Thanks to all who have commented so far, I will definitely try and incorporate some beer & spirits information on the blog as well. In fact I'm drinking a bottle from my latest home brew right now, a nut brown ale, yum.
I figured it was time for my first wine review and I approach this with much consternation. Most wine reviews list exotic flavors like cassis and rose water and on occasion offer up the description of granite and road tar. While I have been able to isolate flavors in wine I like to leave the elaborate descriptions to the experts. The wine education I received at the Wine School of Philadelphia taught me, what you taste in wine will differ based on your culinary background, e.g. a Pakistani may taste something completely different than a Brit. This made complete sense to me and left me relieved that each bottle I opened as I delved deeper into wine enjoyment was going to be a test. I'll explore the different flavors that can be tasted in wine later, but just remember, fruit, earth & barrel.... more later.
Without further ado the wine review for this evening. Most of the experts use a 100 point rating scale, 100 being perfect, I however am going to use a simpler more elementary scale of bad, so-so, decent, good, great! This scale may change at any time to include, kick ass or toilet water, so be on your toes.
I had the pleasure last year of tasting a fun little wine from Australia called Woop Woop. If you're a person that buys wine by the name or label, you'll stumble upon a good one here. At around $9 a bottle you can't beat the rich, dense fruit from this wine. The Wine Advocate gave this wine an 89 (not too bad) and posted: "Dark violet. Smoke-tinged blackberry and blackcurrant on the nose, with complicating notes of cured meat and sweet vanilla. Suave and round, with supple tannins framing sweet raspberry and blackberry flavors. Finishes fleshy, sweet and persistent, with subtle lingering notes of smoke and spice."
The cork from this wine is a little crazy too. Ever had a loose bit of string hanging from your shirt and when you tried to pull it off it just unraveled more of your shirt? The cork is vinyl but it's more like a stopper than a cork. Wrapped around the neck of the wine is a vinyl string you have unwind before you can pop the stopper, unique.
In summation this is a very good wine for your buck, test it out and post your response? I think you'll be surprised.