The HTC Rhyme

The HTC Rhyme is something of a delicate matter, as it is HTC's firstphone that is said to have been designed with a female audience in mind. Yet it comes in dull colours and looks quite a lot like every other HTC handset we’ve seen so far.

PENTAX Q-REVIEW

Let’s get one thing straight from the start. The Pentax Q is quite an incredible camera to behold. It’s tiny. But not only is it tiny, it also looks great.

NIKON 1 V1

Nikon has announced two new compact system cameras: the Nikon 1 V1 and the Nikon 1 J1. We got our hands on both new cameras today, so until we can bring you our Nikon 1 V1 review

The ULTra Personal Rapid Transit System

"Think of it as a horizontal lift," says Fraser Brown, managing director of ULTra, the company that has built a new way to travel to Heathrow Terminal 5 from the business car park

THREE MIFI HSPA

Three has updated its MiFi range with the new Huawei E586 complete with HSPA+, and we have managed to get our hands on one to test out all its mobile internet goodness

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Wine Lover's Holiday Gift Guide

Wine Lover's Holiday Gift Guide

Whether you're looking to splurge or save, the editors of Wine Enthusiast present out-of-the-box wine-, spirits- and food-related ideas for the 2011 holiday season.

Published on Oct 11, 2011
By Wine Enthusiast Editors

Save

Fusion Triumph Stemware ($59.95 for a set of two) Made from European crystal fused with magnesium, these varietal-specific glasses are the most break-resistant in the world. The oversized bowls ensure generous aromas and flavors.

Winerd Board Game ($35) By combining wine trivia and blind tasting, players can flaunt their vinous knowledge, or lack thereof, in this entertaining board game.

Yankee Candle Wine Collection ($17.99 each) Bring the aromas of the vineyard home with candles in scents like Napa Valley Sun, Grapevine & Oak and Vineyard (with aromas of Merlot, Cabernet and Zinfandel wines). Each comes in a stemless wineglass-shaped holder.

Kahlua Cinnamon Spice ($20) Ideal for cold-weather cocktails, this new release was inspired by Mexican café de olla and has cinnamon, brown sugar and coffee notes.

Splurge

Krug Flânerie ($200) This chic Champagne cooler has the look of a designer bag—keeping the enclosed bottle of bubbly (Krug Grande Cuvée) at a chill 50ºF, ensuring a portable party.

Riedel Mamba Decanter ($415) This striking, serpentine decanter is free form and mouth blown, so no two are alike. Wine aerates faster in the crystal coil than traditional decanters

Edo Kiriko Saké Glasses ($137 each) These colorful, intricately etched saké glasses are hand blown, lending them a delicate feel.

Newton The Element Chiller and Coaster Set ($400) Renowned clay artist Michael Wisner designed this white wine chiller and coaster set out of local clay for the eco-friendly winery Newton Vineyard in Napa, California. Only 100 sets were produced.

Sip

Taylor Fladgate 20-Year-Old Tawny Port ($54.99) With its rich dried fruit and spiced nut flavors, this classic fortified wine is sure to spread holiday cheer while warming away winter’s chill.

Essential Bar Tool Rollup Kit ($39.95) This black neoprene roll-up pouch features nine must-have tools for at-home bartenders. Tools include a bottle opener, strainer, tongs, stirrer, muddler, double jigger, bar knife, measured liquid pourer and corkscrew.

The Clicker ($25.99) No man cave is complete without this toy—a universal TV remote and beer bottle opener in one. Available in blue and red.
Traveling Bitters Set ($19.99, the-bitter-truth.com) Five 20-ml bottles of bitters (including Creole, orange and celery flavors), packaged in a playful, vintage-style tin, ensure sweet success for cocktail makers on the go.

Brix ($25.99) This “chocolate for wine” gift set contains four 4-ounce bars of chocolate, complete with tasting notes and wine pairing suggestions.

Whiskey Iced Ginger Cookies ($34/dozen) These ginger cookies contain whiskey-infused cherries and are drizzled with a shot of whiskey icing. A Black and Tan version is also available for beer lovers.

Meyer Natural Angus Steaks ($99.95) Fine restaurants like FIGA in Maine and The Oak Room in New York serve these certified humane, antibiotic- and hormone-free steaks to red wine lovers. A variety of gift packs are available for under $100; the steaks arrive in a cooler with a personalized note.

