One of the many daunting aspects of the Diploma is the blind tasting, where you are asked to provide detailed tasting notes on flights of wine, including spotting the identity of a wine and its age.
To help practise this technique, the WSET recommends a series of flights to taste, such as "Full-bodied spicy reds" (Shiraz, Zinfandel, Malbec) or "Old-World Oaked Whites" (Côte de Beaune, Rioja, Cru Classé Bordeaux). The only problem with this advice is that some of the flights suggested are quite expensive - "Gamey, Strawberry-ish reds" (Burgundy, Barolo, Rioja) - and you need like-minded people to share the wines with.
For this reason - and despite tasting lots of wine in the meantime - I had until now only gone through one of the recommended flights, "Syrah/Shiraz" (Northern Rhône, South-Eastern Australia, Barossa). Here, identifying the inexpensive wine was straightforward, but less so distinguishing between the French Syrah and Barossa Shiraz, showing just far from its stereotypes premium Australian Shiraz lies.
I finally rectified this lack of flight tasting by haphazardly creating a version of the recommended flight of "Unoaked aromatic whites" (Alsace Gewurztraminer, Argentinian Torrontés, Dry Muscat). Not having two of these in the house, I opted for an Australian Viognier and a Vinho Verde, as well as an Alsace Gewurztraminer, all of which are available from the Wine Society.
Knowing what the wines were, if not which ones were which, clearly helped. The distinctive aromas of Gewurztraminer leapt out of the glass and the slight spritz pointed towards the Vinho Verde, leaving the Viognier as a process of deduction. Next, it's braving tasting wines completely blind...
what we tasted
Vinho Verde, Viognier, Gewurztraminer |
Dócil Vinho Verde, Niepoort 2012, £9.95
Vinho Verde is the only region in Portugal known for its white wines. Possessing a floral aroma with a slight sparkle, it can be made from a variety of grapes, including, as here, Loureiro.Dirk Niepoort is a character in the Portuguese wine scene; from an important port family, he also produces great reds and whites from the Douro, but I didn't know he also made Vinho Verde. However, this wine didn't have the character of his Douro whites I've tasted.
Tasting notes: deep lemon-green colour; citrus fruits (grapefruit, lemon) and tropical fruits (banana) on the nose, with medium(-) intensity; high acidity, medium intensity and body, and same citrus fruits on the palate, with a spicy (ginger) finish.
Overall conclusion: good. Nose lacking, but spicy finish on mouth.
Princes Abbés, Schlumberger 2011, £13.50
From an historic, and Alsace's largest, estate, you could smell the rich aromas of Gewurztraminer before you even picked up the glass.Tasting notes: medium gold colour; pronounced intensity on the nose, with tropical fruits (lychee, mango, pineapple), stone fruits (apricot), and citrus fruits (orange peel and marmalade); on the palate, medium-dry, medium(+) acidity and intensity; fruits as above, with a medium(+) finish.
Overall conclusion: good. I felt that the acidity wasn't quite high enough to balance the sweetness.
Tahbilk Viognier 2012
Tahbilk, from Nagambie Lakes in Victoria, own the oldest Marsanne vines in the world, dating back to the 1860s. I've tasted their Marsanne wines before - nutty, danky, and weirdly ageworthy - but this is the first time I've had any of their other wines. Viognier is a grape which produces perfumed, floral wines and this was the best wine of the three.Tasting notes: medium lemon colour; green fruits (apples and ripe pears), tropical fruits (mango, passion fruit), kernel, and possibly some MLF; medium(+) acidity, body, and flavour intensity on the palate, with pine nuts, cinnamon, white pepper, as well as green and tropical fruits, with a long finish.
Conclusion: very good. Depth of flavour and intensity, though spices dominate the finish.
Three good wines which, despite all being aromatic, were quite different: a fresh Vinho Verde, a medium-dry Gewurztraminer, and a fuller-bodied Viognier. The New World screwcap wins...
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