November 2nd, 2009
I’ve just returned from EWBC in Lisbon with a newfound passion for Portuguese wine. The whites impressed me most, even though they represented a mere champagne flute to the magnum of reds on display.
Esporão Reserva 2007 was a leftover bottle of tinto that found its way into my luggage by means not requiring wallet surgery – I can reveal no more than that.
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Posted in Spain and Portugal | 2 Comments »
October 31st, 2009
I am in Lisbon for the European Wine Bloggers Conference and there are a few missing faces from last year which is a shame. The Italians are notable absentees, for example. However, the event is at least twice the size of last year’s and superbly well organised by Ryan and Gabi Opaz and Robert McIntosh.
If you are sad enough to want live updates you can follow me on Twitter at @tiptoptaps.
If you are even sadder and want to see everyone at the conference tweeting on exactly the same event every other second, follow the hashtag #EWBC.
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October 27th, 2009
Sounding a tad venereal, La Clape came to me via a “South by South West” mixed case from the Wine Society. Like all retailers who think we are firmly in a W shaped recession (as I do), the Wine Society is looking for wines at the cheaper end of the spectrum on the grounds that people are much more likely to drink cheaper than drink less.
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October 20th, 2009
An open top “Tommy the tourist” bus in New York is indisputably the best place to learn about New York culture. Well, if you believe the tour guides (and assuming that you tip them enough). I learnt that if you want to eat cheaply in NYC there are two options: McDonalds, or Restaurant Row on W46th St between 8th and 9th.
Bangkok House is not McDonalds, but it certainly isn’t expensive either.
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October 18th, 2009
I was pretty chipper about my Combine Harvester, installed in 2008 at Bathgate Towers. It has kept my finer bottles in tip top condition and is a super talking point when anyone remotely interested in wine visits.
But I am a mere amateur according to a book just published in the US. Living with Wine, by Samantha Nestor, is actually better read in pictures (impressively furnished by Andrew French).
From swish New York bachelor pads to decadent Napa Valley wine clubs I can only drool at the fantastic cellars containing fantastic wines – many not even American! The intersection of architecture, interior design and fine wine is surely one of the greatest causes of wine envy in the oenological world?
Just one thing – can we have a repeat of this book but focussed on UK cellars?
Living with Wine is published by Clarkson Potter ($75), a division of Random House and whilst my copy came from the US, I understand it will be available in the UK soon.
Posted in Miscellaneous, USA | 1 Comment »
October 13th, 2009
I enjoy a slurp of Chablis so I was delighted to be invited to the tasting below. However, the date clashes with a little plot I am working on with Guido. Big Bang theory – that sort of thing.
The other happening on this historic date is a “trade only” event but I’m sure you can blag your way in by wearing an Oz Clark face mask.
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October 13th, 2009
I had to smile at yet another special offer using the recession friendly “staying in is the new going out” mantra. However, when I logged on to enter my Freixenet code on the top of my bottle, I discovered it is merely a way of capturing personal data for marketing spam.
The offers are the same, or barely more than the companies offer to anyone who subscribes from the web.
So save the trouble, the time, and the spam. By all means use emusic, LOVEFiLM, or Vie at Home, and you should definitely stay in one night and try a bottle of Freixenet Cava – it’s pretty good. Just do all the above independently.
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October 10th, 2009
After a Spring 2009 visit to an architectural gem of the highest order, and possibly the most erotique et fantastique et en meme-temps grotesque bâtiment du 20eme siècle, la Basilique du Sacré-Coeur de Montmartre, I dropped down the hill to the arty farty and over-rated Bohemian 18e arondissement.
Paris is a loveable city, and one of my favourites, although a bit up itself. All the historical République monuments are interesting and important, but one senses that the French are clinging to an identity that expired with the proof that all men could be created equal under a monarchy.
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October 7th, 2009
Occasionally I like to take a break from Progressive House and listen to a couple of real “Old Skool” albums. Tonight I sampled Counting Crows’ “August and Everything After”, Steve Winwood’s “Back in the High Life” and David Bowie’s experimental and innovative (at the time) “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars”. Top stuff, and could show those young whippersnapping beat stealers a thing or two.
Not everything old is implicitly good though. Most old wine goes off sooner or later, so drink it before it does!
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October 5th, 2009
Have you ever placed a bet you can’t lose? Cast iron guaranteed?
Just prior to the start of the season I wagered the considerable sum of £10 with fellow Man City fan, Jamie Goode.
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