Virgin and Aged Olive Oils and Balsamic Vinegars

(prices vary) First-crush olive oils and balsamic vinegars. Pure and natural, in vivid flavors both classic and exotic: cinnamon pear, jalapeño, dark chocolate, chipotle…even butter.

Stocking Stuffers

Six small gifts to fill up stockings this holiday season.

Rate That Wine Pad ($6.95) With a built-in coaster and amusing wine tasting notes like “lean and sinewy” and “same color as box,” this wine-rating note pad doesn’t take itself too seriously.

Pocket Posh Wine Journal ($7.99) This bright, portable journal contains fun facts for budding oenophiles, and plenty of space for jotting down wine notes.

100 Stiff Drinks Vouchers ($6) These comical drink vouchers ensure that the next round is on you.

Glassware Care ($19.95) This set of three brushes was designed for hard-to-reach places in decanters and stemware. Foam “bristles” make cleaning less of a chore.

DeVine Lip Shimmers Wine Lip Glosses ($9.99) Available in shades of rosé (pink), Bordeaux (plum), and Merlot (red), DeVine lip shimmers have a light wine scent enriched with grapeseed oil.

Hangover Recovery Kit ($12.99) Guaranteed to get a few laughs, if not to cure an actual hangover, this cheeky tin offers a 16-page remedy booklet, healing bandages and other amusing trifles for the day after.

Here are more gifts perfect for a wine, beer and spirits lover:

Mionetto’s Prosecco Brut Magnum ($24): This Prosecco bottling will impress with its sparkle and size (equivalent to two full-size bottles), and the price is right. A large gift box makes it a pleasing party gift.

Chandon Étoile Brut Wine and Pointy Snout Caviar Pack ($150): Bubbly and caviar is a classic combination for discerning drinkers. This gorgeous gift box features a bottle of sparkling along with 50 grams of white sturgeon caviar from Pointy Snout (available November 1-December 31).

Cooler Cleanse ($174): Cofounded by Salma Hayek, this three-day, all-natural juice-cleansing system will help you slim down after all your holiday partying.

Puiforcat Champagne Daggers ($650 each): These handcrafted silver daggers are part of the Puiforcat Champagne collection, epitomizing elegance with crystal bowls hand blown at the Cristalleries de Saint-Louis glass workshop.

Clive Christian No.1 Gift Set ($1,040.00): Looking for luxury in a bottle? The most expensive perfume in the world, this perfume house now known as Clive Christian was honored by Queen Victoria more than a century ago, and incorporates rare ingredients from across the (former) British Empire. Clive Christian perfumes are available at Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. 

Branché’s Silk Charmeuse Pillow Covers ($55): Made from high-quality silk, this sleek pillow case is packed with 18 amino acids and copper, reducing fine lines and creases in the skin. A model secret.

SoHo Bar Glasses ($49.95 for a set of two): These solid rocks glasses feature a 1½-inch base of European crystal and a handsome crosshatch pattern—perfect for the Scotch lover.

Don Julio 70 Añejo Claro ($70): Celebrating the 70th anniversary of Don Julio Gonzalez’s foray into Tequila making, this special release is aged 18 months in American white-oak barrels and twice-filtered, resulting in a crystalclear Tequila.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label ($200): This high-end Scotch has a new signature look, mirroring the original 19th-century bottle design. Complimentary, personalized engraving removes the need for sending a card.

Mandarine Napoléon ($36.99): Drink like an em  peror with this mandarin-accented liqueur, a blend of 10-year-old Cognacs and macerated mandarins, first bottled in 1892 for Napoléon Bonaparte.

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Champagne: How Dry Is Dry?

Champagne: How Dry Is Dry?

Producers are adjusting their winemaking methods as warm temperatures are resulting in more naturally balanced wines.

Published on Oct 24, 2011
By Roger Voss

Hervé Deschamps, cellarmaster of Perrier-Jouët, calls it “the salt and pepper that bring out the flavors of the ingredients.” The “it” he refers to is dosage (doe-SOJ), the final flourish of the Champagne blender’s task. Dosage is the addition of a small amount of sugar and still Champagne wine. This is done just before the cork is put in the bottle, and just after the dead yeast cells that make the bubbly fermentation in the wine have been disgorged.

But an increasing number of Champagne houses have launched offerings without any dosage, using only what comes from the vine. These wines, called brut nature or brut zéro, are challenging the traditional concept of blended Champagne, where dosage was considered essential.

