Holiday Gift Guide

How the mighty have fallen. Last year we were riding high with extreme wine accessories. This year we’re going back to basics for our holiday gift giving. Wines, glasses and books. Period.

Wine

Sweet wines are the perfect wine gift. Practically everybody loves them but either can’t admit it or won’t buy them for themselves. How did dryness ever become the popular standard of sophistication? Humans have a natural preference for sweet things – our positive response to them is our bodies’ primitive way of telling us what we’re eating or drinking has nutritional value. Back to basics: caveman and cavewoman need sweet wine. Another great thing about sweet wines is that they’re cheaper than dry wines of similar quality. The easiest way to find excellent value sweet wines is to go to your favorite wine shop and ask for a recommendation. You may be amazed at the amount of geeky enthusiasm you’ve unleashed. Proceed with caution but go with their advice. Otherwise, here are a few excellent value suggestions: Kourtaki Mavrodaphne of Patras NV $9 find this wine Mavrodaphne of Patras is a Port-like Greek dessert wine from main wine region of the Peloponnese. Named after the indigenous grape variety, Mavrodaphne, that it’s made from, it has the spicy warm holiday flavors of English Christmas pudding. A cheap, cheerful and delicious way to toast Tiny Tim. PEDRO ROMERO Moscatel Sherry NV $13 find this wine In direct defiance of the wine press, wine drinkers worldwide ignore the great wines that are Sherry. What does that mean for Moscatel, one of the less regarded Sherry grape varieties? Quite simply, it means bargains. Also known as Muscat of Alexandria, Moscatel was probably more popular back in Cleopatra’s time. Deliciously raisiny, peachy with orange peel and toasted almonds but with the old world oxidized flavors that will get the nod from hard core wine geeks. Smiles and nods all around- this one is hard to beat. 2004 Coyeux Beaumes de Venise $15 /half find this wine Guaranteed to cheer even the meanest Grinch’s tiny heart, it’s made from Muscat Blanc. Muscat Blanc à Petit Grains, which is the grape's full name is the most acclaimed variety of Muscat. Fresh peachy, grapy and floral this has always been one of my favorite dessert wines. It’s made like port – alcohol is added to stop the fermentation of the grape’s sugars, preserving a nice balance of sweetness. Alois Kracher Beerenauslese $22 to $40/half find this wine The great Alois Kracher tragically died just over a year ago and the Kracher winery is now run by his son Gerhard. If you’ve never had a Beerenauslese wine, where the grapes are picked late in the season and have dried on the vine to concentrate their sugars, the Kracher wines are a great place to start. Not because they’re beginner wines, but because they're amazingly good value for some of the world’s finest Beerenauslese - try any one you can find. 2005 Château La Tour Blanche Sauternes $32/half find this wine This is a spectacular bargain especially since its more illustrious neighbor, Château d'Yquem, goes for $400 to $500 a half bottle in the same vintage. Decanter magazine recently had a blind tasting of Cru Classe Sauternes and preferred the 2003 Château La Tour Blanche (5/5 Stars) to the Château d’Yquem (3/5 Stars). The 2005 vintage is considered even better than 2003. This intensely aromatic and sweet wine is perhaps the greatest bargain in the wine world today. It’s delicious now but really should use a decade or 2 to develop into something amazing.

Glasses

If I could have only one wine glass it would be the 13.6 ounce Schott Zweisel Forte (known in Europe as the Viña). We use ours almost every day for both red and white wines. It's also the official glass of the San Francisco Wine Competition http://www.sfwinecomp.com/, which make sense since it's like an enlarged version of the official INAO (Institut National des Appellations d'Origine) tasting glass. The INAO glass was developed in France in the 1970’s and has long been regarded as the perfect tasting glass except for one critical thing: it’s too small. The Forte is also made from titanium crystal which makes them more durable than regular crystal. They’re not cheap but they don’t cost the world either. Find them in the US Find them in the UK If you can’t force yourself to spend more than $10 on a glass you may want to go the IKEA route. They’re especially handy if your parties end with everyone throwing their glasses into the fireplace. Don’t let the funny names and umlauts distract you, it’s the shape we’re interested in. We want the sides to taper up to concentrate the aromas as the Forte does. These are good choices:

IKEA 365+ IVRIG $2.99 each

OPTIMAL $1.99 each

Here's a mediocre choice and the equivalent of an old wooden tennis racket. This style of glass is often used in fine wine shops and tasting rooms but that doesn't make it good. Why handicap yourself with your equipment when you don't have to?

