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Wine
on the Radio - October 10, 2003
Dessert Wine
Recommendations
Everyone
at The Wine Experience loves dessert. But instead of
cake, cookies or ice cream we love to sip a sweet dessert wine.
Now, when we
say "sweet", some folks say "yuck." But late harvest dessert wines
are scrumptious enough to stand alone.
The grapes are left on the vine longer
and picked after the normal harvest. Some are then dried even
further before pressing. Others come from grapes that have a fungus
called Botrytis . . . hang on, it's a good thing . . .
These grapes have more concentrated flavor and higher sugar content.
With these wines, you taste more than
sweetness. The wines are intensely flavorful . . . almost like
a spoon of honey.
The classic examples are from Germany
and France but even Canada and northern Michigan make a terrific
dessert wine called Ice Wine. It's actually made from grapes that
freeze on the vines. Talk about late harvest!
Pop the cork™ and pass the dessert!
Listen to the show
Some
Dessert Wines . . . All Prices Approximate
Ch. Castelnau
de Suduiraut 1997 Sauternes $35
Bordeaux, France
Winemaker's Notes
Beautiful concentration of fruit. Attractive aromas of pineapple
and wood
1998 Ch. Coutet
Sauternes $40
WS 85-89 points, Plenty of honey, lemon and lime in this young
wine. Medium-bodied, medium sweet, with a spicy finish
Ch. Guiraud
1997 Sauternes $55
Bordeaux, France
wine.com Notes
Chateau Guiraud is one of the largest estates in the French Sauternes
appellation
Inniskillin
2001 Ice Wine Gold Oak Aged (half bottle) $75
Canada
Winemaker's Notes
Icewine is nectar of the gods - some of the hardest to make, most
intense wine in the world
Ch. d'Yquem
1997 Sauternes (half-bottle) $190
Bordeaux, France
Winemaker's Notes
"A sensational Yquem, 1997 may be this estate's finest effort
since 1990"
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