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Specialty Wines – Sparkling Wine

Specialty Wines – Sparkling Wine

Originally from Champagne, France, sparkling wines are a universally recognized symbol for celebration, and the traditional drink for wedding toasts, parties, and other occasions. However, it's also nice to sip a dry sparkling wine before dinner with light cheeses or puff pastry; a sweeter style is enjoyable with cakes, berries, and fruit tarts. Styles range from dry to sweet: “Brut” means dry while, counter-intuitively, “extra dry” is sweeter, and although “demi-sec” translates literally as “half-dry” it is sweeter than extra dry and is more of a dessert wine.

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Other Specialty Wines

Sparkling Wine

Originally from Champagne, France, sparkling wines are a universally recognized symbol for celebration, and the traditional drink for wedding toasts, parties, and other occasions. However, it's also nice to sip a dry sparkling wine before dinner with light cheeses or puff pastry; a sweeter style is enjoyable with cakes, berries, and fruit tarts. Styles range from dry to sweet: “Brut” means dry while, counter-intuitively, “extra dry” is sweeter, and although “demi-sec” translates literally as “half-dry” it is sweeter than extra dry and is more of a dessert wine.

Dessert Wine

Dessert wines are sweet wines that pair well with desserts or function as dessert themselves. White varietals that offer flavors of apricot, peach, and honeysuckle—such as muscat, riesling, gewurztraminer, and semillon—are especially popular with fruit pies and tarts, cakes, meringues, or a simple cookie platter. Other than port, dessert wines made from red varietals tend to be less common, although their wild berry sweetness and rich jam flavors make them an excellent match for chocolate desserts, such as cakes, cookies, or a simple piece of dark chocolate.

Port

True port is from Oporto, Portugal, and is primarily divided into “ruby” and “tawny” styles. Both are suited to after-dinner sipping, or pairing with strong cheeses, nuts, or chocolate. The sweeter “rubies” are typically dark purple to black, and full of sweet jam-style blackberry and raspberry flavors, a warming headiness, and a roasted spiciness. Tawnies are clear amber, or tawny, in color, with flavors of caramel, butterscotch, toffee, and roasted nuts. True tawny ports are aged in wooden casks (usually ten years or longer). Simple tawnies are blends, and don’t list an age.



Copyright 2007, Healthnotes, Inc., 1505 S.E. Gideon St., Suite 200, Portland, Oregon 97202, www.Healthnotes.com.

2006-09-07

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