Tuesday, 26 April 2022

Côte Restaurant Sloane Square and La Reserve de Lucien Lurton 2017 Red Bordeaux

 My wife and I recently went to the Côte Restaurant on Sloane Square in London.  The restaurant chain offers very good value for money and decent food. It also maintains a very good standard of service. In fact, the food service and wine is about as good as it can get. It is not fine dining but it is close to it.  We had a two course prix fixe menu. Our main course was rib-eye steak cooked rare in French style and it was delicious. We drank a bottle of La Reserve de Lucien 2017 Red Bordeaux to go with it.  We were particularly impressed with this wine which was ready to drink. The wine was typical of the region and if I tasted it blind I would instantly tell that it was from the region. The wine was concentrated and had the typical aroma and taste of a good Bordeaux and at £26 pounds for the bottle in a restaurant was exceptional value for money. I am sure that I have paid more for a lesser quality wine.

I called the manager over to congratulate him on the food and very good service, the lady who served us was polite and friendly and left us to get on with the dining; as a matter of taste I do not like waiters hovering over me to serve the wine, as I like to do it myself. 

It is not possible to congratulate the wine buyer personally when dining in a chain restaurant, but often they are the unsung heroes of dining out. They have to find the best quality wine at the best price and match the wine to the customers' expectations and to the food. All I can say is well done and thank you.

The following week again we dined in the Côte Restaurant in Sevenoaks in Kent, and  once again the service , food and wine were excellent. We particularly liked the French house wine - White Sauvignon Blanc. The wine was excellent and its dry style matched matched our chicken dishes perfectly.

Needless to say, we shall be going back many more times while Côte Restaurants maintain their high standards for food, wine and service from knowledgeable and friendly staff. The post-Covid world has seen a general fall in service across service outlets. Côte Restaurants have defied this trend and long may this continue.

https://www.cote.co.uk/





Saturday, 26 March 2022

Les Hauts de Lestac 2013 Red Haut-Medoc Bordeaux

 We had a little gathering last Sunday and somebody had the good sense to bring along a bottle of this red Bordeaux. Everyone was opening bottles without my presence so I hid the best bottle that was brought along. My guests only drank a third of a bottle  maybe they were driving because they missed out on a great wine. We had two thirds of a bottle left to drink with roast chicken the following evening. The wine tasted and smelt fantastic. It had matured well in the bottle and had all of the flavour and character of the Haut-Medoc. Instantly I could tell where the wine was from; if not identify the vineyard. I am astounded that that the bottle was left unfinished. 

When I looked up the reviews for the wine the drinking public were not giving the wine favourable reviews, perhaps they were drinking the wine too young, as it needed to be kept to develop its full potential. This was one of the best wines I have drunk in the last few months. Les Hauts de Lestac 2013 Red Haut-Medoc Bordeaux is a real bargain if you can still find it. It also goes to show that you do not have to pay big bucks for a decent wine if you chose carefully. Haut-Medc wines are generally better than varietal wines labelled, Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon or Shiraz etc. as they are not subjected to industrialised wine making processes.

It was not just wine that was brought to our house because three people tested positive for the dreaded c19 virus but they were vaccinated and were not ill for long. I caught a bad cold which testing revealed was not c19 and my cold was worse than the c19 symptoms which our guests were reporting. Luckily, I did not lose my sense of smell and I was able to enjoy a glass or two whilst I was recovering. Drinking a glass of wine does not relieve cold symptoms but it sure cheers me up.

Monday, 28 February 2022

Pheasant's Tears Saperavi 2019 - Georgian

 We tried a bottle of this wine the other day with food: beef steak. This Georgian wine well made from grapes indigenous to the Kakheti region. The grapes are well suited to the soil and climate. The wines are fermented in amphorae which are buried into the ground and lined with beeswax. The wine is produced by a superb wine maker, and you can tell that the traditional methods of production come through into the wine. The wine has a taste and character of its own. It is of full body and is concentrated and complex and has a deep fruity flavour. The wine remains on the palate for a long time. It is a wine for drinking with food and it should be savoured and not sloshed back.

We drank our wine too young it will improve in the bottle for ten years. We will search out this wine and buy some bottles for further keeping.

Georgia was probably the region of the world where wine was first produced in Neolithic times more than 8,000 years ago. Wine production in this area is fully entwined in the culture of Georgia. There are not many wine production areas which ferment the wine in amphorae. 

