Information Blog

11:44 PM

Sunday October 19, 2008 - Wine Ingredients

Another Great Wine Ingredients Article

I Love French Wine and Food - Reviewing The Whites


I recently finished a wine tour of Italy?s twenty administrative regions, briefly describing each region prior to tasting a representative wine with food, and at least one imported Italian cheese. I enjoyed the experience so much that I plan to repeat it, but only after doing something similar for France and perhaps a few other countries. I am happy enough with Italian wine to continue to drink it for the rest of my days, but there are other wine-producing countries out there, and other wines to drink. I am going to give you a bit of a report on the white wines I encountered on this wine tour, but only after a quick summary of Italian white wines, as if such an endeavor was possible. Look for a similar article on Italian red wines.

You wouldn?t be alone if you immediately think red when the subject of Italian wine is raised. In spite of extreme variations in climate, soil, elevation, and other geographical conditions, every single one of Italy?s twenty regions produces white wine. Of course the percentage varies widely from 84% in the central region of Latium to 9% in the southern region of Calabria. Many of the best-known Italian white wines come from northern Italy.

But the reality of Italy wine is more complex than first meets the eye. Who would have thought that Sicily, a southern Italian region if ever there was one, produces almost as much white wine as red wine. Considering that Sicily holds first place for Italian wine production that?s a lot of white wine. In fact, Sicily?s annual white wine production is greater than the total wine production of all but five Italian regions. Not all of it is good. But not all of it is bad, and in fact some Sicilian white wine is excellent.

In chronological order we tasted a white wine from the northern region of Emilia-Romagna, the central region of Umbria, the southern region of Campagnia, the central region of Molise, the northern region of Friuli-Venezia Giuli, the southern region of Sicily, the northern region of Veneto, and finally the northern region of Tuscany while describing its neighboring region of Liguria. I was unable to find a Ligurian wine.

These eight wines varied in classification from basically unclassified table wines to IGT, DOC, and DOCG. In short all Italian wine classifications were represented. IGT stands for Indicazione Geografica Tipica, which may be translated as Typical Geographic Indication, in other words a wine that typifies its specific location. DOC stands for Denominazione di Origine Controllata, which may be translated as Denomination of Controlled Origin. DOCG stands for Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Guarantita, which may be translated as Denomination of Controlled and Guaranteed Origin.

The wines varied in price from $6 (actually $8 for a one-liter bottle) to $20. Interestingly enough they all contained from 12% to 12.5% alcohol. They were all 2004 or 2005 vintages. In contrast, the grapes used varied widely, including both international and strictly Italian varieties. Some wines included multiple grape varieties, others did not. And now for the question that you?ve been waiting for, what about the quality, and in particular the quality as a function of price? That too varied widely, there were both positive and negative surprises. We overpaid and there were definitely some bargains. Which was which? Read the articles.

Levi Reiss has authored or co-authored ten books on computers and the Internet, but to be honest, he would rather just drink fine Italian or other wine, accompanied by the right foods. He teaches classes in computers at an Ontario French-language community college. His wine website is http://www.theworldwidewine.com .



Another short Wine Ingredients review

I Love French Wine and Food - Reviewing The Whites


I recently finished a wine tour of Italy?s twenty administrative regions, briefly describing each region prior to tasting a representative wine with f...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Recommended Wine Ingredients Items

Beaune 1er Cru - Hospices de Beaune - Cuvee Rousseau Deslandes


We purchased this dry red wine at the Hospices de Beaune auction that was held November 17th, 2002, and we have been eagerly anticipating its arrival! Ripe red fruit (strawberry & raspberry) dominate the nose of this 1er Cru, along with notes of violet, licorice and a hint of toasted bread. It is clean and fresh, well-structured and well-balanced, with soft, ripe tannins. The finish is round and elegant and vanilla is persistent throughout the palate. This will pair well with dishes of either red or white meat, grilled, roasted or marinated, as well as more sophisticated dishes such as veal cooked with tarragon or turkey dishes. The Cuvee Rousseau-Deslandes is really the quintessential French Pinot Noir from Burgundy. BHB02 BHB02