“You have a choice,” says Jean-Hervé Chiquet, co-owner and cowinemaker of Champagne Jacquesson. “You can either make a wine without dosage, because it’s the fashion and it looks good on the label, or you can make a wine drier because the wine doesn’t need much dosage. I’m a believer in the second option.”

The Jacquesson Champagnes lean toward dry, he says, because “my brother and I like a Champagne that is a wine first, sparkling second. And we are our most important client.”

Jacquesson’s stance has evolved because of the quality of the grapes.

“Our dosage levels have fallen because of the improvements in viticulture, and because of climate change,” he says. “We regularly get riper grapes. And riper grapes mean lower dosage.”

The Upside of Climate Change

Up until the mid-1990s, dosage was essential to soften the often austere nature of raw Champagne’s high acidity, low alcohol and subtle flavor. Dosage worked because the hard angles and almost unbearable acidity were softened.

Things have changed. It’s easier to make Champagnes with lower or no dosage. Champagne producers don’t need to mask the unripe grapes with sugar.
“In 15 years, we have gone from an average of 12 grams of sugar per liter to eight grams per liter,” says Jean-Baptiste Lécaillon, deputy managing director of Champagne Louis Roederer. “And we could go lower as long as we can maintain the house style.”

While reducing the dosage on its regular Champagne range, Roederer has also followed the trend to bone-dry Champagne by developing an ultra brut, or brut nature, Champagne. “It is the result of riper grapes, as a result of climate change,” says Lécaillon. “But we are not just doing this because it’s the fashion, but because that is what the climate and the grapes are giving us.”

With the 2011 vintage, Champagne began its earliest harvest ever. Traveling around the vineyards during the summer, the evidence was all around. The vines flowered in May, and the grapes were wellformed by mid-June.

At that time, Didier Gimonnet made a prediction about harvest at his family winery, Pierre Gimonnet et Fils, in the Côte des Blancs: “We haven’t had an October harvest since 1988, and this year, we could well harvest in August.” He was right: Harvest in that region started on August 24. In Reims, headquarters of Champagne Veuve Cliquot Ponsardin, harvest was authorized two days earlier.

What do earlier harvests and riper grapes mean? Champagne’s Chardonnay and Pinot Noir will never be 14%-plus potential alcohol, as may be found in California fruit. Riper in Champagne means grapes at 10-11% potential alcohol rather than 8%.

It also means that your favorite brand of nonvintage brut Champagne (the style that comprises 80% of the American market for Champagne) will have less dosage, even though it will taste just as it always did—that’s where house style comes in. The master blenders are adapting their blends to cope with the new era.

“While we want to keep the Roederer house style,” says Lécaillon, “we are able to express it even more precisely because the sugar doesn’t get in the way.”
It is also now possible for the Champagne houses to develop approachable bone-dry wines. At Pol Roger, Export Director Laurent d’Harcourt is rightly proud of the company’s brut nature, “which we have called Pure. We were challenged to produce a wine like this and found we could.”

It wasn’t a simple matter of adjusting the dosage, however. “We found making a brut nature is not just a question of taking away the dosage from a standard brut nonvintage,” he says. “We tried that, and it didn’t work. We had to change the blend, take out some of the acidity that is balanced by a dosage, and also add a more floral character” with a different grape balance.

What Comes Around

Bone-dry Champagnes may be the future, but they are far from new. Laurent-Perrier introduced its Ultra Brut brand in 1889. “The British market wanted a dry Champagne, while the rest of the world was still drinking sweet Champagne with dessert,” says Anne-Laure Domenichini, the company’s director of communication.
Withdrawn after World War I, Laurent-Perrier Ultra Brut was reintroduced in 1976. “We could do it then because the summer was unusually hot for that period,” says Domenichini—and it has been made ever since, “when the year is right.” Dosed at around three grams of sugar per liter, it’s technically an extra brut (see box on page 66).

While most of the big houses are just reducing the dosage on their regular cuvées, one house has taken up the challenge of bone-dry Champagne in a big way.
Ayala, owned by Bollinger and run separately by Hervé Augustin, produces three brut nature Champagnes. Augustin is a true believer in the future of these very dry Champagnes. “Zero dosage is a big trend for the future, it could become more important than rosé,” he says.

No matter which way the trends are going, it’s safe to say that Champagnes are resembling Chiquet’s model of “wines first, sparkling second.” Expect wines that better express their terroir and fruit, while not losing their essential character in the sugar of the dosage. This is the new, exciting reality of Champagne.

