Cuisine

WINE TASTINGS

Cabernet sauvignon plays nicely with a host of blending buddies, finds MARY-THERESE BLAIR.

The best Bordeaux varieties, syrah and shiraz.

THE TITLE BORDEAUX, when we talk about red wine, encompasses a wide range of wines: cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc, merlot, malbec and petit verdot as single varietal wines or as any blend of two or more, usually with cabernet sauvignon or merlot as the dominant grape. I’m no mathematician so my brain boggles at the potential number of combinations that could result from a set of five master wines, but I do know it’s a lot.

It’s interesting that the majority of our wines are cabernet sauvignon either as single varietals or as part of a blend. The most-grown red grape in the world, cabernet sauvignon is thick skinned, resilient and renowned for its versatility, agebility and those remarkable tannins that give intensity and structure. It makes up a small fraction of what we do here in coolclimate New Zealand, so it’s particularly gratifying to see a Waiheke wonder taking the top spot, with warmerclimate competitors strong in the mix.

EDITOR’S LETTER

en-nz

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://cuisine.pressreader.com/article/282827899816990

Slick & Sassy Media Ltd