Skiing and Shiraz - both overrated

I really cannot see the appeal of skiing. Every winter, flocks of people rush off to far flung countries, dress up in clothes that look like sleeping bags with legs and fling themselves down a slope with two planks attached to their feet. Then, when they have got to the bottom of the slope, they clamber onto a chair lift that is almost certain to not have a legitimate health and safety certificate, go back to the top of the hill and do it all again.

For a week.

At least.

I’d understand if you could get a clear run on virgin snow, where you are the first to venture down the slope. I still remember the thrill it gave me, rushing out and making the first footprints in the garden after a heavy snowfall when I was a child, and it is more than likely I’d do the same now if I lived further inland so snow actually fell where I live. However you don’t get that sort of winter graffiti opportunity when you go skiing.

Venturing to your mountainous destination, you have dreams of clear slopes, log cabins, wood fires, lots of hyper-attractive people, champagne flowing freely and your skill as a skier is surpassed by no-one. The reality is far from that. The slopes are packed with skiers, the log cabins are, in reality, sheds, the wood fires are electric heaters, the attractive people are anything but, the champagne is too expensive and your skills at skiing involve counter balancing your forward momentum by sticking your backside out whilst one foot heads east and the other south west. It never lives up to it’s reputation as a holiday that you would remember for the rest of your life and if it does, it is more than likely you have done a Sonny Bono.

To sum it all up, skiing is over hyped and a massive disappointment.

Which brings me to top end Australian Shiraz. The iconic Shiraz of most Australian producers are like a skiing holiday. Despite being built up in your estimation as an Alpine orgy, the reality is they are a massive disappointment, offering little of what you were told it would and costing you a fortune. Take Battle of Bosworth’s White Boar Shiraz. This producer makes lovely wines in lower price points, their Shiraz Viognier is great value at around ten pounds as is their Chardonnay Viognier. But when the price creeps across the twenty pound mark, things go wrong.

The White Boar, when opened, is like drinking Bovril. Thick and dark, with lots of meaty characters and a massive spicy streak running through what little fruit shows. All that hits you is a jammy mess and a long, bitter finish. Giving it a day in a decanter does lighten things up a bit and brings out a lot more fruit, but it is still a sweet catastrophe with it’s arse out and it’s legs going in all directions.

Glaetzer’s Amon Ra is a similar beast. Whilst much more balanced than the White Boar, the Amon Ra is still far too big and jammy. Liquorice and leather abounds on the palate with lots of tannin, and you can’t help but wonder what you are spending your money on. With both these wines, there seems to be a preoccupation with extracting as much out of the grape as possible, then putting a huge emphasis on it being drunk young, which is almost as daft as saying you can make it from the top of the slope to the bottom without having to take drastic action to avoid ploughing into a novice skier.

But over the past couple of days, I have seen a couple of top Australian reds that have not been an over extracted jam fest, and they have done one thing to make their Shiraz better. Add Cabernet.

I am a big fan of Australian Cabernet Sauvignon, it always seems to be more balanced than a winemaker’s shiraz. I asked a winemaker why he didn’t make a Cabernet, when he had plenty of grapes available, and his reply was “because no bugger will buy them!” Maybe it is this reason why the Aussies have taken to making wines that are a mixture of Cabernet Sauvignon and Shiraz, which, lets face it, are now as Australian as Crocodile Dundee swigging on some Fosters while cooking a Kangaroo steak on a barbecue.

I’ve always being reluctant to try Cabernet Shiraz blends after being informed by someone influential in my early days in the trade that “Cabernet and Shiraz should not be found in the same bottle”. I’d followed this school of thought now for numerous years, avoiding these two varietals when found together. Then, my taste for Australian wines in general waned and they just never came up on my radar again. Until yesterday.

I was presented with four wines from Yalumba – all Cabernet Shiraz, and was won over by them. I’ve liked Yalumba’s wines for a year or so now, their Y (read entry) Series is decent for the money, and their mid teen priced wines show a lot of balance and great, subtle fruit. However their top wines were uncharted territory to me and I found that they are wines you really should try as good examples of this Australian blend.