SVALKA $4.99 /6

To Elvis, drinking his liquor from an old fruit jar was a high insult. These glasses show a similar level of contempt for any wine:

PRALIN $2.99 each

RÄTTVIK $2.99 each

POKAL $7.99 /6

Books

When times are tough it’s time to get real. The wine books recommended here all have a strong dose of reality as they all have a strong sense of context. Two are wine travel guides and one is a guide to drinking with the seasons. The Wine and Food Lover's Guide to Portugal, by Charles Metcalfe and Kathryn McWhirter, will make anyone who enjoys wine and food want to get on a plane to Portugal. It’s organized regionally from the Minho and the wines of Vinho Verde in the north down to the Algarve on the south coast. Beautifully illustrated with tons of photos and useful maps, it would be great if every country had such an incredibly in-depth guide. Hey another country does have such a guide. The UK isn't usually regarded as a wine country but its wines have benefited greatly from rising temperatures. A Guide to the Wines of England and Wales by Philip Williamson, David Moore and Neville Blech is another exhaustively in-depth and beautifully illustrated wine travel guide. It's from the people who make the excellent Wine Behind the Label series. A Year of Wine is probably the first wine book to be organized entirely by season. It’s an approach that makes a lot of sense; just as we eat seasonally it follows that we drink that way as well. Written by super wine-blogger Tyler Colman of www.drvino.com in his easy going humorous style, it makes an excellent gift for anyone interested in wine. It's the kind of book you can read cover to cover or easily browse with Dr. Vino showing you how to "Drink Different." His unique approach includes shopping and travel advice as well as tips on installing a home cellar. The sommelier surveys – interviews with some of American’s best sommeliers – throughout the book reflect its casual conversational tone and high level of insight into the world of wine.

Wine Guides

Dude, I thought it was Wine, glasses and books. Period. Okay, I can’t help meself, I need to hawk me own wares (as well as speak like a pirate). If you want a really special gift, divers right into our online shop. Here are a couple of excellent stocking stuffers:

Contest! Prizes!

In the spirit of holiday giving, Dr. Vino has offered us a signed copy of his excellent A Year of Wine as first prize, second prize is a copy of our new Hardbound Wine Tasting Notebook and third prize is a Pocket Wine Guide. To enter, just let everyone know what your favorite sweet wine is in the comment section below (even if it's Manischewitz Extra Heavy Malaga). Winners will be chosen at random Wednesday, Dec 17th, 2008 at 12 noon EST.

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Comments

  • I liked the Petite Sirah Port Shell Creek from Imagery.

    Tommy on
  • Port Wine. For the moment, I’m stuck with this and am having difficulty getting out of it. Will need at one point to try other things… but I’m still enjoying port too much for the moment.

    There is port for every occasion :P

    nick on
  • As a class…. Tokaji. The decadence and complexity to meet or exceed top Sauternes with much better acidity… So you can enjoy a whole bottle, rather than just a glass…

    As for one bottle…. 1934 Chateau Climens tasted at a Fine Wine Experience 1934 horizontal tasting last year… Breathtaking!

    As for a sweet memory…. Braida’s Brachetto d’Aqui paired with our Choccywoccydoodah dark Belgian chocolate wedding cake… served with love, family, friends and fireworks over Lake Como =)

    Mimi Aye on
  • PX!!!!! lustau pedro ximenez

    wendy on
  • When I had the BUCK$, I enjoyed Heidi Schrock’s Ruster Ausbruch or Gypsy Canyon Ancient Vine Angelica.

    Hunter on
  • I’m extremely impressed using your ability as a copywriter and in addition while using layout on your own blog. Are these claims a paid theme or did you colorize it for you yourself? Anyway maintain the superb quality writing, it really is rare to see a great blog such as this one nowadays

    SEO on
  • Sincerely, and this is from someone that knows only a few sweet wines, i still think that Port wines are fantastic. There´s allways one for every ocasion, every step of the meal, except for the main course. It is a unique wine, and something worth to be tasted and learned…

    Vitor Mendes on
  • It’s time for our PRIZE DRAWING. Drum roll, please. . .

    From the random number generator at random.org

    Here are your random numbers:

    7 14 3

    Timestamp: 2008-12-17 20:52:43 UTC

    Congratulations Stacy Woods, nick and Mike Veseth!

    Steve De Long on
  • Tokaji / Tokay from Hungary. The number of Putnyos (similar to stars in a rating) indicate the percentage of botritus (noble rot) grapes used. 7 Putnyos is all botritus grapes and 1 is 1/7. I prefer about a 3. Sevens have too much of a botritus funk for me. Takay is a remarkable dessert wine. If you ever go to Hungary, be sure to bring back a few bottles. You’ll be glad you did. Of course, it is available stateside, but 1/3 to 1/2 the price over there. I got four bottles from 1 to 7 putnyos for $100 a couple years ago.

    Michael on

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