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Wine: the rise of Portugal

1/29/2013

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by Fiona Beckett (The Guardian.co.uk)

It's high time Portuguese wines were given the same respect we grant French, Spanish and Italian ones.


As I stagger towards the end of the autumn tasting season (I don't expect you to feel sympathetic but 150-plus supermarket wines are not a bundle of laughs), one country stands out for offering characterful wines at a fair price: Portugal.

It's partly because they have the weird and wonderful grape varieties I touched on the other week, but also they mercifully don't have a long-established fine wine culture, José Mourinho's favourite Barca Velha aside.

The exuberant, brambly Marco de Pegões Terras do Sado Tinto 2010 (13.5% abv), for example, is an absolutely cracking deal from Majestic at £6.49 if you buy two or more bottles. I love the label and the screwcap (very un-PC in Portugal), too. It would go well with gutsy gastropub dishes, spicy stews or even, I suspect, rogan josh – Portuguese reds can usefully take a bit of spice.

Waitrose has the more expensive F'OZ (£9.99; 14% abv), from Alentejo, coming into 121 branches midweek, a supple, sexy blend of aragonez, trincadeira and castelão that tastes a good fiver more (but not, as the name might suggest, of Australian wine).

Independents also tend to do Portugal well. Tanners has a handsomely labelled, juicy Douro Red (£7.90; 13% abv) under its own label – that would make excellent cold-weather drinking. They reckon it's a natural for chicken peri peri, but I'd fancy cracking it open with some braised ox cheek.

The Real Wine Company has a notably good selection, including Quinta de Santana's Sant'ana Tinto 2011(£7.99; 14% abv), an attractive blend of touriga nacional and aragonez. It reminds me of an Italian red, but you'd be lucky to find one as good for the price. One for hearty pasta bakes or sausages and polenta. I also like the same outfit's Boas Dao Branco 2011 (£7.99; £7.95 at the Halifax Wine Company; 13% abv), a dry, full-bodied white made from encruzado and cercial that would go really well with pokey Iberian fish dishes with pimentón and garlic and even with pork or veal.

And now that Spanish albariño has become so pricey, look over the border to the Vinho Verde region, where you frequently find the same variety, alvarinho, a couple of quid cheaper. Take advantage of the last two days of Marks & Spencer's current "25% off six bottles" offer to snap up some delicious crisp, citrussy Tercius Alvarinho 2011 at £7.49 instead of £9.99 – it's the ideal seafood white.

Portugal is definitely one to watch in 2013.

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Portugal: the land wine buyers forgot

1/29/2013

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By Victoria Moore (Telegraph.co.uk)

The idea that there might be a meritocracy in the wine world breaks down when you consider Portugal. The country produces a fantastically diverse range of wines, from light, thirst-quenching vinho verde to complex and unusual reds and mateus rosé (stop sniggering at the back). It offers value to those looking for an everyday drink and interest for the nerds. So the problem with Portuguese wines is…?

“Selling them,” say supermarket buyers (off the record).

A recent story uncovered by the writer Robert Joseph on his blog (thejosephreport.blogspot.co.uk) underlines the point. “No one is indispensable,” he wrote, explaining that Portugal was “facing a removal from the scene – or at least from the shelves of Majestic”.

What had happened was this: confronted with the loss of cash to subsidise promotions when the marketing body for Portuguese wine decided its money would be better spent elsewhere, Majestic asked its suppliers for compensation. Anyone who didn’t fancy paying was out. Or, to put it in Majestic’s terms, had “the option to withdraw [their] listing”. And anyone hoping to put a new Portuguese wine on Majestic’s shelves could think again: without the marketing bung, “new listings” had apparently become “an extremely tenuous proposition”. The message seemed to be that Majestic felt Portugal needed it more than it needed Portugal.

The disappearance of the entire country didn’t happen because most wine producers agreed to cough up and, a Majestic spokesman said, “I don’t think they would have pulled out.”

But it’s hard to imagine this happening to any other mainstream wine-producing country. Portugal does better in independent shops, where customers perhaps have more recherché tastes and a greater interest in ferreting out wines made from grapes they’ve never heard of in places they can’t pronounce.

And it has some brilliant champions. These include the infectious good humour of critic Charles Metcalfe whose book, The Wine and Food Lover’s Guide to Portugal, co-authored with his wife, Kathryn McWhirter, is a must-buy for anyone planning to gorge their way around this part of the Iberian Peninsula. And the specialist importer Raymond Reynolds Ltd, an indefatigable truffler-outer of intriguing and good-quality wines, whose team has done much to put delicious bottles from Portugal on restaurant tables and in smaller shops.

But it still hasn’t captured the hearts and minds of ordinary wine drinkers. What I like about Portuguese wines is their individuality. It’s hot enough there to make big wines that are ripe and feisty. But the country has never succumbed wholesale to the lollipop style of winemaking. Most of the reds still have a bit of dirt in them; they grunt rather than simper; have acidity, kick, tannin, a hint of wilderness rather than the careful styling and corporate features of an Algarve golf course.

Perhaps we just need to know a bit more about it, in which case let’s begin here with five starter things to know about Portuguese wine…

1. Vinho verde might well be Portugal’s most recognised region for non-fortified wine. It’s wedged up in the north-west of the country and its thirst-quenching white wines are best drunk young. They’re usually made from a blend that may include loureiro, trajadura and arinto as well as alvarinho grapes – which over the border in Galicia is better known as albariño. Vinho verde can be light to the point of insipid but if you want to try one with flavour, cook some prawns and crack open a bottle of Tapada de Villar Vinho Verde 2011 Portugal (11%, M & S, £6.99). It’s gently pétillant – tiny, occasional bubbles break gently on the tongue – and deliciously peachy, like water infused with peach stones and mixed with white wine.

2. Mateus rosé is sometimes drunk by those who work in the wine trade, although you usually have to get them drunk before they admit to swallowing the lightly sparkling rosé famously favoured by Saddam Hussein. The wine still comes in the gloriously tactile, rounded bottle but it’s not as sweet as it once was. Drunk alone it has a slight edge of raspberry-flavoured boiled sweets, but it goes brilliantly with curry. Not home-cooked posh curry; curry from a supermarket box. And yes, I have tried it, and yes, I enjoyed it. Mateus Rosé NV Portugal (11%, Tesco, £4.48).

3. The Alentejo in the southern half of Portugal is a hot-spot for newer, interesting producers. Try wines made by Aussie David Baverstock at Esporão (Eshporão) or the Cortes de Cima, listed right.

4. The schist slopes in the Douro — port-producing country, to the east of Oporto – are so steep and so intransigent they had to be dynamited to make terraces on which grapes could be grown. These days the area is also important for its unfortified reds, also made with port grapes.

5. The names of Portuguese grapes are well worth translating. Rabo de ovelha means ewe’s tail. Or you could have a bottle of borrado das moscas (a synonym for the grape bical) – fly droppings.

And that’s just for starters – happy exploring.


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