Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Sentosa Island Getaway

Dangling high in the air, attached to a single metal cable is obviously not Caroline's idea of a relaxing start to the weekend, as she has a distinct green tinge around the gills. However, we are heading to Sentosa island via cable car to Resort World's Universal Studios and I'm almost certain this is going to seem tame in comparison.





It's about $70 each to get in so it's my turn to go slightly green and queasy as panic sets in at getting some cash out. In reality this is actually not too bad - approx £35 each. Alton Towers in the UK is about the same price. Mind you at Chessington you can take a family of 5 for the same price!



Once in there, we are in a land of make believe, not dissimilar from Singapore itself, where nothing quite seems real. We walk through downtown Hollywood then into New York where we witness Lights! Camera! Action! a live special effects show of a hurricane hitting New York's sky line. Not a bad start.



We chicken out of going on some mental rollercoaster after they announce that it the ride is temporarily suspended. If only you could do the same when commuting on the Tube in London....





So, Caroline thought the Cable Car was scary, huh? Next we get on The Mummy ride. I don't realise I'm screaming but I must be - Caroline is laughing at me when we get off - I thought that was her high pitched screeching. There is a lot of lurching about and falling down huge bottomless pits - what makes it really scary is that most of it happens in pitch blackness, like a real nightmare...



We go to see Shrek in 4D and it is really good - 3D specs on, you get the 4th dimension with a splash of water here and there, moving seats and gusts of air. Bit like watching a film with a bunch of hoodies in Hammersmith Broadway, really, but without people talking loudly on mobile phones, innit.

Despite this, we're not quite prepared for spiders falling around us in 3D with a terrifying brushing against our legs as they fall to the floor! Not sure what all the kids made of it but there was an awful lot of screaming - and not just from me this time. If only it was Hammersmith Broadway: da yoof would be outta there like a shot!




The rest: Waterworld (entertaining enough), Lost World (gave up queuing) and burger in a diner (pretty good) All done, we head to Sentosa beach!




The beach is great, lined with bars all the way along - expat heaven! We dive into one (Coastes), hiding from the rain that's just started and get stuck into a jug of Carlsberg. We move on to the bar next door (Bikini Bar); I realise pretty quickly why we couldn't get a seat there straight away. Bikini ogling seems to be what's attracting the largely male clientele. And why not? Except I'm facing the other way and sitting with the Mrs...

We while away a couple of hours with the dulcet tones of drunk Australians and a fine selection of tunes from the house DJ as a soundtrack. Bliss




Enomatic: A Bond Moment

Some people have Blonde Moments, well, I've just had a Bond Moment!

The good people of Enomatic wine serving systems have just come up with a revolutionary new idea; let's make everyone feel like they're on the set of a Bond movie in a Monte Carlo casino. How do they do that, you might ask. Well, they invent Flute, a system that dispenses glasses of Champagne from a machine that could conceivably come from Q's gadget lab!

The sleek, dark exterior with flashes of chrome purrs to life like an Aston Martin. Backlit bottles of Bollinger stand proud behind the shiny glass like engine pistons. Your Champagne is dispensed with ease as the sensor acknowledges your waiting flute. Next to this is another well crafted beauty called North Pole that has you imagining a daring mission across icy seas while you enjoy a Martini made with chilled Grey Goose....

But, hey, back to reality!

The system is stylish and gorgeous to look at but on a practical level (Bond was practical too!) it allows us all to have these Bond moments without the unecessary risks. You can try high end wines and Champagnes before you buy, which liberates the world of wine. Now you can sample that vintage Krug or Dom Perignon without opening a Swiss bank account or indeed having a Licence to Kill...

For more details see http://www.enomatic.co.nz/home/

A Man Walks into a Bar...

A man walks into a bar to buy a glass of wine..... sounds like the start of a joke, and of course it normally is. The wine selection by the glass in most bars and pubs is gradually improving, but how do you know that the wine hasn't been hanging around on the counter-top for days, if not weeks, rendering it more suitable as part of a salad dressing?

This is where a new phenomenon in wine dispensing, Enomatic, makes a very welcome entrance to the world of wine bars. Enomatic machines enable customers to experience wine at the correct temperature and in the right condition, every time.


