OK, an uneventful night in DOH before jumping on a QR A350 to HEL. I thought it was going to be QSuites but that was not the case.
Basically, the side trip to Finland was killing some time between the end of my Arctic voyage and the start of the 5 Stans tour. I had been to HEL a few times before but not out into the countryside. After the first night in HEL, I rented a car and did a loop around the SW of the country.
Then it was down to SIN as I started making my way to DEL which was my jump-off point to Ashgabat in Turkmenistan to start the three weeks in the Stans.
HEL-SIN is AY’s longest flight (11.5h) and I wanted to try their long-haul J and their A350. Marred by being a midnight departure (arrival around 1630h), but nothing to write home about. The bird only had standard window shades, without the extra curtain things inside the window. Maybe an early-model A350 or AY scrimping? The F&B was rushed and ordinary.
I needed to use some sectors in Asia on my DONE4, so why fly direct to DEL when you can connect? So overnight in SIN and onto the JL B777 to NRT at 0800 today, arrival about 1630.
Nice ride in 1A (natch). There really is something about the Japanese and their style of service.
Interestingly, no PD drinks offered. Once airborne, drinks came out and lunch order was taken - and delivered when I was only a little more than half through my Champagne.
No worries.
I went for the Japanese menu and enjoyed it greatly. The wine selection, despite some seemingly florid descriptions - which turned out to be accurate - had some inspired choices, certainly with the Japanese food. The blokes pictured clearly know their stuff; an MW doesn’t come easily.
The Champagne was a Heidsieck label I had not previously tried. Pinot dominant, fine bead. Nice and dry/astringent and a good texture. A bit different. I liked it. Forgot to get a pic.
The cracker was the Pinot Blanc. It just worked a treat with the mixed starter, within which the eel was a standout.
I initially tried the Pinot Noir with the main. Interesting and very different from what we may typically think as Pinot, but not entirely to my taste. It certainly had a bitterness that the notes mentioned.
I switched to the Malbec. Now, judging from the back label, this looked pretty much like a Negociant-type wine. Nothing wrong with that if done well - and this one was. It hinted at being a mix from Valle de Uco (about 100km S of Mendoza and around 1200m altitude) and Lujan de Cuyo (very close to Mendoza and lower altitude). It certainly seemed to have the refinement of the former combined with the greater robustness of the latter. Good stuff.
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