Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

TDG: Wine Camp: Use It Or Lose It . . . Sherry


Fat Guy

Recommended Posts

Thanks for the great article Craig. And I'm happy and proud to say that I indeed have sherry bottles in my recycle. I'm a regular consumer of Hildago La Gitana and also a huge fan of the Lustau wines. (which, incidently, are harder to find so now I know why..) but I'm lucky to live close to The Spanish Table and they have an awesome selection of sherries. I've always felt these were highly underrated wines.

Born Free, Now Expensive

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've always liked the sherry glasses that they use in what seems like every bodega in Andalusia. They're perhaps 100-125ml in volume, made of normal wine-glass material, and look like squat champagne flutes with a 1-2cm stem.

Copitas - the name of the glasses you see in Spain can be hard to track down. However, the official INAO tasting glasses are relatively easy to find and not too expensive. They work great both for Sherry and Port.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"La Gitana Manzanilla from Hildago competes for the "best aperitif on the planet" award. "

Here, here!

When I first had this wine over 10 years ago, it was an eye and mind opening experience.

I have never met a miserly wine lover
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Good news from Stephen Metzler, the dedicated and passionate owner of Classical Wines of Spain, of one of the top importers of quality Spanish wine. He has convinced Hildago to bottle La Gitana in 500 ml. which is the perfect size to help you keep your Manzanilla fresh. BEST OF ALL they will include the bottling date in plain English on the new label.

Compliments once again to Steven and Classical Wines of Spain for their commitment to quality. Look for their label on bottles of Spanish wine and you will be rewarded.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For my birthday, my girlfriend made me a tapas meal with a special tasting flight, devised by her native genius (with some help from the guy at Spanish Table):

Manzanilla La Cigarrera

Alvear Fino "en Rama" 1998

Barbadillo Palo Cortado "Obispo Gascon"

Barbadillo Oloroso Seco "Cuco"

Unfortunately, I didn't read Craig's latest article until this morning, so I did not take notes.

All were excellent, the Manzanilla fresh and refreshing as a good manzanilla should be. The fino, as Craig noted above, was 100% PX, from Montilla Moriles, and "vintage", so no solera. I would have liked to compare it to a "normal" fino, because it tasted exactly like a (very good) normal fino in my mind -- bone-dry, nutty, flor-al. I sort of felt that the regular 8-10 degrees C was too cold to really tease out the complexities, but my palate is still a little out of sorts.

We concluded the meal with the last two and a cheese plate. As you can imagine, they were amazing, particularly with the manchego/membrillo combination. By this time, I may have been a teensy bit wasted, because I find it hard to come up with appropriate adjectives. How many times can you say "nutty"? I will say that a good cheese plate is brilliant with powerful sherries like these -- every bite seems to wipe your palate clean, so that each sip has that incredible "first sip" oxidized feeling. Luckily, there is much more of the last two, so I will be able to ponder their deliciousness for weeks to come.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...