I’m not saying you should rush out and buy them all, some of them are way too expensive for that, but if you ever get the chance to sample these wines, you should. I started off with the 2006 Yalumba 'The Scribbler'. Priced around £12, with a third Shiraz and two thirds Cabernet, this is a light, clean, juicy wine full of cherry and a whole punnet of raspberries rammed in your mouth. Then things get serious with lovely green pepper that you get from Cabernet coming through with a finish of bramble and mint. This is a seriously nice bottle of wine. 8.5/10. Moving on, and up in price is 2001 Yalumba The Reserve Cabernet Shiraz. A split of 74% Cabernet and 26% Shiraz, and coming in at around forty pounds, the nose immediately gives off roast chicken juices, all herby and covered in cranberry sauce! Then you get grippy tannins, quite savoury with lots of green pepper, blackcurrant and some tobacco box and liquorice. I love these big, veggie wines, and whilst there is a little heat on the finish, it is still super. 9/10

So far we are getting the Skiing holiday we want, but with the forty four pound 2004 Yalumba The Signature Cabernet Shiraz we have a near miss with a tree. There is just a bit too much tannin on this wine. Delightful mint, bramble and a little cream on the nose, leads to gentle cherry flavours, a touch of black pepper and lots of blackberry stalk. There is a nice cocoa dusted berries flavour, but the tannin stops this being brilliant. Given time, that should soften down, but unfortunately the majority of this wine will be drunk too young and so I have to score it on that. 8.5/10

Finally, the 2004 Yalumba FDR1A (Fine Dry Red 1A) is outstanding, Rich, dark aromas of dried fruit, coffee and toffee. Gentle sweetness envelops the dark liquorice and spice flavours, caressing the teeth with just a little tannin. The palate then has a green pepper element coming through, with cocoa, leather and cinnamon bundled up and then melting in your mouth disappearing one by one. 9/10

I still don’t get skiing, probably never will, but I now get Cabernet Shiraz. You need a good winemaker, a load of great Cabernet Sauvignon and just a touch of Shiraz. Throw them all together and you get an outstanding bottle of Australian wine. Now all I need to do is find out how to get a perfect skiing holiday.

5 Questions with... Dan Aykroyd

Dan Aykroyd has been a major part of my development as a man, despite the fact that I've never met him! One of my favourite movies growing up was Ghostbusters. I have both the movies on original release VHS and DVD, I have Ghostbusters action figures and I wanted to be a Ghostbuster! Then I watched Blues Brothers and he introduced me to a style of music that I'd never been exposed to before, and finally, in my early teens, his 1983 film Trading Places introduced me to Jamie Lee Curtis' breasts. For that, I am eternally grateful.

Dan Aykroyd launched Dan Aykroyd Wines in 2007, producing wines from the West Niagra Peninsula in Ontario, with his Icewine receiving plaudits in recent awards ceremonies. I am thrilled to have had Dan Aykroyd agree to answer five questions...

Who or what got you interested in wine?
My early wine experiences were limited to Manischewitz, over-consumed at my University's Annual Grape Grope and bottles of Mateus Rose born as an offering on dates. In 1979 as we were shooting the LA portion of Blues Brothers, my friend the genius musician, producer, composer and songwriter Steve Cropper generously open his cellar to myself and Mr. Belushi. He ruined our palates for anything but the best Napas, Sonomas and Bordeaux style wines.

Do you have a cellar and if so what is your most prized possession?
Our cellar is a beautiful limestone chamber perfectly held at 56to 58 degrees Fahrenheit. To date the finest white I have tried recently comes from Tom Green our winemaker in Niagara. The Dan Aykroyd Sauvignon Blanc is already an award winning wine which is mind-blowing when consumed with thin maple-glazed pork chops, chicken wings and reeking cheeses.

Aside from your own wines what do you like to drink on a regular basis?
My household drinks whatever remains after all the summer stock is gone. After the Bordeaux, Margaux, St. Julien, St. Estephe, Puligny-Montrachet, Rhones, Sauternes, Sonomas, Napas, Oregon, Washington and Niagaras we drink what is left after the family and guests have been
properly treated.

Old World or New World?
New. Sonoma. Specifically the Alexander Valley for reds and the Sonoma Coast for whites.

