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kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 14, 2019
I like rose.
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You disgust me.I like rose.
Bit late, but plenty of wines pair fantastically with spicy foods - the key is to have at least a little bit of sweetness. One of the strongest tells that someone is being pretentious about wine without actually knowing anything is a universal dismissal of sweet wine, so a lot of people in the US will suffer through horrible wine pairings in order to avoid being mocked by would-be snobs. But a nice sweet Spätlese or Auslese Riesling, or a demi-sec Champagne, or a nice off-dry or even straight-out sweet Chenin Blanc are all fantastic paired with spicy food - the sweetness and spice sort of mellow each other in a very enjoyable way. I remember pairing a honey-sweet Quarts de Chaume with a Szechuan dish and it being a match made in heaven.Do you think part of the reason why white people don't have many overly spicy dishes is because they don't go well with wine?
Apothic is good shit and not too pricey either. I've been fucking with Coppolas shit recently too. And I'm in total agreement with only drinking red. It just feels classier as retarded as that may soundI am typically only a fan of Red wines. White wines just don't sit right with my tastebuds. Every weekend or so I'll drink any of the red Apothic branded winesView attachment 5830578
Ice wine and late harvest are my to go mid grade when I can't afford Tokaji/Tokay aszu wines.Austrian ice wine (where they only pick the grapes if it's below freezing) was the best wine I've ever had. Sweet and delicious. I could happily drink that as my only wine. A shame it's so hard to find in my country.
Sangria, south european muscats are okay. Not ice wine or late harvest, nowhere near Tokay, but better than average in the sweet category.I've always been a moscato and Tokaji type, if I drink wine I want it sweet, and I'll never say no to a sangria.
Ice wine is lovely and fruity.(Bumping because I'm drunk as hell)
I just tried Eiswein for the first time. Very unique. Very sweet. Very good. Going to try to make it a tradition at my house because of the positive reception.
That sounds really interesting, i'd love to try it.This month...
Finally pulled out the Dandelion Wine after 12 months secondary aging - Started a 2 week bottle aging cycle.
Had a couple glasses today. Hits you with a prominent, astringent herbal/floral note, that dissolves to a traditional white wine profile. Aftertaste is very pleasant and memorable. The aging was excellent for mellowing the wine.
Pulled 2 bottles for recipes, carbonated 5 bottles for champagne, back-sweetened 2 bottles for flavor experiments, kept 3 bottles for longer bottle-aging.
The back-sweetened wine softened the initial hit - but softens all notes all around.
Carbonating is proceeding - no explosions yet. I am using crown caps - not corks. Bottles are punted (champagne bottles)
Napa is horribly overpriced nowadays, with a lot of big corporate joints and a county government which is incredibly hostile to the small, family producers who used to make up the backbone of the county. Back when Sideways came out you could sit down and taste wines for a nominal fee or even free. Nowadays many small wineries are barred from offering tastings, and the big glitzy ones have turned themselves into instagramable 'lifestyle experiences' where rich, vapid whores & techbros will pay $100 or more to sit down and taste overpriced wines on a manicured terrace. There are a few small producers who are 'grandfathered in' and you can get a nice tasting off the beaten path, but there aren't many of them.Sideways with Paul Giamotti always made California Wine Country look so interesting, I'd like to go bit I'm sure it won't live uo to my mental image I've been storing since childhood. And there will be no Sandra Oh waiting for me
I'm sipping this right now.
View attachment 6106231
It's a VERY sweet wine with honey/flowery/fig notes. It must be served cold (no ice), it's not a main course wine. It can also be used for cooking. It's sweetness can be overbearing and it doesn't have a very interesting flavor profile, little to no tannin so if you don't like that mouth texture it's a plus I guess. You will get drunk fast because it's somewhat high % alcohol (~15%).
It's very affordable: 4.7€ 75cl
I’m drinking a gran reserva rioja right now and it’s real good with my steak and tomatoes.I’m partial to riojas.
I love all these wines, though I've never tried Eszencia. But it's not quite as you put it. Sauternes and Tokaj are both made from botrytized grapes. Furmint and Semillon are the main grapes used for Tokaj and Sauternes, respectively. They're both grown in areas with reliable morning fog in the autumn which burns off by the afternoon. This means that a fungus called Botrytis cinerea begins to grow on the grapes. If it doesn't rain and the fog comes and goes the skin of the grape never breaks, and the controlled growth of the mycelia desiccates the grapes while producing unique, honey-like flavor compounds that are unique to this production method.I do love Tokaji/Tokay above all else. It is sweeter and spicier than Ice wine.
Sauternes wines are like a 80% Tokay / 20% water mix. Not bad but... don't cut my wine with water frogs!
If it doesn't do it, there is Tokay Essence, where alcohol is replaced by more sugar. It doesn't give you hangover or makes Allah mad, as youcan't get drunk from it. So it is the best and most exclusive wine, while it isn't a wine as it is too sugary to ferment and only has trace alcohol in it.