Little ole wine drinker me (us?)

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More summer sun, more vinho verde:
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This has to be one of my favourite styles of summer wines, always cool and refreshing. Sometimes with a slight spritz, sometimes not; do not mind either. A perfect apero and always good with anything from the sea or salads. Sadly these are the last bottles of my vinho verde, it has been a wonderful adventure.

Ermelinda Vinhos Gabia Loureiro 12% - good quality; fresh and elegant.
Adega Guimaraes 11% - good; very, very slight spritz that disappears quickly; light and fruity; produced by one of Sogrape’s* many outfits.
Quevedo Radiante 9% - very good; no spritz, clean and zesty; cool label !

*Sogrape is Portugal's largest producer by far; it has many companies under its umbrella ranging from cheap 'n' cheerful Mateus Rosé to the astonishingly expensive Barca Velha. The Azevedo a few posts above is also a Sogrape wine.
 
A vinous miscellany:
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2005 Moulin Touchais, Coteaux du Layon 13.5% - dessert wine from the Loire Valley; sweet, rich, superb balance, mouth-filling, long, very long; quite superb; hugely underrated and undiscovered; could probably last another 10 years easily
Yuli Chardonnay, Migdal, Moldova 13% - second label partly reads “moderate sweetness will satisfy lovers of semi-dry fruity wine”, possibly a translation of the Moldovan Cyrillic above the English. It went down the sink. Would not pay the £3.15 that I originally paid again! Interesting label though. No year indicated.
Luda & Mara White Cuvée, Tikves, North Macedonia 13.5% - another wine with no second label, so no information e.g. country of origin, vintage, abv, grapes etc. A search found country, abv and grapes - chardonnay, sauvignon blanc and viognier. Unlike the Moldovan, this was very pleasant, fresh and fruity, could identify sauvignon, a good apero.
 

midlandsgrimpeur

Senior Member

midlandsgrimpeur

Senior Member
A vinous miscellany:
View attachment 783090

2005 Moulin Touchais, Coteaux du Layon 13.5% - dessert wine from the Loire Valley; sweet, rich, superb balance, mouth-filling, long, very long; quite superb; hugely underrated and undiscovered; could probably last another 10 years easily
Yuli Chardonnay, Migdal, Moldova 13% - second label partly reads “moderate sweetness will satisfy lovers of semi-dry fruity wine”, possibly a translation of the Moldovan Cyrillic above the English. It went down the sink. Would not pay the £3.15 that I originally paid again! Interesting label though. No year indicated.
Luda & Mara White Cuvée, Tikves, North Macedonia 13.5% - another wine with no second label, so no information e.g. country of origin, vintage, abv, grapes etc. A search found country, abv and grapes - chardonnay, sauvignon blanc and viognier. Unlike the Moldovan, this was very pleasant, fresh and fruity, could identify sauvignon, a good apero.

Got a bottle of 2005 Moulin sitting in the wine fridge. You can still pick up much older vintages at decent prices too. Sweet and off dry wines; chenin, riesling, gewurztraminer are great value as nobody buys them. I have a reasonable collection of German riesling and wines from the Loire and Alsace. £15-20 will easily get you something amazing and with a bit of age to it.
 
I've discovered this guy's channel on YouTube - straightforward reviews of supermarket wines. I've tried a couple of his reccomendations and they've been really good

Good stuff. Surprised he did not rate the Gavi. Tried it ages ago and on his ratings I would have given it a 'Pass'. But the Tesco Finest is better - see post # 157!
I have mentioned a few of Tesco's and Sainsbury's Finest and Taste the Difference lines and at the very least usually offer good value.
 
Got a bottle of 2005 Moulin sitting in the wine fridge
Hope its not been there long...the cork will dry out! Or do you have a humidity control on the fridge too?

You can still pick up much older vintages at decent prices too. Sweet and off dry wines; chenin, riesling, gewurztraminer are great value as nobody buys them.
So true.

I have a reasonable collection of German riesling and wines from the Loire and Alsace. £15-20 will easily get you something amazing and with a bit of age to it.
Again, so true. I too have a few german and Alsace rieslings (and canadian!) sitting on the rack waiting for me. And a few Loire wines, picked up this year during a visit, but they are unlikely to last more than 2 years in this house!
 

midlandsgrimpeur

Senior Member
Hope its not been there long...the cork will dry out! Or do you have a humidity control on the fridge too?

It's a temp/humidity controlled fridge so I can keep everything in good condition. As I will never own a house with a cellar thought it was a worthy investment rather than being at the mercy of my garage!
 
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