Name three people real or fictional, living or dead, who would be at an ideal dinner party and what would you drink?
Myrna Loy, Donna Dixon Aykroyd and Gertrude Cayce. We would drink my own Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc with grilled swordfish and pesto appetizer and the Dan Aykroyd Cabernet Merlot with our steak Chateaubriand.

Dan Aykroyd Wines

Previous 6 Questions with
Paul Draper
Dan Connolly
Sir Cliff Richard

Wine Web Watch AND Crap of the Week... Whisky Works


We know that whisky ages in the barrel and not in the bottle, so I am not saying that this mini barrel doesn't change the way a whisky tastes, and as an experiment it may be interesting, if expensive, to play around with. Still, I can't help thinking that if you normally drink Macallan 10 year old and want it eight years older, it would work out cheaper to buy the older bottle rather a wooden barrel that costs over £50.

If you want to play about with whisky, you can get one of these from Whisky Works. I am, however, thrilled that an American company has spelled whisky without an 'e'!

Oz and James Drink to Britain

I was speaking to a colleague yesterday and he expressed surprise when I told him that I watched Oz and James Drink to Britain. I'm not certain why, as though I know (generally) more about wine and spirits than is broadcast, it is an entertaining way to spend half an hour on an evening and it is great that alcohol has got a watchable programme on television.

Thankfully, they have ventured away from wine for this series, concentrating on our own nation's drinks (beer, whisky, gin and a little bit of wine) so the format shouldn't go stale. I'm beginning to see these two take the alcohol and do what Keith Floyd did with cooking in the 1980's with his 'Floyd on...' series, make an entertaining show that doesn't lecture the viewer as past programmes have done and shows when the experts muck it up and get things totally wrong.

The only thing that totally threw me was when they were in a pub on a train platform in the Yorkshire town of Dewsbury. The girl serving Oz and James was my cousin - didn't expect that one!

New Year Resolution #4

Every year we make New Year resolutions that involve depriving ourselves of things. Losing weight, cutting back on alcohol, stopping smoking… blah blah blah. What we all fail to realise is that the reason we do these things in the first place is because we enjoy them, so it is hardly a surprise when we abandon our healthy living plan because that burger just looks so good or one more beer won’t really hurt.

This year, I’ve decided that my resolutions are going to enrich my life. They are;

1. Pass my driving test
2. Buy a car
3. Discover more interesting wines from smaller producers
4. Drink more Fine Wine with friends

And on the 1st January, I embraced number 4 and had dinner with the five people I love tasting wine with the most. Three of these are experienced tasters, albeit no older than their mid thirties. We have, as a group, tried so many fine wines over the past eight years and we bounce off each other while tasting the wine, helping each other to find new aromas and flavours. They are also some of my best friends and we rarely get a chance to see each other at the same time, so there are few people in the world I’d rather have dinner with – particularly when there is outstanding wine to be drunk. The final people are my girlfriend and my friend’s girlfriend, who are relatively inexperienced in tasting old wines and it is always great to watch them try new things, even if my girlfriend doesn’t let me look at her tasting notes!

We started off with a magnum of recently disgorged 1959 Moet & Chandon. This champagne house, probably the most famous house, has, for years, produced champagne that at best was satisfactory and at worst, bloody awful! The 2000 vintage has readdressed that, and I've sung it's praises before, and this old wine, just in its 50th year, shows the quality that Moet & Chandon is aiming to recapture. It was a delightful wine, burnt gold in colour, with lots of toast, butter and honey on the nose and some delicious soft lemon juice. The palate has a lovely mousse, with a little green tea component and a crusty bread flavour mixed with some lemon seeds. It is lacking a little bit of body, had all the richer flavours you would expect from an old fizz but just not the depth. Having said that, this was still a stunning magnum of Champagne. 9/10

A number of years ago, my three friends and I bought each other birthday presents, bottles of wine from the year we were born. Alongside a 1976 Dom Perignon and a 1979 Krug, there was a 1973 Chateau Palmer and a 1978 Chateau Ducru Beaucaillou. The latter two wines were opened, some five years after being laid down. Unfortunately, the ’78 Ducru (my birthday present) was past it – all vegetal aromas and flavours, but the ’73 Palmer was not bad, not brilliant, but not bad!

