Drinks of the Month
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8 great bottles to give for Christmas 2022
Bottles might seem like a bit of a cop-out but they're a treat that the recipient is unlikely to buy for themselves. Here are some that are a bit out of the ordinary ...
Black Cow Christmas Spirit £25 for 50cl
Sherries are often described as liquid Christmas pudding but this vodka-based spirit really is - full of raisins and cinnamon and cloves. I’m not sure I’d top it up with champagne, as suggested, but it’s lovely to sip on its own. (Not so much for drinking this spirit but they have some incredibly cute highball glasses with little cows frolicking over them too.)
We all want to do our bit for Ukraine but here’s a way of building it into your ‘gifting’ as we must now call it. So well done Sainsbury’s for stocking this smooth Ukrainian vodka which I would keep in the freezer over Christmas.
Sainsbury's is also selling a 50cl bottle of Krupnik for £11.50 (and their cherry vodka for just £9.50)
One Remarkable Botanical Vodka 40% £34
The latest release from the innovative distiller, One, flavoured (rather deliciously) with fresh sage, citrus and vanilla. You might think that makes it a gin but it doesn’t include juniper.
What I love about this range - which also includes a gin - is the beautifully embossed bottles which they encourage you to recycle as a water carafe - or you can buy them separately for £12). £3 from every purchase goes to The One Foundation which helps to fund clean water projects.
Tamdhu 15 year old 46%
I was going to recommend the Macallan’s special Christmas bottling until I discovered it was £950! Crazy like everything Macallan but if you fancy a special bottle of whisky can I suggest the Tamdhu 15 y o which I discovered on my road trip to Scotland this summer. Not cheap, I know at £77.50 (Master of Malt) though some places are charging nearer £90 but a real treat. Sherry cask without being too heavily sherried.
Veuve Clicquot, Smeg edition
Champagne is always a great gift but Veuve Clicquot have taken it to another level packaging it in a bright orange, fridge-shaped tin, thanks to their collaboration with Smeg. Totally cool and still cheaper than Krug! £58 Clos 19, £68 Fenwick. Selfridges has one with the rosé and a pink fridge tin for £71.99.
Specially Selected 8 year old muscat dessert wine 18% £9.99 Aldi
This Aussie alternative to port is absolutely luscious - think liquid burnt toffee. A great bottle to take to a Christmas lunch or when you go round to the neighbours for a few mince pies. Would also go with the Christmas pudding. Good value too.
Saicho sparkling tea
I love this range of sparkling teas which are a great alcohol-free alternative to champagne or other sparkling wine. You can also buy them individually. Darjeeling and jasmine are probably going to be the most popular flavours but I personally like the Hojicha which is made from roasted green tea. It has a slightly nutty flavour - they recommend it with sushi which I can imagine would be ace. The whole set in a gift box comes to £55.99 or you can buy a mini collection pack for £14.99
Innis & Gunn 06 Vanishing Point 11%
I know it is infuriating to include it when this amazing beer (think bittersweet chocolate with notes of espresso coffee, treacle toffee, and prunes) which was matured in 18 year old Glenlivet malt whisky casks is sold out (unless you know a specialist beer shop who might have a bottle) but the 05 which underwent a similar maturation is still available.
Or go for another imperial stout. In a recent Twitter exchange prompted by this request from beer writer Pete Brown …
Can anyone recommend an Imperial Stout (8%+) currently available in the UK, that is made out of BEER, with no cake ingredients, nuts, coffee, vanilla, spices, fruit, berries, rum, coconut, maple syrup, jam, biscuits, vienetta or trifle in it? You know, like, a BEER?
… his followers suggested Siren’s Origin Story and Kernel’s Imperial Brown Stout
(Totally with Pete on this but would be nice to see some of these in a bigger, more impressive bottle)
Anyway hope that helps with your present-giving this year. Do post any other bottles you think people might enjoy!
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The best Jubilee fizz bargains
If you’re planning to celebrate the Jubilee with a glass - or two - of bubbly you’re not alone. According to Majestic the UK is going to be consuming 114 glasses of fizz per minute over the bank holiday weekend (not sure how they calculate this but fair to say it’s likely to be a fair bit!)
A lot of it, they say, will be English sparkling wine which has come down a fair bit in price with brand leader Nyetimber widely on offer at around £28. But there are cheaper places to buy it than Majestic even with their mix six deal - and cheaper English sparkling wines, come to that (some of which are made by the same winemaking team as Nyetimber though under a separate label Rolling Green Hills).
If you’re after a single bottle I would always advocate buying from an indy or direct from the producer if you have one near you but here’s where you’ll find the best supermarket bargains for bigger numbers.
For once Aldi and Lidl are not the place to go for cut-price bubbly although both have their well-priced champagne (Veuve Monsigny, in the case of Aldi, Comte de Senneval at Lidl)
But Asda, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s and Tesco all have 25% off six bottle deals (in Tesco’s case just for Clubcard members) which gives you more scope.
Asda
As I pointed out in my recent article for Guardian money Asda has the biggest discount at the moment - a half price deal on their newly launched Asquith Gardens which is selling for £9.99 and on which I was considerably keener than the customer who gave it a one star rating! Add the 25% discount if you buy 6 (which can be any six) and that brings the cost down to £7.49. They also have Heidsieck & Co Monopole Blue Top champagne for £14.99 a bottle though not, it seems, on the discount deal (corrected by the reader below) And if you’re willing to drink cava rather than prosecco you can buy the very decent Marques del Norte for £7 (or £5.25 if you buy 6). Good with fish and chips.
