A Warm Welcome
to our
New Customers
Again this year our combined Cellar Door
and
Education Master Class
was one of the most popular stands at both the
Sydney and Melbourne Good Food and Wine Show
With an extraordinary number new customers we want to make a welcome offer available and
for those waiting to hear about our next dinner - the plans are being put in place you will get some details soon!
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Wine critics over the years have pointed out that small estates can sometimes out-perform wines that cost 3 to 4 times as much. Why is that? A good location and proper matching of the grape types to the soil and local micro-climate are critical. Then the turning factor is the passion and detailed care that can be put into tending vines on a small plot. Better fruit will give better wine every time. At Bordeaux and Beyond we understand that and our local knowledge and on the ground expert tasters select small estate wines from France that are interesting and deliver value in spades. A $25 wine outperforming a $100 wine - and you thought a 50% discount on wine that wasn't cutting it at the higher price point was good value!
Time to join in with the smart crowd.
www.bordeauxandbeyond.com
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Argentina’s Malbecs are plummy and fruit-forward, with a velvety texture. France’s have more structure, firmer tannins, and an inky dark, brooding quality.
For centuries, Malbec played an important role in Bordeaux blends but disease problems meant over time its benefits were overlooked in favour of easier grapes. However, Malbec took a firm hold further up the Garonne River in the medieval city of Cahors where the Mediterranean influence allowed the grapes to ripen while cooling breezes from the Atlantic keep the vines rot-free. The limestone soils of the Cahors region produce darker wines showing blackberry fruit in youth, and tobacco, coffee, and meaty notes as they age. The calcium component in limestone helps maintain acidity in the grapes late into the growing season which gives structure to the wine. In Cahors, during the Middle Ages, Malbec was called “black wine” for its deep, purple-ebony hue and their truffles were called “black diamonds”. Famously the last stone of Cahor’s 14th century Valentre Bridge was not placed so as not to complete a “pact with the devil”. In this city of dark themes the “black wine” is always in fashion.
Sunshine in Mendoza, where most of Argentina’s Malbec is grown, gives Malbec a fruitiness. On the foot of the Andes, the Malbec is rich and robust with brambly black mountain fruit and sweet floral notes. The alluvial sand and clay soils lighten the colour and reduce the fruit acids so the altitude in this very sunny region is essential to slow down ripening and ensure the grapes develop enough acidity to ward off the “soda-pop” effect.
We have two great Malbecs from Cahors made by two winemaker friends who are rising stars in St Emilion, the Mas des Etoiles Rouge and the Petite Etoile Rouge.
]]>Interestingly wines from Provence, France, recently took out the top 3 places in the premium bracket of the Drinks Business Global Rosé Masters 2014 and the judges descriptions show just how serious and delicate these wines are “slightly oaken, taut and youthful”; “lovely texture, nuanced aromatics and depth of flavour,” while “maintaining its freshness and playfulness”; “glossy, salty, soft, lively yet subtle,” with flavours of “pears and citrus, pineapple and wild strawberries”
We have a few rosés of this style for you to consider for your next dinner party if highlighting delicate flavours is your aim.
This confirms a little secret we have known for quite a while…and we went out to find the best Sauv Blancs in Bordeaux at fantastic prices.
]]>Check out some of our great reds from the 2009 vintage that have been aged and cellared well for your enjoyment.
]]>This is a member’s website which entitles you to a further 5% discount which can be combined with the 10% discount for ordering 12 bottles or more. That’s because we are as interested in giving you value as we are in giving you great wine.
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Let me explain. I drink nearly a bottle of wine every day. About 300 bottles a year. Since I intend to be here for at least another thirty years, and I can’t expect much longer – the price of gout being what it is – that adds up to a consumption of 9000 bottles. Throw in another 1000 bottles for those special occasions (and one would indeed be lucky to have another 1000 special occasions), and that’s 10,000 bottles.
Now, talking about 10,000 bottles to a lot of people is like talking about the discovery of a new planet so many million light years away. The mind just cannot comprehend the volume of it. Yet, I remain astonished by the lack of application of the true lover of wine.
You see, our vineyards in the Hunter Valley produced more than half a million bottles this year. In one vintage. Next year it could be nearly one million and the year after it will be more than one million. And that’s only one vineyard in a small part of a small wine-producing country.
Which means that there is an awful lot of wine available throughout the world. Countless flavours, nuances, shades; endless varieties, regions, styles. Simply, I haven’t got the time or the capability to try them all. So I have to apply myself to my future wine drinking requirement. And, as I’ve said, I continue to be astonished that other wine lovers don’t do the same thing.
They go two ways. Recently, I put on for luncheon, among others, a dollar a bottle red. A pleasant wine of no distinction at all, worth the money. A dollar a bottle. A well-known city figure, dashing, ebullient, wealthy, a man who lives well and glories in it, bought several dozen. I asked him why. ‘Barbecue stuff,’ he replied, ‘you know – when friends pop in, the kids, that sort of thing. You can’t drink your good stuff all the time.’
That’s where I disagree. You’ve got to drink your best stuff all the time; there isn’t time to drink anything else. By my reckoning he’s only got 2000 bottles to go, yet he still drinks a dollar a bottle stuff. Now, don’t misunderstand me. If that’s all he’s good for, it doesn’t matter, however much money he’s got. But he likes wine, understands it, appreciates it, enjoys a good drop. Who is he going to leave his money to? Another dollar a bottler?
On the other hand, there are those people who love good wine. They love it so much they buy it by the tens of cases. Good stuff, too. They put it away, store it up, wait for it. For what? I know a man who has more than 1000 dozen waiting for him. And he still buys other wines every week. He likes the best and buys it, but he sadly overestimates his capacity. But at least he errs on the right side, for I know where I can always get a good bottle.
More thought is required. There are people who don’t want good wines. They are happy with the ordinaire at a dollar a bottle and the tres ordinaire at a dollar ten. Don’t laugh – it happens. Wine plays a very small part in their lives. At least it plays some part. Please understand that they are not part of my argument. Nor are the countless beer and spirit drinkers. That’s their business. I can’t worry about everyone.
But I do worry about the genuine lovers of wine who haven’t done their homework. Wine plays an important part in their lives. They enjoy and want to enjoy it more. After all, what more can one do?
Material possessions are all very well, but people, friends, are far more important. What can you do with friends? You can talk to them, and talk is cheap; make love to them, provided they’re of the right sex; and share with them. Share what? Experiences, life. It’s remarkable how many of these experiences include wine and food. The theatre is great, but you have to eat before. Why not make an occasion out of it? I love art galleries, but I get hungry and thirsty walking around them. So, why not?
Sharing is living. If we accept that food and wine are part of sharing, then a specific allocation of income must be set aside for such involvement. One tragedy of Australia is that many high-income earners do not enjoy their money. They enjoy having it, maybe, but they don’t enjoy spending it. They don’t know how to spend it.
Should I stay fit and healthy, I may earn anything between a half and a million dollars in the next thirty years. Many of you will do the same or even better. I want to educate my children, but I do not want to leave them dynasties. I want to care for my wife, but I don’t want to leave her a millionairess. I want to live now.
Wine is at least a tenth of my life. Therefore, I can afford at least a tenth of my income to good wine. Which equals, take my word for it, at least five dollars a bottle and perhaps even up to ten dollars a bottle. If I earn more, I can scale up. If other pleasures are denied me, I can adjust. And if, for any reason, I don’t make the thirty-year intended span, then all the more reason to drink up now. You see, I can’t afford to drink the dollar a bottle stuff. It would be such a waste of my capability.”’
Source: Australian Wine Browser 1979
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