I'm at Vintry in Clarke Quay, a smart yet relaxed bar with 4 of these Enomatic machines, delivering 32 wines by the glass as well as many others by the bottle. Fazil is Operations Manager, but he also happens to be a very experienced Sommelier, so you are in safe hands here.


First, you purchase a payment card with your chosen amount of credit, grab a glass and choose whether you want a tasting measure (25ml) a small glass (75ml) or a large glass (150ml). It takes the hassle out of buying wine to match food or to suit the personal tastes of a larger group. There are recommendations and scores from Wine Spectator, Parker et al to help you make your choice. What could be easier?

The Local Nose sets Fazil the challenge of coming up with a list of wines that can be sampled for a straight $50 that will impress even the fiercest wine critic. As Fazil really knows his wines and his ever-changing selection, it doesn't take him long to come up with the goods.

Fazil's selection showcases the breadth of wine on offer at Vintry and it's like a journey to the 4 corners of the wine world!

The Penfolds Bin 51 Riesling 2007 ($4) is a good place to start with it's stone-fruit and citrus flavours with a pleasant whiff of petrol. A refeshing aperitif to begin our adventure.

An Italian Michele Chiarlo Gavi Le Marne 2009 ($3) is next, with classic honeyed aromas and apricot and nettle on the palate. A smooth, balanced wine.

Trimbach Gewürztraminer 2007 ($2.5) is a classic, fragrant, Old World wine that's great with Asian food  flavours. Roses and lychee on the nose with vegetal, sweet pea and basil flavours make this deliciously different and utterly compelling.

In direct contrast to the Aussie Riesling, I try Dr Loosen's Wehlener Sohnenuhr Riesling Kabinett 2009 ($3) and it is full of lime and peaches, with a lovely sweetness of orange and apricot on the palate. A great opportunity to sample “Kabinett”-style wine at a give-away price!

Robert Mondavi Reserve Chardonnay 2005 ($5.5) is buttery and nutty but made in restrained Old World Burgundy style. There is good acidity to balance that richness of the caramelised pear flavour.

I feel like I've been around the world already and we're only halfway through his list....



On to the reds next, I start with St Clair Pinot Noir, Marlborough 2009 ($2.5) from New Zealand. It has a savoury, smoky bacon nose with red fruits on the palate, and hints of spiced red apple to finish. A super start for the reds!

I'm blown away by the Domaine de Montille Volnay 1er Cru 2006 ($8.5), a top Pinot Noir from Burgundy, that follows. There's warm oak on the nose with more of that spiced red apple; there are warm vanilla hints and cinnamon and almond. Really good.

On to Italy and we visit Gaja Sito Moresco 2008 ($5.5) with it's fresh, chalky, cherry nose and black cherry, treacle, cassis and minty notes on the palate. There is great acidity here, along with integrated oak. Gaja is iconic – you can't fail but be impressed.

Petrolo Torrione 2006, Italy ($4.5) a Sangiovese from Tuscany, supplies menthol cherry and herb aromas with savoury oak and cherry richness on the palate. One to sit back and relax with, definitely.

Next stop is California and a Kendall Jackson Grand Reserve Cabernet 2006 ($3.5). It has a pure cassis nose with drops of sandlewood oak and capsicum. It is smoky and meaty with fine tannin structure. This would keep and develop over the next few years, but it won't get the chance: it's too good right now!

I'm even getting the opportunity to sample a classed growth Bordeaux in the shape of  Chateau Lynch-Bages, Pauillac 2006 ($8.5) – who would have thought that the money would go so far?! Lovely raisin and tobacco on the nose and palate with red apple spice and warm oak. It is bright and alive, a rare glimpse at the youthful beginnings of a classic Claret.

It all comes to $51 - $1 over, but I think it might have been worth it!

The Enomatic technology means that each wine is in great condition, as you'd expect – this is a machine, after all. However, it's the human touch that makes all the difference and that's what makes Vintry special. You can get involved in choosing your own wine and pouring your own glass and learning about wine. But, best of all, you too can set Fazil the $50 challenge – see what he comes up with!




