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Liquid Refreshment

Archive for March 26th, 2007

Both from Sainsbury’s:

2000 Castillo de Caltrava Reserva has all the look of a Rioja Tempranillo; In fact, it is a Tempranillo, but that is where the similarity ends, except for the fine gold wire ‘basket’ the bottle is wrapped in. Centrally located and mountainous, La Mancha is known for some great wines, as is Rioja. The Calatrava was slashed by £3, if memory holds, from £8 to £5. The initial taste was one of disappointment. However, after recalibrating for decision-bias, the study continued more upbeat.

The wine is very ripe with a perfumed (like sandalwood) and sweet nose. Light and airy on the tongue, unlike the high expressions found in many of Spain’s major wine regions these days. No this is classy for a fiver, once on it airs. Short finish and unbelievably harmonious, except for a bit of burn, predictable since it is only a Reserva and not a ‘Gran(d) Reserva’ which would denoted up to a year longer in oak, depending on the region – in La Mancha, 12 months in oak, 24 in bottle for Resverva, 24 months in oak and 36 months in bottle for Gran(d) Reserva (these are minimums here). Maybe not worth £8, but great at five: 8.5.

South Africa’s First Cape 2005 Shiraz Cabernet blend was also on sale for a few pounds off, bring it to £5 or £6 per bottle as well. Like the Caltrava, it seemed new to the shelves, and stood out only because of the red tag marking it reduced. (But, isn’t that the point?) Lovely colour and a lot like Pinotage. But this is way tart, way tart. Also smells like wet, black pepper, with a red meat kind of slappiness to it (getting hungry here). Seems to be quite a lot going on in there and will most likely taste better tomorrow: 8.3.

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