Grading Champagne on the Sweet Spectrum

Each Champagne’s style falls into one of seven categories, depending on the amount of sugar dissolved in the white wine that’s added at the final stage before the bottle is recorked. You will find the style on the label, but keep in mind that many wines can slip from one category to another due to a 3-grams-perliter tolerance between the actual sugar level and what is printed on the label. But if a producer has always made a brut or an extra dry as part of its branding, it may not be ready to let Mother Nature do marketing, too.

Brut Nature, Zéro Dosage:

Champagnes with three grams or less of residual sugar per liter.

91 Ayala NV Brut Nature.
Ayala has adopted very dry Champagne as something of a specialty, and this delicate and deliciously food-friendly wine shows why. It’s so well balanced, the bone-dry citrus flavors integrated into the nervy texture. It would be worth aging for a few months. Cognac One.
abv: 12%        Price: $45

Extra Brut:

Champagnes with six grams or less of residual sugar per liter.

89 Mailly Grand Cru NV Extra Brut.
A dry Champagne, so well balanced that the dryness is integrated into fruit and zesty character. Lemon peel, pink grapefruit and intense white fruits all contribute to this very good Champagne. Saranty Imports.
abv: 12%        Price: $51

Brut:

Champagnes with 12 grams or less of residual sugar per liter.

91 Louis Roederer NV Brut Premier.
A beautifully integrated wine that shows richness, even a touch of toasty age to go with apple flavor and intense acidity. The acidity shows so well against the rich backdrop of ripe fruits and a final edgy texture. Maisons Marques & Domaines USA.
abv: 12%        Price: $45

Extra Dry:

Champagnes with 12–17 grams of residual sugar per liter.

89 Piper-Heidsieck Extra Dry NV.
More boldly yeasty than the brut, this has an intriguing note of coconut in the nose, and the beginning hints of an oily, toasty richness. The extra dollop of sweetness still leaves it tasting fairly dry, but in a more approachable, less austere, style. Remy Cointreau USA.
abv: 12%        Price: $35

Sec:

Champagnes with 17–32 grams of residual sugar per liter.

90 Taittinger NV Nocturne Sec.
In the strange world of Champagne, sec (dry) on the label means a wine that’s less dry than brut. It’s more to do with fullness and weight than sugar. This wine bears ripe fruit, flavors of peaches, creamy pears and light nougat and spice character. Pair this with richly sauced foods. Kobrand.
abv: 12%        Price: $100

Demi-Sec:

Champagnes with 32–50 grams of residual sugar per liter.

90 Pol Roger NV Extra Cuvée de Réserve
Rich. A completely convincing sweet Champagne, balancing the natural acidity of the region with the higher dosage. The wine is fruity, with peach and lemon juice combining easily. A wine for fish, shellfish, or just by itself. Frederick Wildman & Sons.
abv: 12.5%    Price: $65

Doux:

The sweetest Champagnes, with more than 50 grams of residual sugar per liter.

This category is only a faint presence on the American market. Champagne Fleury produces a doux Champagne from its biodynamic vineyards in the southern Aube region; they are imported by K&L Wine Merchants, but availability is limited.

Pairing Brut Nature Champagnes:

Treat brut nature Champagnes in the same way you would very dry white wines. Seafood dishes like cod’s roe, scallops, lobster or crab are all fine pairings. Sushi and other Asian-style foods are also good matches with this style. The minerality of brut nature Champagne also acts as a foil to very creamy cheeses. Because they are so dry, brut nature Champagnes are not ideal as stand-alone apéritifs; serve them alongside light hors d’oeuvres with some fat-based richness and a touch of salt, such as assorted charcuterie, roasted almonds or traditional caviar canapés with crème fraîche.

Here are three Champagne and food pairings that are worth celebrating:

Chicken liver or duck pâté: 90 Pol Roger NV Extra Cuvée de Réserve Rich Champagne. $65. (Imported by Frederick Wildman)
Sushi and oysters: 88 Mailly Grand Cru NV Demi-Sec Champagne. $45. (Imported by Saranty Imports)
Red fruits: 88 Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin NV Demi-Sec. $53. (Imported by Moët Hennessy USA)

Don't pair ice cream with Champagne. The sugar levels of the ice cream will overpower the bubbly.
Don’t pair Champagne with dark or milk chocolate. Instead, opt for white, which has complementary flavors.

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