For me, wine is about conviviality and good fellowship. It is about sharing and enjoying communal pleasure. A glass drunk alone can be enjoyable but the pleasure is one-dimensional. Wine only comes into its own when there is company. Then the enjoyment and satisfaction is fully threedimensional, adding conversation and kinship to the restricted joy of solitary consumption. Wine’s great gift to mankind is the ability to bring people of widely differing backgrounds and beliefs together in harmony. And, because its production tells a story of people and place and time, I believe it sits above all other alcoholic beverages in this respect. I count myself lucky to have shared the wines below with generous, like-minded friends over the course of the last 12 months or so.
I often play a little game, asking well-versed wine lovers to rattle off the names of the world’s great wine styles, a request that always prompts a roll call of the ‘usual suspects’: Red Bordeaux, Mosel Riesling, Burgundy of both colours, Barolo,
Napa Valley Cabernet, Sauternes, Northern Rhône Syrah in the shape of Hermitage and Côte Rôtie… Seldom, if ever, is dry white Bordeaux mentioned. Yet, when prompted, everybody readily agrees that it is worthy of the highest approbation, which leads me to label it as the wine world’s most overlooked, though not underrated, style. Why this should be so, years after I first posited this paradox, remains a mystery to me. Baldly stated, there can be no arguing that at their best the dry white wines of the Graves region, specifically Pessac-Léognan, compare with the world’s best.
Esta historia es de la edición Winter 2024 de Sommelier India.
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Esta historia es de la edición Winter 2024 de Sommelier India.
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Godinho Historic family owned restaurant
Feasting on Portuguese and Indigenous Goan flavours, relive the calm and quiet of a time long gone by,
Laurent Ponsot is one of Burgundy's most celebrated winemakers
Jon Wyand finally captured the mercurial Laurent Ponsot - a renowned winemaker and vintner known for his exceptional Burgundy wines - on camera
Exploring Brunello vintages
Ten years in the bottle, a long decant, and yet the harsh tannins overshadowed everything.
An ode to the diva grape
It is worth tasting Pinot Noir in all its varied roles - from the shy, delicate ingénue, and simple yet intense New World newbie to the full-on Grand Cru prima donna
Best ways to explore wine in a new city
The first thing most of us want to do when we go to a new city, be it Dallas or Boston, is to enjoy a few good wine tastings
Champagne Billecart-Salmon
One would think that a 200-yearold Champagne as renowned as Billecart-Salmon did not need any marketing, yet Billecart-Salmon AsiaPacific head, Sebastien Papin was recently in India to tell us about the brand and how the wine is best appreciated.
A thoughtfully curated wine experience
Wine tastings at Vintage Wines in Karjat, Maharashtra, are designed to enhance the appreciation of wine and deepen our understanding of it, writes
The legacy of Henri Gouges
The wines of Maison Henri Gouges from the commune of Nuits-Saint-Georges are considered among Burgundy's hidden gems
An overview of Sussex and
Rosemary George describes the importance of Sussex as an appellation and its potential for tourism
Shades of Rosé
Rioja and Navarra share a love for Grenache, producing two very distinct styles of rosé, writes Elizabeth Gabay MW, which succsesfully enrich the category as her tasting notes illustrate