Price: 108.99 USD



Wine Ingredients in the news

Avoiding the march - La Paz, Bolivia

Sat, 18 Oct 08 13:12:36 -0700
Jump to the full entry & travel map La Paz, Bolivia We arrived at the office of the agent in Copacabana that sold us our bus tickets at 13:00 for our 13:30 bus. At 13:30 with no sign of a bus Kingsley was getting anxious and when a crammed minibus arrived he started demanding a refund. Turns out the minibus was just to take us 5 blocks to the "real" bus. Much to our horror the bus did not look like what we were expecting, luggage on the roof and old and squashed. It was made worse by the

PARIS Griff Rhys Jones: World’s Greatest Cities

Sat, 18 Oct 08 10:02:45 -0700
Griff describes Paris as small, intense but full of flavour and sets out to find the ingredients that make up this great city. Paris is exquisite in scale and content. New York may boast bigger, taller, London more extensive, but Paris knows it has the finest. It’s the attention to detail that makes this city tick. Paris has probably had more admirers than any place on earth. From the Roman Emperor Julian who called it his ‘beloved city’ to Adolf Hitler, who in 1940 wrote that he had ‘alway

Pamper Party

Sat, 18 Oct 08 05:37:03 -0700
The “Pamper Party” ended up being a Mary Kay party, which, when I found out, I wasn’t psyched. However, our “party” ended up being a lot more fun than I expected! Our night started off with snacks and wine. Thanks to all of you that suggested appetizers for me to bring! Quite a few of you suggested cheese and crackers, and that’s what I brought. At Stop & Shop, I bought a wheel of brie, crackers, and some roasted red pepper tapenade. At Walgreens, I purchased a cute jack-o-lantern plate an

China’s best-known milk candy to return to domestic market soon

Sat, 18 Oct 08 00:01:43 -0700
The producer of China’s iconic White Rabbit milk candy said on Monday the sweets would return to the domestic market within the next few days, as the products had passed Shanghai quality supervision administration tests. The Guanshengyuan company last month recalled all its exports, some of which tested positive for melamine, and announced the suspension of domestic sales on Sept. 26. Guanshengyuan general manager Wen Mao said the company had produced 650 tons of White Rabbit candies since t

A confluence of notable dates…

Fri, 17 Oct 08 23:14:58 -0700
The past week has seen Canadian Thanksgiving, the Canadian national Election and my birthday, concurring within two days. It has been a busy week, and I have spent much time in the kitchen preparing foods and accompanying that, tidying up. We have kept company with friends and family in a swirl of visiting and discussion. We thanked Providence for everyone’s health and for now, ongoing economic stability. It has been largely unspoken, but during times of difficulty we all know we are going to be

Top 5

Fri, 17 Oct 08 19:05:35 -0700
Well the rain started coming down and it still hasn’t let up. According to Weather.com, the sun should be shining when I wake up tomorrow, so I’ll take that as a cue to go to bed now! This afternoon I had a cup of tea around 3pm to cheer me up as I worked on Micro - Followed by this around 5:00!! The husband asked if we were drinking wine tonight. I said I wouldn’t complain (as I worked at my desk) if there was a glass of wine set down beside me. And soon enough one appeared!!! I didn’t k

Top Ten GOOD Ina-isms

Fri, 17 Oct 08 15:45:16 -0700
Starting tomorrow, the Food Network will be airing brand new episodes of The Barefoot Contessa, and in honor of this GOOD event, I've decided to rank my top ten "Ina-isms" — those familiar phrases Ina Garten employs time and time again, much to my continued entertainment. The best part about Ina-isms, however, is guessing when they'll pop up. Sure, words like "GOOD" are a dime a dozen, but don't act like you don't get excited when she cracks open an egg. Will there be perhaps a cautionary tale


Wine Vineyard
|

Labels:

BlinkBitsBlinkList Add To BlogmarksCiteULike
diigo furl Google  LinkaGoGo
HOLM ma.gnolianetvouzrawsugar
reddit Mojo this page at Rojo Scuttle Smarking
spurl Squidoo StumbleUpon Tailrank
TechnoratiAddThis Social Bookmark Button

onlywire Socializersocialize it

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home