Tuesday 04/01/08 - - Wine Writer
New Zealand Wines: The Two Best Bets
Every wine-producing nation has a specialty. From nations good at producing Cabernet to those who excel in Chardonnay, from those who are excellent makers of Semillon to those who know the quality of their Shiraz is a sure thing, many nations have a wine that they make best. For New Zealand, two wines can be considered the ?special:? Pinot Noir and Sauvignon Blanc. Putting many grapes in the baskets of these two wines, New Zealand relies on their excellence to keep the wine industry continually prospering.
Pinot Noir is a light-colored red wine with hints of berries, plums, cherries, and tomato flavors. On occasion, the taste of earth or wood may sometimes seep in. While it goes well with the typical food fitted for red wines - including red meat, creamy sauces, and spicy seasonings - Pinot Noir is more adaptable than other red wines and also compliments both chicken and pork.
Pinot Noir is a bit of a high maintenance wine, relying on a grape that rolls its eyes and huffs sarcastically whenever its asked to ripen. It quite simply is hard to cultivate. Many nations, however, believe that the difficulty in planting is trumped by the finished product.
Pinot Noir is most famous for being French; the wineries of France are particularly gifted in this type of wine. But, New Zealand is close behind, frightening the French bottles of Pinot Noir and causing them to wee wee unexpectedly in their bottles.
Red wine and New Zealand, because New Zealand does not have a high amount of sunshine, initially seemed like a poor pairing. But, after a successful run with Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot in the Auckland region, the two entities proved to be an adequate combo. Once Pinot Noir entered, the combination went from adequate to wonderful.
A type of Pinot Noir soon flourished in the Canterbury region, making Canterbury the province where it found its first New Zealand home. Martinborough, located on the south end of the North Island, was the next place Pinot Noir took off. For a decade, the vineyards of this region produced Pinot Noir laden with flavor and complexity.
Central Otago was eventually given a trial run at producing Pinot Noir. This trial run was offered in part because of Central Otago?s reputation of producing great fruit. While Central Otago was originally overlooked as a region because of its very southern location, the surrounding mountain range helped increase the temperature variations among seasons. This benefited production of the grape. The latest area to adopt Pinot Noir is Waitaki, located on the border between Otago and Canterbury
On the other end of the color spectrum is New Zealand?s most famous white wine, Sauvignon Blanc. This wine is responsible for the wine glasses of the world turning towards New Zealand and asking for a sample. A green skin grape, Sauvignon Blanc is typically described as crisp, dry and fresh with flavors that can vary from leafy to fruity. It goes well with fish, cheese and even sushi. It also doesn?t benefit much from aging and is typically drank young.
New Zealand is thought to be the ideal home for Sauvignon Blanc, a virtual headquarters in a globe of possibilities. This is particularly true of the Marlborough region. Montana Wines first laid claim to this region by producing Sauvignon Blanc in 1979. Located in the north tip of the South Island, the Marlborough region proved to be an area where Sauvignon Blanc absolutely flourished.
The decade of the 1990?s saw Sauvignon Blanc make a name for itself in New Zealand. Not only did the lands of Marlborough evolve into vineyards at an expedited rate, but New Zealand finally found a wine they were proud to label theirs. Producing bottles high in quality and low in expense, many wineries of New Zealand - Montana, Hunters, and Cloudy Bay Vineyards - began producing what many people assert are the greatest Sauvignon Blanc?s in the world.
It is the flavors of New Zealand?s Sauvignon Blanc that leaves it superior. Filled with the taste of green vegetables - green beans, teas, limes, and herbs - as well as sweet flavors - mango, and passion fruit - this wine tastes like, and is rivaled by, no other.
New Zealand is a country with wine that will only get better as time goes on. These two types are just the beginning of a culture that could soon be known more for wine than for kiwi. Pinot Noir and Sauvignon Blanc aren?t the only wines in New Zealand?s cellar, but they are the wines inside the trophy case.
Jennifer Jordan is the senior editor at http://www.savoreachglass.com With a vast knowledge of wine etiquette, she writes articles on everything from how to hold a glass of wine to how to hold your hair back after too many glasses. Ultimately, she writes her articles with the intention that readers will remember wine is fun and each glass of anything fun should always be savored. |
Another short Wine Writer review
Tips on Making Affordable Wine Recipes
One of the great things about wine on a date is that one bottle is a defined amount, normally about five glasses. If shared equally it is unlikely tha...
Click Here to Read More About Wine ...
Wine Writer Products we recommend
The FTD Elegant Tribute Bouquet - Premium
This elegant bouquet lets family and friends know your thoughts are with them. Lilies and alstroemeria are mixed with greenery and delivered in a glass vase. S37-3120P
Price: 79.99 USD
Headlines on Wine Writer
2008 Cellar guide hits stores
Mon, 24 Mar 2008 01:10:01 PDT
The newest edition of Guida Cantine d'Italia 2008 edited by Go Wine and dedicated to Wine Tourism is now on bookstore shelves. The guide lists 450 cellars open on weekends, 1,300 wines, descriptions of surrounding art and nature, 900 useful addresses for eating and sleeping and 23 full colour maps. read more
Vegetarian cassoulet
Mon, 24 Mar 2008 06:50:32 PDT
Does anyone remember the J. Peterman catalog? At this point, it’s probably best remembered from Seinfeld, on which Elaine got a job writing the fanciful text for the catalog, but I remember the catalog itself well from the late 80s and early 90s. It sticks out in my memory not only because my best childhood friend’s mother was one of the artists for it at the time, because it was, well, simply unlike any other catalog I’d seen before or have seen since. A clothing catalog illustrated with dr
Anti-Snob Wine Appreciation: 7 Tips from Sonoma
Tue, 25 Mar 2008 18:37:38 PDT
Thick legs, full body, good structure. Sounds to me like a bad Match.com description. But no, it’s a cabernet sauvignon. Huh?
Biwa
Wed, 26 Mar 2008 19:48:46 PDT
It’s hard to be terribly impressed with Japanese restaurants in Portland. Aside from a couple of outstanding examples, Japanese restaurants here are fairly mediocre and formulaic. Sloppy mayo-filled sushi rolls, pasty overcooked udon noodles in packaged broths, and sugary sweet teriyakis are Portland’s curse. This is most apparent in our lack of good noodle shops and absence of the wonderful Japanese tradition of Izakaya - those casual drinking establishments that serve a wide variety of snacks
Find your sipping point (Orange County Register)
Thu, 27 Mar 2008 03:08:04 PDT
From Brix in Sunset Beach to Tannins in San Juan Capistrano, there's a wine bar to savor.
Aubrey de Grey, Technological Immortalism, and the Idea of a Longevity Singularity
Thu, 27 Mar 2008 17:18:06 PDT
There is a saying that nothing is inevitable but death and taxes, but it is beginning to look to some people, strangely enough, as if taxes will end up being the more inevitable of the two. In fact, reading the reports of gerontologists these days sometimes suggests that if we just put our tax dollars to work in the right places we might have the whole death thing licked in no time at all. For a readable account of the more radical sort of discourse I am talking about here, have a look at this
Bordeaux Wine
Wine Racks
Italy Wine | Jordan Wine
Labels: Marvel Wine | Merlot Wine
&type=page">