At around £20 a bottle it is not cheap, but it is worth searching out. It's a delight. 

https://www.vinvm.co.uk/pheasants-tears-saperavi-2019

Tuesday, 8 February 2022

Dry January 2022

Once again my wife and I did not participate in dry January 2022. Why is that? We do not drink so much that we feel the need to cut down on on drinking. We do not like being manipulated by health authorities or anyone else for that matter.

During January we had a period of 6 days when we did not drink., and that is because the thought did not cross our minds to open a bottle. This is a way life for us; we don't feel obliged to drink or not to drink.

Last Sunday, we had 7 people for dinner and drank two bottles of Champagne, a bottle of Prosecco, two bottles of red and a quarter bottle of sweet white wine. That meant that on average we each drank about 3/4 of a bottle of wine. This is more than the health recommendations. The next day we did not have a hangover and we didn't feel any sense of guilt. We didn't feel the need to go on the wagon for the rest of the month. Our drinking habits mean that over the course of the month we don't drink too much.

Without being sanctimonious or finger pointing, my opinion is that if you drink so much that you feel the need not to drink for the month of January then you might be better off not drinking at all. Lots of people indulge in dry January because of peer pressure or blandishments from the health authorities and they are not problem drinkers. There is, however, a substantial number of people who cannot control their drinking, if you are one of then the best advice is to quit altogether, as you can still enjoy your life by just drinking water, tea or coffee - this is what we did on our 6 day abstinence.

Wednesday, 12 January 2022

Covid19 Loss of taste and smell - a disaster for wine lovers.

Just before Christmas my wife and I caught the dreaded Covid 19 virus. I was rather shocked. The symptoms that we experienced were so mild that it was almost impossible to believe that we had a respiratory disease. I just had some nasal congestion and my wife had a bout of sneezing. Our symptoms  lasted one day only. Because my wife was due to meet someone who was medically vulnerable she took an antigen lateral flow test, which was positive, so I took one and got the same result. We immediately informed all our personal contacts for the previous week, but none of them subsequently tested positive.

I believe that I caught the virus at the vaccination clinic for a "booster" injection which was overcrowded and there were plenty of people coughing. I then passed the infection on to my wife. Masks did not protect me and we probably caught the Delta variant rather than the more infectious Omicron one.

I believe that we had a re-infection because I fell ill to an infection in January 2020 which had all the symptoms of C19, but no-one was being tested at that time to prove it. My symptoms then were more severe including a loss of sense of smell and taste. I recovered quite quickly from a continuous dry cough which made it felt as if my lungs were on fire. I also had a fever which I recovered from overnight. My wife also caught symptoms from me which were less severe. During my sickness which lasted for about 7 or 8 days not a single drop of wine passed my lips. I have to be really ill to not drink at all.

I believe that our previous infection helped to reduce the severity of the subsequent one, but in co-operation with being vaccinated twice.

After the positive lateral flow test we confirmed the diagnosis with a PCR test and filled in all the forms listing our symptoms. After the PCR test we felt that we were in grand form. We could not confirm that we had any symptom related to Covid 19, so we would have been recorded as asymptomatic. Then all of a sudden I felt that I had lost my sense of taste but not completely. I could smell my wife's Eau de Cologne with my nose 1cm above the open bottle but no further. However, I could taste mouthwash an hour after spitting it out. I could taste all the components of my evening wine, but I could hardly smell the wine from the glass.  The flavour of a wine is not just tasted; your taste buds can only detect, saltiness, sour, sweet and bitter, however, the full taste and flavour of a wine or food is detected by your sense of smell which complements the basic four tastes on your palate. I could still appreciate my Alain Mathias Epineuil but not to the full extent and so could my wife. 

We also detected a change to our sense of taste. The taste of slightly burnt toast was acrid to me. The loss of a sense of smell worried us a little and we installed an extra smoke alarm as we could not smell our dinner cooking even if we could taste the food. I have a possible explanation as to why we could taste our food and wine but not smell it. It seemed to me that our noses could not detect odours being breathed in through the nose only, but that odours emanating from the mouth could be detected by smell receptors at the back of the nose. The loss of our sense of  taste lasted all the way through our ten day quarantine, and this was disquieting until I remembered that my mother lost her sense of taste when she had a cold and she eventually insisted that we paid a visit to the seaside. The sea air helped her recover and she too was disturbed by her loss of this vital sense.

