I Love Italian Wine And Food – Riserva Wines

By LeviReiss

Did you ever wonder what the word Riserva on an Italian wine label means? Does it guarantee a fine wine? Can it still be a bargain? This short article will try to answer these questions, and review a Riserva wine that I recently tasted.

The major and sometimes only difference between two Italian wines with the same name on the label except for the word Riserva is the Riserva’s extra aging. For example, Barbaresco wine from the northern Italian region of Piedmont wine is aged for a minimum of two years, one of which must be in oak or chestnut casks. The Barbaresco Riserva version is aged for a minimum of four years, two of which must be in oak or chestnut casks. Let’s look at another example; Piedmont’s Barolo, the king of wine and the wine of kings. Barolo is aged for a minimum of 38 months, and Barolo Riserva is aged for a minimum of 60 months. In the first case Riserva means that the wine has been aged in wood for two additional years, while in the second case it means the wine has been aged in wood for 22 additional months. The exact specifications for Riserva depend on the given wine. As you will see in the review of the wine I tasted, the producer may add his or her own additional requirements.

What about the price? Do you have to pay extra for a Riserva wine? The answer is yes. The Riserva process costs money, in part because the wine has been held off the market for all that extra time. But the wine business is complicated. Let’s say that you are always on the lookout for a specific wine. One lucky day you get to your favorite wine store just when the new shipment arrives including both a 2005 and a 2003 Riserva of this wine. To your grand surprise the 2005 costs more than the 2003 Riserva. How could this happen? Perhaps the 2005 is a far superior vintage for this particular wine. Buy what you can. And expect to pay even more for the 2005 Riserva when it finally reaches the marketplace.

Be careful, on occasion the word Riserva means an essentially different wine. The central Italian region of Umbria produces a DOC wine called Torgiano and a DOCG wine called Torgiano Rosso Riserva, both made from the same grape blend with minor changes allowed. A similar situation occurs in the central Italian region The Marche where Rosso Conero is a DOC wine and Rosso Conero Riserva has been accorded the DOCG classification. The grape varieties used in both wines are the same, and perhaps only difference is the aging. For both these pairs the authorities decreed that the longer aged wines are sufficiently different from their cousins to warrant a fancier classification, and a higher price tag. Are they right? You might want to taste them to reach your decision. Personally, I have not tasted any of the wines mentioned in this paragraph.

But I have tasted two Nebbiolo-based wines, a Gattinara and a Gattinara Riserva from the northern Italian region of Piedmont. As luck would have it both wines came from the same producer. The regular Gattinara was a 2001, the Gattinara Riserva was a 1999. Of course, when comparing these wines, we should take into account the vintage, which can make a big difference. I remember a relatively inexpensive 2001 French dessert wine that was absolutely spectacular. But the 2002 vintage of this wine made by the same producer from the same grapes was good and nothing more.

For a review of the Gattinara DOCG 2001, see my article I Love Italian Wine and Food – Aosta Valley Region, Piedmont Wine.

Wine Reviewed

Travaglini Gattinara Riserva DOCG 1999 13.5% alcohol about $33

First a few notes supplied by the producer Giancarlo Travaglini. This Riserva wine, composed of 100% Nebbiolo grapes, was aged for at least three years in oak barrels, and one year in the bottle. In fact, 25% to 30% of the grapes were aged in small oak barrels. The grapes for the Riserva wine come from selected grapes at selected sites. To protect its name, Travaglini makes Gattinara Riserva only in the best years. The Riserva grapes are processed and aged separately from the regular production. The producer suggests serving the wine at 19-20 degrees Centigrade (66-68 degrees Fahrenheit), and claims that it can be cellared until 2015-2020.

This wine was very rich and mouth-filling. A little bit went a long way. I tasted tobacco, leather, and black cherries, but essentially I tasted a very fine wine. I don’t think that I am kidding myself when I say that I could tell the difference between this wine, and the non-Riserva 2001 vintage, which I also found excellent. I felt that the Riserva was even more powerful and complex than its younger cousin.

I tasted it with rib steak and potatoes, and with slow-cooked beef ribs as in my previous tasting. (I wasn’t going to waste any of it on a more plebian dish such as a lasagna.) The food pairings were great, as was the wine on its own. My only regret was that the bottle was empty before I tasted it with any cheese. Frankly I wonder if a wine of this quality wouldn’t be a bit wasted with cheese.

Final verdict. I’d have to think very hard to find something negative about this wine. I’m not convinced that it should be cellared until 2015-2020, which at this point seems a long way off. But for now, and certainly the next few years, this wine is excellent, and is somewhat of a bargain. For this particular wine, and undoubtedly many others, Riserva means more than just additional aging.

About the Author: Levi Reiss has authored or co-authored ten books on computers and the Internet, but to be honest, he would rather just drink fine Italian or other wine, accompanied by the right foods. He teaches classes in computers at an Ontario French-language community college. His wine website is http://www.theworldwidewine.com .

Source: www.isnare.com

Permanent Link: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=122402&ca=Food+and+Drinks

Continued here: I Love Italian Wine And Food – Riserva Wines

Classy Vintage Wine Posters are available online

A thing of beauty is a joy forever and if you are to make this joy of the highest levels, then there are a number of ways you can do it. Buying vintage posters to adorn the walls and corners of your home can be a great idea if you are more of a creative fellow. Furthermore, if you have been a worshipper of the most artistic creations, you would surely love to purchase some of the most exotic ranges of vintage posters for your home. Vintage posters which are available through professional poster sellers can be of different themes and motifs. One of the major vintage poster categories is that of vintage wine posters. These posters beautifully depict wine stories and events that have occurred through the ages. Places like France, Germany, Italy etc. have always been on the forefront in the creation of some of the most spectacular wine posters.

