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Anyway I know what I like and vice versa.
I am after recommendations for good wines. Red or White and must be in the £5 - £15 price range.(My aff site went bits up last update so it's gotta be cheap ATM.)
I prefer dry wine but am open to anything so long as its not that dodgy £2 Bulgarian red I sort of remember
from xmas.
My Recommendation
My Local Wine shop does a very nice Organic Red Tempranillo which I have been drinking a lot of recently.
Thanks and Bottoms Up
Ska
I love Merlot - Chilean ones are cheap and tasty. Semillion Charddonays are nice if you like dry oaky whites. Also partial to a good Cabernet Sauvignon - best are french. The Tesco (UK) range of wines is brilliant and affordable.
Wine snob? ;)
I've never had a bottle with a screw-off cap go bad, but - even when properly stored - the same can't be said about a corked bottle. In fact, those rare times I'm entertaining with wine, I only serve capped wine; the wine may not be good, but I know it's not bad.
As for suggestions, I have a terrible sweet tooth - haven't met an ice wine I didn't like.
Texas..... wine?! <Insert off-colour political joke here> Gee, I'm so caught off-guard by that, that I can't even come up with an outrageous analogy expressing what I think of it!
Just make sure they dont have a screw off cap!
This is becoming more common in supermarkets in the UK. I noticed last night lots of bottles had screw caps. I asked the girl at the checkout "why?" and she said it was to stop people returning wine because it is 'corked' and also because people had cut themselves by snapping the neck of the bottle off thru heavy handed use of a corkscrew.
Anyway, tonight I shall be trying a New Zealand White Chardonnay called Marlborough. It cost nearly 6 quid so I'm hoping it'll be quite good.
Heh, I'm looking forward to it now and it's 8.45am. Hmmm!
La La La La
Ska
Basically watch for their offers and pounce when you see good ones. The Campo Viejo is often on offer - I would say their are several quality options in it, crianza, reserva, grand reserva
Re the screw on caps - corks are not necessary unless the wine is being kept for several years (corks help maturation as they can breathe). As most wine is drunk within 48 hours of purchase, and is not particularly old, a cork is not necessary. The screw on caps are cheaper, hence wine growers trying to overcome prejudices and get public to accept them.
[edited by: cornwall at 11:04 am (utc) on July 27, 2005]
I haven't been to the States for about four years but I seem to remember that wine was one of the few things over there that was dearer than here in the UK. Is it still the same?
It seems in the UK the wine around £5 seems to be mostly usable. Below that price and you get some pretty rough tasting wines like the cartons of vino tinto you get in spain.
I have a Californian wine from the Orange vineyard that I am saving til the weekend. It cost £8.99 so it better be excellent.
Thanks for your input. So far BeeDeeDubbleU is the winner with the Rioja recommendation.
Ska
New Zealand was blessed with its first commercial 'Vintage' about three/four years ago - a vintage to put it on the world stage.
Because no-one paid any attention at the time there is almost a glut of vintage NZ wines in certain countries.
Just for the record: my current fave is: Nobilo (East Coast) Merlot 2003
All that shows is that I can read a label...:-)
Syzygy
I especially recommend Ravenswood Lodi County Zinfandel, at Sainsburys for 7.99. A huge, huge wine.
I visited the winery when in San Francisco a few years back... and discovered wine tasting at 10.00am isn't the easiest thing in the world.