The day after our quarantine was over, we celebrated by going to Whitstable on the north  Kent coast to breathe in some fresh sea air and to eat their famous oysters. Yippee, we were able to smell a glass of muscadet  and savour it without washing it around our mouths. We could both smell and test our food and our coffee afterwards. Our trip to Whitstable had been worth it and our noses were cleared of congestion into the bargain.

The next day, on a walk ,we could smell a petrol engine and the school dinners being dished up in the cantine. However, my sense of smell had not completely recovered. It took almost three weeks to recover completely  and I only noticed that it had returned completely when I could smell the chip shop from 300 metres away, albeit down wind. I can now smell my wife's Eau de Cologne from a considerable distance. I have read that some people take weeks to recover their sense of smell after a bout of Coved 19 infection and they too are very disturbed by it.

Apart from getting very ill,  keeping your sense of smell is a very good reason to avoid getting a C19 infection but this is easier said than done without isolating yourself, and it is difficult to enjoy a good glass of wine without good company - especially if you can't smell it.

Thursday, 4 November 2021

Health claims about drinking too much

Once again the debate about drinking one glass of wine a day is making the rounds of the press with the Times saying that a glass of wine a day is good for your health. I always find these claims amusing. There is no solid evidence that proves that drinking wine is good for your physical health. One thing is certain, is that to consume too much alcohol is damaging to your health. 

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/glass-of-wine-dinner-health-study-lancet-jmqskxvd8

Another certainty, is that despite how much wine you drink you are going to die and reducing the consumption of wine and cigarettes and other substances will not stop you from dying. You are going to die whether you like it or not. I am also amused by statistical studies which "prove" that if you drink one glass of wine over the arbitrary limits set by health care professionals then you will reduce your life span by an hour or half an hour or whatever.

Presumably, you could counteract the detrimental effects of wine over-consumption by not eating red meat, and to live longer by following a nutritionist's healthy diet. Life is too complicated to base your decisions on what you should eat or drink based on statistical analyses. 

I fear that this controversy will go on and on until the health professionals finally achieve their aim of no-one drinking wine or whiskey or whatever.  What about coca-cola? Why has no-one done research into the dangers of drinking more than a glass-full a day, or lemon juice or carrot juice? It is up to the individual to decide how much wine they drink. My advice is not to drink too much so that it affects your physical or mental health.

Of course drinking too much wine is dangerous , that is obvious and most of us do not need to be reminded of it. I shall continue to drink a glass of wine with a good meal or with friends because it makes me feel better,  and I am cheered up by the conviviality. I am not going to feel guilty if, occasionally, I go over the top. At my advanced years I know that I can't consume several glasses a day, so I give wine and beer a rest for two or three days a week. I am fully aware of what is going to happen but I am not ready for my last sip just yet.

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2018/apr/12/one-extra-glass-of-wine-will-shorten-your-life-by-30-minutes 

https://www.eatthis.com/drink-wine-every-night/

Wednesday, 8 September 2021

Yippee the supermarket shelves are filling up with wine

 I went to our local supermarket this morning to find that some of the empty shelves were being filled up with wine. Overseas readers may not now that there is a shortage of heavy lorries drivers owing to Brexit. Thousands of lorry drivers from the EU have left the UK because of the C19 pandemic and Brexit, and they are not coming back either because they feel un-welcome or they need a visa to come to Britain now to work. They are considered to be unskilled workers so not many visas are being handed out.


This is one of the victories of Brexit, and perhaps the only one, with supermarkets over-flowing with wine - it's a pity about the prices.

The supermarkets must have enormous stocks of wine if they are able to replace the empty food shelves with wine.   However, the price of wine is now so high that I doubt if it is shifting quickly, but luckily it has a long shelf life. Brexit resulted in the cost of imported wine shooting through the roof because the pound fell so heavily against the Dollar and the Euro.

I don't buy wine now unless it is discounted, but this morning I bought a bottle of one of my favourite wines, "Château Pey La Tour 2019 red", from Dourthe: this wine is typical of a good AOP  Bordeaux. It was GBP 7.99 instead of GBP10.69. This is not a bargain though compared to the prices in France.

I noticed in the aisles that the cost of a discounted Crémant de Bourgogne sparkling wine was  GBP13.99; this is as costly as a bottle of good quality Champagne that I can by directly from the suppliers in France.

https://www.waitrosecellar.com/red-wine-offers/chateau-pey-la-tour-885888