Wine
on the Radio - June 4, 2004
Have you got a sweet tooth? Is your
favorite question, "What's for dessert?"
Well if so we're here to offer up
a luscious dessert for you . . . the sweet wines of Bordeaux.
Two areas in Bordeaux, Sauternes
and Barsac, bring us really special wines whose unique style is
due to a quirk of Mother Nature.
We owe their specialness to a fungus!
Yep the mold called Botrytis can grow on the grape under certain
weather conditions and pierce the skin. Sounds bad but its really
good because when some of the liquid evaporates, what's left becomes
highly concentrated with sugars, acids and flavor.
The berries are hand picked and nurtured
with care and the wines are sweet and very intense.
Imagine this taste . . . it's like
dried apricots or candied oranges dipped in golden honey. They
can age almost forever and become more dense and yummy with each
year.
So next time someone asks. "What's
for dessert?" treat them to the lush liquid of Sauternes or Barsac.
Pop the cork™.
Listen to the show
Sauternes
and Barsac - Our Picks and Recommendations . . . All Prices Approximate
Ch.
Rieussec 1999 Sauternes (half-bottle) $22
Bordeaux, France
Winemaker's Notes
"Explosive aromas of apricot, peach, minerals, creme caramel,
grilled nuts and spices, along with cooler hints of licorice and
menthol. Thick, sweet and chewy with extract; an impressively
mouthfilling wine with lovely framing acidity"
2002 Ch. Doisy-Vedrines Barsac "Sauterne"
$26
WA 89-91 points, This is a sweet, full-bodied, fat, concentrated,
intense effort
1999 Baron Philippe de Rothschild
Sauternes $28
The nose is full with very rich candied fruit aromas. A fine
texture on the palate combining the refinement of honey, dried
apricot and roasted flavors
Ch.
d'Yquem 1997 Sauternes $290
Bordeaux, France
Winemaker's Notes
"A sensational Yquem, 1997 may be this estate's finest effort
since 1990 (although I would not discount the 1996 turning out
to be nearly as good). The 1997's light gold color is accompanied
a gorgeous perfume of caramel, honeysuckle, peach, apricot, and
smoky wood. Full-bodied and unctuously-textured, with good underlying
acidity as well as loads of sweetness and glycerin, it looks to
be a great vintage for this renowned Sauternes estate. Anticipated
maturity: 2005-2055. Note: Yquem spends 42 months in 100% new
oak. No cask tasting is permitted, and the wine is not released
until 5 years after the vintage. For example, the 1998 will be
released some time in 2003; the 2001 will not be released until
2006." -Wine Advocate