Some more top choices from Fazil:

Whites:
Mt. Difficulty 2010 Sauvignon Blanc ($3)
Franz Haas Manna  (Riesling, Chardonnay, Traminer Aromatico, Sauvignon Blanc) 2008 ($4)
Beringer White Zinfandel 2008 ($2)



Reds:

Jean Luc Colombo St Joseph Les Lauves 2007 ($4.5)
Richard Hamilton Centurion Shiraz 2006 ($5.5)
Isole e Olena Chianti Classico 2007 ($3)
Craggy Range Sophia  2005 ($5)
Yacochuya Malbec 2003 ($8)
Il Marroneto Brunello di Montalcino, Madonna delle Grazia 2005 ($7)
Robert Mondavi Oakville Cabernet Sauvignon 2005 ($5.5)

Sweet:
Disznóko  5 puttonyos 2000 ($5.5)

Sherry – A Criminal Investigation!

A Sherry tasting with Dr Jesús Barquí, Equipo Navazos.
Taberna Wine Bar, 15th Feb 2011

It is a crime that Sherry wines have been ignored for so long, so who better to host a Sherry masterclass than Dr Jesús Barquí, professor of criminology at the University of Granada.

Dr Barqui's passion for sherry has developed so much over the years that he has gone from part-time wine writer to expert in his field. Not surprising, perhaps, for a man that prides himself on gathering and imparting knowledge in his day job, but Jesús has gone about this a slightly different way. He and some like-minded Sherry fans decided to buy (and bottle) a barrel of 20 year old Amontillado!

This was in 2005, and since then the wild purchase has developed from a one off act for the pleasure of friends, to a project that has evolved into more commercial scale bottlings. Saying that, the scale is still tiny and the wines very rare (2,000 – 5,000 bottles per release) so the opportunity of trying some of these Sherries with the man himself could not be missed!

Jesús calls these wines his “children”, such is his pride in their development. He corrects himself later, using the description “adopted-children”, for these are wines created by the best Sherry bodegas – he just adopts them and nurtures them like his own. Along with his friend and business partner, Eduardo Ojeda, technical director of Grupo Estevez, he has chosen not only the best Soleras (groups of barrels) that Sherry has to offer, but also the best barrels with in those Soleras!

We start with some bubbly – not Champagne of course, maybe some Cava? No! This is a brand new experience! These are  two sparkling wines made by Equipo Navazos in a joint venture with Colet Vins:
The wines are of the Penedés appellation (near Barcelona) as they are made with wines from the north. However the magic is in the Sherry wines that are added at dosage stage and this why the wine stands out. Dosage is the addition of wine and/or sugar in the traditional method of making Champagne and sparkling wine. Here, they add Sherry wine but no sugar. - This is Brut Zero – a slimmer's drink!

COLET-NAVAZOS 2007 Extra Brut. Made from mainly the Xarel.lo grape in an oxidative style (letting air gently change the wine's chemistry) It was cellared for 29 months before it was disgorged in October 2010. The nose is raisin, honeysuckle, oats and nuts with a dry palate and a smooth creamy finish. Touches of caramel come from the dosage.

COLET-NAVAZOS Reserva 2006 Extra Brut. Made from mainly Chardonnay in a  Flor-yeasts style (letting the wine mature under a protective layer of naturally occuring yeast). It was cellared for 41 months before it was disgorged in October 2010. On the nose it is more fragrant, more reminiscent of Champagne, with apricot, lime, stone fruits and oats. There are apricots on the palate with yeasty, creamy flavours to counter the crisp acidity.

Jesús introduces us to another rare experience; sampling a non-fortified cask-fermented wine made with the Sherry grape Palamino Fino. Made in collaboration with Niepoort of Portugal, the NAVAZOS − NIEPOORT 2009 is full of complexity from it's ageing under Flor yeast. The style harks back to traditional wine-making in the Sherry area and is made to highlight the terroir of the chalky soils.

The aromas are of rum and raisin chocolate, un-ripe banana and figs. It is nutty like walnut with orange zest, fig and bay on the palate. The finish has a mild numbing effect on the tongue!

The next two wines are Fino-style Sherrys: here the wines develop under a layer of the Flor yeast. They both use grapes from the Macharnudo Alto vineyards and are unfiltered to show terroir character (or, their “upbringing”, to use Jesús' metaphor). We get to compare two different extractions; this is the date when the Sherry is taken from the barrel.

