Nice wines I have drunk recently - Red or White

Now here is a very interesting wine.

Cosecha Otonal (late picked) Syrah from the Cavas del Valle, Elqui Valley, Chile.

A few posts up I showed their 5-variety red that @juddles and I had with dinner the other night. Yesterday we went to the winery which is one of the extremely few table wine producers in this pisco-dominant production region. As I indicated then, I felt that this was a very tight small producer.

This wine did not disappoint; in fact it exceeded expectations. Recommended served cold, it retains a light tannic edge combined with juiciness, and light sweetness. It’s certainly not in the cloyingly sweet dessert wine category at all; rather it seems to fit into a unique category of its own. First rate.

It was simply yummy and refreshing. @juddles and I just bowled it over as a nightcap while chewing the fat.

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Chris Ringland CR Shiraz 2010

Cold night,high alcohol wine. Couldn’t find my 08 and 09 of this wine so end up with this 2010.

Jam jelly,more sweet than a standard Shiraz , easy to drink ,no decant. Didn’t notice any secondary characters yet.
 
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Some scraps from last night and tonight.

Concha y Toro is a massive wine conglomerate and the world’s second or third largest producer. Offerings are solid from the entry level. This one from the superior level was a cracker. Probably unrecognisable as a CS to most Australians owing to a lack of berry fruit expression, but showing typical Chilean robustness and solid mouthfeel.

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Another from the small Elqui Valley producer that @juddles and I visited. I bought a bottle of everything they had on offer just to try them over the next few days untill I leave the evil clutches.

Again, not a Shiraz easily recognisable as such to an Australian expecting some vanilla characters. Basically, undefinable to variety. Nevertheless, typically Chilean - robust and full. A food wine that needed the BBQ steak @juddles and I slipped in with it tonight.

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@juddles twisted my arm - or maybe I twisted his ;):eek::D, and we pulled the cork on the Malbec from our Elqui Valley producer. Again, a very solid offering not easily classified, but falling short of the gentle, velvet tannins of a good Mendoza or Valle de Uco Argy Malbec.

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We continue our struggle :D:p. Let me just say, there are a few more we are determined to squeeze in before I escape evil influence ;):p.
 
Some recent wines, the rod n spur blend was a delight
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Unlike the recent Tamar Ridge, this Spring Vale PN had plenty of life left, I would recommend this.
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Then another Tassie PN, 12 months since cracking one of these - it was right at, or just past it’s peak - a very good wine but I will open my last bottle in the next few months
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Tonight, one of the best Viogniers I’ve ever had, plus the top-level wine from the small Elqui Valley producer previously mentioned

The Viognier was from the Limari Valley in N Chile, an agriculturally diverse region. It hit the spot between the light, zesty style (eg. Yalumba, a pioneer of Viognier in Australia) and some small producers that produce the very oily style (eg. in the Margaret River region). A cracker IMO.

The red was extremely good, but not exceptional. It did tend to grow on us (@juddles and me) as we consumed it over a decent steak tonight in N Chile. Smoothness was its key characteristic - a great virtue in its own right, I might add, but maybe just that little bit too much so to the point it slightly fell away. But really, I’m being picky.

And at the price-point, just insanely good value compared with Australia. The Viognier was about $12; the red a gouging $40 which is top-shelf in Chile. Just nuts value-for-money.

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Some heavy-duty action tonight at Charco in Colonia Del Sacramento, Uruguay.

My first ever day in Uruguay, so just putting a toe in the water in the centre of this World Heritage-listed town ;). The other half of each bottle will accompany dinner here again tomorrow - I don’t have @Daver6’s constitution ;):D.

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Something a little different tonight in Punte Del Este, Uruguay.

A 65:35 Chardonnay:Albarino blend. An absolute cracker! The flavours blend just beautifully and gorgeous clarity and balance A revelation!

Ps: Winery is pronounced ‘bowser’, not ‘boozer’ ;):cool::D

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Twas a funny thing in the mid 2010's where plenty of accolades were thrown at the 2010 south Australian vintage. I found many 2009 variants to be superior to their one year old counterparts. I drank a Lake breeze bernoota 2010 this week and the 2009 I had a few months back was much nicer, more delicate with better balance. What else have we knocked back and enjoyed, the 2014 Vinimofo Arturo 2014 shiraz. A damn fine wine.
The hungerford hill gundagai shiraz 2014 is still a medium bodied stunner, so very complex. A coonawarra jack shiraz 2013 was lovely and I do recally a recent and sublime Jack Chardonnay. I got the Jacks, i got the jacks and they are beautiful.

I will finish on a bot I bought at dannys a few years ago namely for old times sake. Barwang Cab Sauv 2010. This has developed to be such an elegant swan from their natural awkwardness. I used to do plenty of barwangs in my earlier imbibements. This one just cemented this part im my wine history.
 
This is the best Tannat I’ve tried in Uruguay. I’ve the very full to very light styles. This one sits nicely in the middle.

All have been far less mouth-puckeringly tannic than I expected.

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lots of people called the 2010 vintage too ripe, but i found 2010 cabernet is better than shiraz in south australia.
 
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A cracker for my last night in Uruguay. Same producer as last night’s choice, but a step up and a Tannat/Petit Verdot/Cabernet Franc/Viognier blend.

Lovely wine.

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Over to Argentina tomorrow for two weeks. I guess with a bit of luck I should be able to find some red scraps over there...;):).
 

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