It was a bricky brown with a little cherry red in the core. There were some polished wood aromas, some dry twig and tobacco box aromas mixed with some boot polish. There are some date aromas, slightly sweet but with a dry dusty element. The palate has a tangy element; it is quite a bit past it, but still drinkable. A little dried raspberry, dry leather – almost like a dried out old boot! It is an old wine, drinkable and not unpleasant, but past it’s best. 7/10

A Pair of Mazis Chambertins followed. The 1993 Mazis Chambertin from Domaine Faiveley was full of strawberries and wild raspberries, heather and rusty steel on the nose. The palate had a leather, cinnamon and some cherry stone flavour. Very silky, some cranberry on the finish and a simply stunning wine. When it opened up and warmed up, it became a real star. 8.5/10. The 1995 Mazy Chambertin from Domaine Armand Rousseau was all about herbs and cherries with a sprinkling of pomegranate. Then there are flavours of raspberry, a little cedar box, dried herbs and a super, long, dry finish. 8/10.

I have tried 1966 Ducru Beaucaillou twice before, in 2003 and 2005 and in my overeager youthful exuberance I wrote “perfect” in the first of the two notes. But when we opened the last of the three bottles, it was exactly that. Perfect. Rosemary and sweet cherry, with lots of floral notes and some sweet toffee. The palate is dry, with leather, cinnamon and pepper. Cherry stone flavours, some cocoa, dried herbs and dusty books! Beautiful balance and an outstanding bottle of wine. 10/10

Continuing in Bordeaux, we had 1967 Chateau Suduiraut, a stinky, old honey nose with a touch of sweet pipe tobacco and a little menthol appearing on the nose. It was initially too cold, so when it warmed up, you got more of the honey, with burnt orange, and a lemongrass and graphite flavour. It was a delightful wine, a really beautiful Sauternes, a lovely texture, and so clean on the finish. I can understand why Broadbent and Parker like this. 9.5/10

Finally came a 1927 Martinez Vintage Port. It was a rich, sweet, stewed fruit and cinnamon aroma that came off the glass first, then just a little bit of baked meat juice! Very pretty with sweet quince jelly and cassis aromas too. The palate was strange – wonderful, but strange as it was so fresh! A youthful, spicy alcohol, coffee and toffee flavour with dark chocolate, coffee liqueur and blackcurrant. A wonderful warm balanced mouthful with a nudge of leathery tannin and a bundle of sweet blueberry. This is a 9/10 bottle of port as the alcohol was just a touch too prominent for me. That was until we broke out the cheese.

A few days earlier, we had gone into Ian Mellis Cheesemongers in St Andrews and spoke to the manager, Kevin. He suggested that instead of going for blue cheeses with port, we should give a goats cheese a go. He hauled out some little rolls of mould that he called St Maure de Touraine and said we should try these. And Kevin was right. Matched with the eighty one and a half year old port, this cheese calmed down the alcohol a touch and combined let us experience a perfect wine/food pairing at the end of the evening. Thanks Kevin!

My main reason for writing this though, is to record the evening for posterity. I know it isn’t showing much professionalism to inject a whole bunch of emotion into an article, but I’m not a professional journalist! I really do believe that wines, regardless of whether they are a £3 bottle from Tesco or an octogenarian port should be enjoyed with friends and family. Unfortunately, in my life, wine is rarely enjoyed. Usually I am trying wines at soulless tastings, being shown wines by representatives from a distributor, over dinner with a bunch of boring trade people, or with the wine being heralded as some majestic liquid that is to be swirled ad nauseam, discussed for hours and have any passion ripped from the appreciation of it. To me, that is not what wine is about.

The sort of evening I had on the first of January, drinking forty year old claret at a kitchen table over a plate of stew and mash with Peter, Rich, Kirsty, Lillian and Charlotte is why I love wine so much and why it is my New Years resolution to do it more. Not only did the food and wine match, but the company did too. That combination enriches my life more than I could ever express in words, and this is one resolution I will not break.

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