Morrisons
Morrisons is obviously trying to steal Asda’s thunder by reducing its 2010 vintage The Best English Sparkling wine which I think has the edge on the Asquith to £15 instead of £25. Other fizz (and other wines) in their The Best range are on a 25% discount if you buy 3 - rather than six - bottles which would bring their basic The Best prosecco down to £5.99.
Sainsbury’s
Given its 25% off six bottles promotion Sainsbury’s has the best price on Nyetimber which is already on offer at £28 which makes it £21 on this deal. I also like their Ellercombe English sparkling wine (normally £22 down to £16.50) and their Taste the Difference Conegliano prosecco which is reduced to £8.50 (making it £6.38 on this offer)
Tesco
Tesco is offering its Clubcard members 25% off six bottles (you really need to be a Clubcard member to shop at Tesco these days). I’m not a massive fan of their English fizz (the rosé is better but it appears to be out of stock at the moment) but would buy their always reliable premier cru champagne, particularly in indulgent half bottles (£12 reduced to £9 for Clubcard members who buy six. The full size bottle is £21 which comes down to £15.75.) If you prefer a slightly fruitier fizz the Graham Beck brut from South Africa (£13 reduced to £9.75) is really nice - good for those who find champagne too dry and prosecco a touch too sweet.
Waitrose
Waitrose has focussed more on Jubilee editions than special offers but it has a good deal on Nyetimber at £27.90 which might be worth getting if you just want a single bottle. And a special limited edition bottle of Moet rosé for £46.
Note, although I’ve given the links it may not be possible to order the wines online in time for the weekend.
That’s it at the time of writing but given the intense competition to get customers through their doors for their main Jubilee shop I wouldn’t be surprised to see more offers in the next couple of days.
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What champagne to buy (and what not to buy) for Valentine's Day
Do you need to splash out on champagne for Valentine’s Day - and if so how much do you need to pay for it? You may not realise quite what pressure you’re under to spend over the odds
Must it be pink?
For a start, there’s the colour. Rosé champagne, which is heavily promoted at this time of year, costs more than ordinary non-vintage despite only being marginally more expensive to make. Compare the price of standard and rosé sparkling wine and you’ll see there’s little if any difference though English winemakers have tended to follow their French counterparts in slapping on a premium.
The new kid on the block this year is pink prosecco (producers who wanted to make a sparkling rosé couldn't call it prosecco before) which tends to be cheaper. Lidl does a very posh looking one for just £6.49.
Are the reductions genuine?
Well they have to have been sold at the original price by law but how often do you see them at that price? To take a typical example the full price of Bollinger is around £45-£50 normally though Harvey Nichols has it for £55. Waitrose is currently selling it for £35 - £10 cheaper than Tesco but still not cheap when you think about it. You could get a couple of REALLY good still wines for £35.
Should I buy vintage fizz?
Vintage champagne - champagne that comes from a single year rather than being blended from wines from several harvests - is pricier still. Generally it’s of a higher quality but unless you’re going to savour every sip (and haven’t you other things to concentrate on?) it’s possibly not worth it on this occasion.
What about a half bottle?
You need to be aware you're paying a premium for half bottles given the extra costs of bottling a non-standard size but that said It may be just the amount of champagne you actually want to drink. Two I recommended a couple of months ago in The Guardian are Pol Roger and Louis Roederer. You're more likely to find them in a local wine merchant though than in a supermarket. (My local, DBM Wines in Bristol generally has the Pol)
Do you pay for the name?
Then there’s the snob factor. You will pay inevitably pay more for a famous name than a lesser known champagne house or own label. Do by all means splash out on a grande marque if it will do the trick but If your loved one doesn't know one champagne from the next and would actually rather have a glass of prosecco don’t waste your money!
So what specifically should I buy?
As I've suggested it depends who you're buying it for but I’d be inclined to pick from one of these:
Sainsbury's brut rosé champagne £22
If you’re not a label fetishist this very pretty champagne which is made by the respected house of Duval-Leroy is great value. Often on special offer though sadly not at the moment.
Le Pionniers rosé from the Co-op £22
The rosé version of the Co-op's excellent Les Pionniers range is still the same price as when I first wrote this article in 2018. and is not wildly more expensive than the standard version.
Devaux Oeil de Perdrix £27.99 a bottle if you buy on a mix six deal from Majestic (not all of which have to be champagne)
Less well known but delicate and prettily packaged barely pink fizz which Majestic has been selling for yonks (oeil de perdrix means partidge's eye which admittedly may not be the big selling point for your loved one)
Bollinger
As I mentioned Asda and Waitrose are both selling Bolly for £35 which you may feel is worth a whirl. So does Amazon if you’re on Prime.
Taittinger Brut NV
A lighter, fresher style of champagne for those who don't like it too toasty and biscuity. Waitrose has it for £28 currently which is a pretty good deal.
Bredon Cuvée Jean Louis Brut £17.99 Waitrose
There’s a full 1/3 discount on this consistently reliable rich toasty fizz which is less than you’ll pay for full bottles of their own label fizz but they are selling half bottles for £11.99 currently and as part of their Valentine's Day meal deal.
These comparisons do show how wildly champagne prices can fluctuate - not only on V day, right throughout the year - so at least Google the champagne you’re thinking of buying to make sure you’re not paying over the odds. (Amazon, for example, may be the most convenient but it's rarely the cheapest for wine!)
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