripen. But in ways that are still a mystery to us, the grape can absorb the slatey, minerally, wet stone flavours. No other wines in Germany process the finesse and raciness and elegance as the Mosel Riesling…

Here are some of our suggestions: Mosel Wines

22
Mar
10

kevin from fenns quay restaurant drops in for a chat

Cork is blessed with many fine restaurants. One of my favourites is the wonderful Fenns Quay Restaurant in the city centre. Kate Lawlor along with her cousin Kevin Crowley and his partner Pennapa Wongsuwan took over the running of Fenn’s Quay restaurant in the summer of 2008 from the original owners Pat and Eilish O’Leary.

They sum up their philosophy as . . . . .

We use only the best produce from the best local suppliers and treat it with care and attention to detail.

They have a marvelous menu for breakfast, lunch and evening meals. The restaurant itself is comfortable and relaxed, the service is top notch and very friendly and the food and wine are superb.

Kevin is a regular visitor to our warehouse and shop in Carrigaline so the last time he called in, we asked him to tell us a little bit about his restaurant and especially his wine preferences.

How did you originally get into wine Kev ?

What wines / regions interest you at the moment ?

Thanks to Kevin for calling in to chat to us. Make sure to put Fenns Quay top of your list of places to try out. It really is a brilliant place to eat and he has a wonderful wine list including some from Karwig Wines ;-)

19
Mar
10

Those wines are like gold !

  

Bird In The Hand Vineyard

Bird In The Hand Vineyard

 

What I hear you say ? Can this be true. 

You see, the wines from Bird In The Hand are named after the 1879 “Bird In Hand” goldmine situated in the Adelade Hills near the town of Woodside, South Australia. The Bird In The Hand wines are limited release and feature single varietal wines including Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Shiraz, Nest Egg Cabernet, Sparkling Pinot, Rose and Riesling

Andrew Nugent, viticulturalist and winemaker, set up the winery back in 1997 in the emerging wine region of the Adelaide Hills. He grew up next door to Penfolds at Magill and his formative wine years were spent in South Australia’s McLaren Vale. It was here that he honed his craft as a viticulturalist, vineyard manager and winemaker. 

The Nugent family live and work on the picturesque property, reflecting the strong sense of community in the Adelaide Hills. 

 

Andrew’s ambition is to grow Bird in Hand into one of the world’s great wineries. 

We live and work at the winery. We know the best thing we can do for our community is grow and produce the best wine and olives we can. Our success will be our community’s success. A high tide lifts all the boats in the bay. At Bird in Hand we’ve assembled the best team of people, we’ve painstakingly selected the perfect terroir and we’re well on our way. To extend the winemaking range available to Bird in Hand, another vineyard in the famous wine-growing region of Clare has been aquired to provide fruit for world class Riesling and Shiraz. 

The company also produces its “Two In The Bush” range, named after the shaft in the above mentioned goldmine in the Adelaide hills. The range offers incredible price / quality value like the Bird In The Hand wines. The range includes a Merlot / Cabernet blend, a Shiraz and a delicious Semillon / Sauvignon Blanc blend. 

They are a wonderful company and highly regarded by James Halliday no less. 

He gave the company a 5 star rating in his Wine Companion 2010 so their wines are well worth checking out.

04
Feb
10

Wine and friends

Grapes in Glass

Tomorrow my wife and I are heading off to London town to spend the weekend with some of our best friends. We are bringing a couple of lovely bottles of wine and we know that there are some lovely ones waiting.

By lovely, I don’t necessarily mean expensive. Lovely wine takes all shapes and forms. I know the wines that await us are going to be equally or even more lovely thanks to the thought that has gone in to picking them.

They will be all the more special as we will be having them with some of our best friends, slow cooked food and lots and lots of laughs.

Wine always tastes its best that way.

02
Feb
10

Our guest blogger – the wonderful @manicmammy and her thoughts on sweet dessert wines

I was fortunate enough to study for my WSET Advanced Cert in the company of some really wonderful people, none better than the appropriately titled Manic Mammy, aka Catherine O Neill. Catherine’s  blog is packed full of wonderful writing – “reviews, news, family, wine, me” as she says herself. True to form, when I asked about a possible guest blog, she agreed straight away and a day later, it landed in my inbox. Class.

So thanks a million and over to you Catherine . . . . .

One of the highlights of the recent Good Wine Show was the Grafenstuck Bockenheimer Eiswein. I thought it was fabulous: full of pineapple, peach and apple fruit, deliciously sweet but lovely and crisp too. Until a couple of years ago my experience of dessert wines was extremely limited. I had the misconception that they would taste like treacle and be over syrupy or cloying. Thankfully as result of tasting a variety of these wines, my eyes have been opened and as result am much more likely to order a glass of dessert wine whilst enjoying the occasional meal out or special event at home.

icewine grapes3
Creative Commons License photo credit: Rivard

I find the different methods of production of sweet wines fascinating. Whoever came up with the idea of fermenting rotting or frozen grapes is indeed to be applauded. It is believed that the best dessert wines come from grapes that are very rich in sugar due to its concentration from one or other of the following methods:

  • botrytis, a fungal disease which consumes water from the grape and shrivels it.
  • drying of the grapes after picking on mats etc.
  • grapes being left late on the vine to shrivel, losing water and becoming raisin like.
  • grapes freezing, allowing the frozen water within the grape to be removed.

