FORTIFIED WINE
Of
all the styles, the fortified wines are the most difficult to pin
down. Why? Well, they are so varied and extraordinary that they evade
simple categorisation. How ironic, then, that for a lot of drinkers
fortified wine equates to simple, warm, sticky sherry or port,
consumed only at Christmas or with Great Auntie's Madeira cake on her
birthday. Let me try to persuade you to re-think these classic and
wonderful wines.
FORTIFIED WINE |
Then
there's Madeira, so often relegated to the kitchen cupboard and used
only for cooking, but which can be magnificent, intense and
intriguing. The fortified wines have so much concentrated flavour and
aroma - it's partly why they are regularly used for sauces, of course
- which is what makes them so fascinating and delicious. They are
good value, too. A little goes a long way in the world of fortified
wines and, once opened, they keep for longer than table wines (though
not until next Christmas, please).
If
you're bored with Chardonnay and Cabernet or if you find a lot of
modern wines too one-dimensional and fruity (or, as some critics put
it, tutti-frutti, conjuring up the fruit-salad- style of much
new-wave wine), then here's your chance to experience some different
sensations. These wines are laced with wild, heady, exotic nuances
and have wonderful mouth-filling textures. They make for some truly
fascinating food matches. Give them a go!
More varied than many think. Sherry
isn't
only richly amber-coloured but ranges from very pale straw to deep
mahogany. Port can be a bright garnet, a brown toffee colour, or dark
purply-black. Madeira veers between pale and deep tawny.
Think thick. Most fortified
wines have a gloopy, more viscous mouth-feel than ordinary table
wines. This is because of higher alcohol levels, but also due to
sweetness. The wine seems to fill your mouth; it's heavier and
weightier than table wine.
AROMA. OF FORTIFIED WINE
Most fortified wines are deeply aromatic. Expect fresh, tangy lemons,
a whiff of fresh bread and yeast, even green olives in the case of
dry fino and manzanilla sherries. Richer, sweeter fortifieds are
often raisiny and caramelly in aroma. Look for hints of hazelnuts and
dried citrus peel, too. Ports often have a red-cherry or
fruitcake-like character or, in the case of tawny, they are very
nutty.
FLAVOUR
. OF FORTIFIED WINE
A wide spectrum of tasting notes, some straightforward, like lemons
in fino and plums or cherries in red ports, but more exotic in
others. Amontillado is distinctly nutty; oloroso is richly raisiny.
Tawny port has a creamy, nut-oil flavour, while vintage port can be
bursting with spice, damsons, chocolate, figs, and sloes. Also,
expect rich, tough tannins in young vintage ports. Many fortified
wines have a fresh, tangy, dry finish; others leave a sweet honeyed
taste behind.
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