One great place from where you can buy all your favorite vintage wine posters is the internet. The internet now features some of the most renowned online poster sellers which have a variety of posters in store for you. Just by logging on the site of such a poster seller, you can have full access to different types and sizes of wine posters which can be hung on your walls so as to beautify them.

Whether it is a wall poster or fine-art print, every type of vintage wine poster is now so easily available at the online poster stores. They also offer you additional rust and dirt treatment besides giving you quality poster framing services. All online vintage wine posters are genuine and full information about their origins and creations can also be obtained easily. Created on different materials, they have the power to transform your home into the most amazing place on earth!

Champagne, Red Wine, Vineyards, White Wine, Wine Accessories, Wine Barrels, Wine Labels, Wine Scenes, Wine Signs Advertisement are the major themes which can be seen on the wine posters that have been available to us over the years. You can find these collections on a wine vintage poster section just at a few mouse-clicks.

 

Retrieved from “http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/classy-vintage-wine-posters-are-available-online-2361940.html”

Link: Classy Vintage Wine Posters are available online

A Warning For Wine Collectors

It’s an accepted nugget of cultural knowledge: wine, when stored in the right conditions for many years, matures with age. But how true is this? The truth of the matter is that there’s simply no wine aging imperative: it will taste just fine on the day you buy it. When you leave certain wines in the cellar, the do indeed become better tasting after a few years. But these wines are actually in the minority. In fact, you may find that some wines are prone to becoming much worse. One estimate is that only 10% of red wines and 5% of white wine will see some kind of benefit from being placed in a rack to collect dust. It is also supposed that barely 1% of wine even benefits from storage that lasts in excess of a decade. You’d think differently considering the amazing prices some will bid for old vintages!.

The advice therefore is that it’s probably not even worth investigating the aging potential of white wines. Just because a wine isn’t worth subjecting to the ageing process, doesn’t mean it isn’t fantastic. Sauvignon Blanc wine and other regularly encountered white wines can be enjoyed no matter how old they are. But you still get a fantastic taste. The evidence is there that some white wines do perform well over time. But this can be a massive and gamble of time and money. A Gewurztraminer wine from a worthwhile producer and vineyard, using the right fruit in the right year, may just be the best example you ever drink in 10 years time. Or alternatively, all the good storage and sourcing that went into it could result in a bitter mess, or something that simply doesn’t taste any better.

Why isn’t white wine suited to ageing? Well, winemakers rarely leave the skins and stems in the barrel during fermentation (whereas with Red Wine, they do). Even when white wines are produced by fermenting skins, it’s rarely done for very long without severe and permanent repercussions for taste. Red wines include this step in the process at the expense of introducing ‘tannins’ into the wine: so they must be kept in the barrel for their taste to mature. However, it’s rarely the resposibility of the consumer to wait for a new Barolo or other red wine to lose its Tannins: it simply won’t be released by its producer until this has happened.

Champagne Nearly Two Hundred Years Old Is Showing Wonderful Taste

Vintage champagne

The conclusion was reached during a wine tasting ceremony in Finland’s Aaland Islands to sample 168 bottles of rare vintage champagne discovered by divers last July in the wreck of a two-masted Scandinavian schooner beneath the straight betwixt Sweden and Finland.

3 of the bottles are now established as being from the still trading Veuve Clicquot house and others came from Maison Juglar, that went out of business in 1830.

The sunken boat, discovered in 2007 50m beneath the sea, was estimated to have been wrecked between 1825 and 1830. Experts concluded that this champagne has not only maintained its sparkle but it has stood the test of time. Most of the bottles had kept their seal. “Great! Wonderful!” so said Richard Juhlin, a Swedish champagne scribe who has tasted both of the rare champagnes. “I think what strikes you the most is that it’s such an intense aroma,” he said.

The Juglar tasted “more intense and powerful, mushroomy,” & the Veuve Clicquot showing much more Chardonnay, with notes of “linden blossoms and lime peels”.
He added: “Bottles kept at the bottom of the sea are better kept than in the finest wine cellars.”

Francois Hautekeur, of Veuve Clicquot’s winemaking team, spoke of “a toasted, zesty nose with hints of coffee, and a very agreeable taste with accents of flowers and lime-tree…Madame Clicquot herself must have tasted this same batch,” he mused, with reference to Barbe-Nicole Clicquot Ponsardin, who presided over the famous Champagne house.

No labels survived on the bottles, brought up from the sea over the last few weeks and gratefully tasted by the divers involved in the salvage. The wine has been dated to the first part of the 19th century.  A spokesperson for London wine merchant, Jeroboams said: “This is a wonderful discovery for the Champagne enthusiasts amongst us.  A vintage champagne wine of this age and quality is something that only time can conceal.It is the way of the world that impatience drives us to pleasure before wines can truly come of age!”

Before this underwater cache was found, the oldest drinkable champagne known to exist was considered to be an 1825 vintage that is still in the cellar at the Perrier-Jouet house.
The vessel was probably sailing from Germany to Finland, a Russian province in that period.  A wine of equal standing to Champagne had its record also broken on Tuesday evening when an imperial-size bottle of Cheval Blanc 1947, a very rare Bordeaux, sold for $US304,375 in Geneva; the highest recorded price for a bottle of wine.  An expert from the fine wine blog, Secret Sommelier said, “In times of constant news about austerity, it is good to see a very few people have the desire to splash out on pleasure!”


Supplemental Related Blogs


Performance Optimization WordPress Plugins by W3 EDGE