The different sugar concentration processes and grape varieties lead to an extensive range of different styles and tastes of sweet wines.

Arguably, some of the most famous sweet white wine comes from the Bordeaux appellation of Sauternes AC. Here Sémillon, due to its susceptibility to botrytis, dominates the blend with Sauvignon Blanc often added to provide acidity and fruity aromas. Muscadelle similarly may be added to provide additional exotic aromas. The harvest in this region is often spread over several weeks as only the grapes sufficiently shrivelled are handpicked on each pass. This effort and manpower tends to explain somewhat why a bottle of Sauternes may be more expensive to alternate wines.

The way that the famous Hungarian Tokaji sweet wines are made surprised me. The nobly rotted or botrytised Furmint and Hárslevelu grapes are separated from healthy ones which are fermented to a dry white wine whilst the rotten grapes are stored and eventually pounded to a paste. This amount of this paste added to the white wine determines the sweetness of the final Tokaji Aszu wine. This process leads to fantastic complex flavours in the wine: apricots, marmalade, rye bread, caramel, honey and more. These wines are classified on a puttonyos scale which is a measure of the residual sugar in the wine. The higher the puttonyos, the sweeter the wine.

These wines merely touch the incredibly varied range of sweet wines: From Australia Rutherglen sticky to German Beerenauslese and Trockenbeerenauslese to Canadian Icewine to Italian Recioto della Valpolicella and many, many more.

So g’wan, don’t take my word for it, the next time you’re in a restaurant choosing from the dessert menu, tackling a cheeseboard or perusing wine in your local wine retailer, treat yourself to a glass of dessert wine. You won’t regret it.

27
Jan
10

Yes Miles, I am drinking Merlot

Merlot

Merlot

Hands up who has seen the movie “Sideways” ? Pretty much everyone. Remember that great scene where Miles and Jack are outside the restaurant, before meeting their lovely dinner companions for the evening. It goes like this . . . . .

Jack : If they want to drink Merlot, we’re drinking Merlot.
Miles : No, if anyone orders Merlot, I’m leaving. I am NOT drinking any f@#!ing Merlot!

This scene is responsible, in the opinion of many experts for the decline in popularity of Merlot, particurally in the US. It’s even been given a name – “The Merlot Effect”. Decanter magazine ran an article on this a couple of years ago. It was very interesting. On the flip side, the movie helped to send sales of Pinot Noir through the roof. Ironically the movies in-joke was that Miles’ prized bottle of wine was a 1961 Château Cheval Blanc. Whats one of the dominant grape varieties in it ? You guessed it. Merlot.

Merlot, like Chardonnay (Bridget Jones gets the rap here) has had a hard time of it of late. And its not fair really. Merlot has an awful lot going on for it.

New World style Merlot is usually medium to full bodied and bursting with plum and blackberry flavours. The tannins are soft and it is very easy to drink. Its intense purple colour is a thing of beauty. It normally is right up there in terms of alcohol and when its well made (and there are lots of examples) the fruit, tannins and acidity can handle it. Merlot handles oak really well too, giving it a lovely toasty aspect.

Bordeaux, its most famous location, can offer different styles. It can do the above style very well but also a style that is more red fruits (raspberry and strawberry) than black fruits. The grapes are sometimes harvested earlier resulting in lighter body wines with less alcohol and higher acidity than their New World style counterparts. Some examples can veer towards a greener, more vegetal expression. They are brilliant and complex when they are made by good producers.

Merlot as a single varietal has so much to offer. It is often blended with other varieties, most notably with Cabernet Sauvignon and the results can be sublime.

Merlot is very adaptable. Its grown all around the world. France (notably St Emilion and Pomerol) [2/3 of the worlds Merlot is grown in France], Italy, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, United States, Argentina and Chile to name a few.  Each country produces its own style of Merlot, from reserved, complex versions to full on fruit bombs and everything in between.

Merlot is one of the great ones. So if its been a while, please revisit this wonderful variety. Its just too good to ignore.

Yes, even you Miles.

P.s        You might like to check out this DVD if you are feeling the Merlove





Because Life Is Too Short To Drink Boring Wine . . .

Karwig Wines are importers, wholesalers and retailers of selected and estate bottled wines from all over the world. Its all about the wine. We have one of the broadest selections of wine from quality Old World and New World producers.

Categories

Archives

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,204 other followers


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,204 other followers