The LA BOTA DE FINO  (nº 15) was extracted in June 2008. It has a nose of marmalade and caramelised banana but also savoury. Notes of hay, oats, mineral and sesame are on the palate.
However, the LA BOTA DE FINO  (nº 18) ,extracted in December 2009, shows more raisiny, smoky characters and is richer, but with a cleansing minerality.
The differences are very interesting!

We get to sample LA BOTA DE FINO (AMONTILLADO) nº 24  next. This is a Fino, but is on it's way to becoming an Amontillado. Amontillado is a Sherry that develops from a Fino as the Flor breaks down gradually and the wine has more contact with the air. It is made in Montilla, which holds the best Pedro Ximénez (a sweet grape) vineyards and their chalky soils. Estimated at over 20 years old, this is still a Fino but the fragile flor has thinned during the wine's ageing which darkens and hightens the richer flavours.
The wine is nutty, salty and buttery with a slightly vegetal nature but has Christmas Cake aromas and a doughy yeastiness.

As a comparison there is LA BOTA DE AMONTILLADO (nº 23) which is a straight Amontillado. This is a very old wine, although Jesús doesn't say exactly how old. The ageing brings out more toffee notes and burnt orange, like a Terry's Dark Chocolate Orange (if you've had one!) There are also nuts, raisins, hay and a smokiness.

Jesús gives us two more wines to compare, made in the same way as Fino, but hailing from Sanlúcar and called Manzanilla. These wines are renowned for their freshness, enabled by the delicate natural Flor that is created by a moist climate influenced by the proximity to sea breezes. Some say you can taste the sea in it's salty minerality.

LA BOTA DE MANZANILLA (nº 16) extracted Jan 2009. This is aged Manzanilla so there is raisin on the nose and fullness on the body. There is definitely a briney quality to the wine and a smoothness. There are also faint hints of Banoffee Pie on the nose giving this a very different quality than your average Manzanilla style wine that is drunk young.

LA BOTA DE MANZANILLA (nº 22) extracted May 2010. There are hazelnuts, apricots and toasted almonds on the nose and palate. There is a slight herbal quality on the finish, reminiscent of the tongue-numbing sparkling wine earlier but this time like spearmint.

Palo Cortado is a natural style of Sherry, somewhere between a Fino / Amontillado and a Oloroso;  the protective flor dies and the wine begins to age oxidatively giving it elegance, complexity and body. Oloroso is a deeper coloured, richer Sherry that is produced without the influence of Flor. It is fortified to around 18% as opposed to Fino fortification of 15.5%.

LA BOTA DE PALO CORTADO (nº 21) Raisin and almond on the nose but with some oxidative toasty notes. There are toasted marshmallow and sweet pastry flavours countering the dry style.

LA BOTA DE OLOROSO VIEJÍSIMO  (nº 14)  An impeccable wine with real age and concentration. This oloroso is nutty, smoky and meaty and there are hints of paprika.

We are treated to some chunky slabs of Iberico Ham with melting strips of fat that go perfectly with the wine! The meat brings out a sweetness in the wine and it dawns on me that at some stage I want to do this whole tasting again... with food! The matches could be heavenly as these are amazing food-wines.

Lastly we have LA BOTA DE PEDRO XIMÉNEZ (nº 25) from Montilla-Moriles – a dessert in a glass! Probably well over 30 years old, and from barrels separated from the usual routine of Solera topping up, it is as pure an expression of the sun-dried grapes and terroir as possible.

There is a popcorn nose, with raisin and prune. The palate is dense with prune, fig and treacle but has an acidity that also refreshes. Sometimes Pedro Ximenez can be cloying in it's richness but not so here!
As you can see, there are many styles of Sherry; serious wine makers and connoisseurs are seeking new and interesting expressions of Sherry and changing the way we think about this classic wine.

So, do some detective work and find some criminally-good Sherries! These work well on their own, as an aperitif and match all kinds of seafood and spicy meats. And at these prices, you'll feel like someone's been robbed, and for once it isn't you!

Quick Recipe Update

If you follow the recipe below more or less, it becomes a really good chicken satay marinade after a few days in the fridge ;)