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Pastimes : Wine You Can Enjoy @ Under $20 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: epicure who wrote (766)12/14/2008 10:48:13 PM
From: SG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1277
 
There's a cheap Muscat at Trader Joe's that's ok.

I've had a bunch of ice wines, now have open Jackson-Triggs 2006 Vidal Icewine. Under $20, I think.

This is the 2nd ice wine I've had with that grape, probably the better.

SG



To: epicure who wrote (766)12/15/2008 5:20:07 AM
From: MoneyPenny  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1277
 
I used to serve sauterne with a stilton cheesecake for a formal Christmas dinner. I liked the icewines from eastern Ontario for a while but have not tried any for a while. Last sweet wine I had was Dolce from Far Niente. It did not overly impress me but I love the expression "Dolce Far Niente": how sweet to do nothing.




To: epicure who wrote (766)12/15/2008 1:27:19 PM
From: Thomas Mercer-Hursh  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1277
 
Sweet wines certainly have their place -- ports, "stickies", eis wein, not to mention the spatlese and auslese rieslings. Unfortunately, a lot are expensive. Good German riesling are pretty rare below $20, although there are certainly good spatlese in the $25 range. Stickies in their infinite variety are vary tricky, varying from insipid to devine. One unusual one I like is the VLH from Sapphire Hill made from very late harvest Zin ... and I *do* mean late!

For me, one of the most reliable bargains are LBV ports. For those not familiar with them, these are vintage ports which have spent a lot longer in wood than regular vintage ports, which only stay there two years. An LBV can spend as much as 6 years and thus is ready to drink when it comes out of the barrel instead of needing 10-20 years or more of bottle age to reach a peak. Styles vary as much as vintage ports, so one has to experiment to find the best match for one's own taste. Top of the line for me is Smith Woodhouse, who are also my favorite in vintage ports, but SW is generally a little above $25, so doesn't make the cut here ... although it is ahead of $17 for 375 since that $26-27 is for 750ml. SW gives their LBV a lot of bottle age before releasing it so the current release is the 1995 vintage. The bargain for me is Krohn at about $13 with the current release being 2001. It has very nice chocolaty overtones on a very deep fruit base.