Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Drinking through some Portugal wine regions. Douro, Dão, Alentejo and Setubal.

Drinking through some Portugal wine regions. Douro, Dão, Alentejo and Setubal.

Portugal mini-series

Part IV (Vinho Verde, Lisboa and Alentejano).

Part III (Alentejo) 

Part 11 (Douro, Dão, Alentejo and Setubal.)  

Part 1 (Minho) 



Foot Trodden (2021), a recent book on Portuguese wine, covers these eight regions: Minho, Douro, Dao, Bairrada, Colares, Ribatejo, Alentejo and Madeira (home of one of the most age-worthy wines). Other regions noted are Algarve, Setubal, Beiras Interior, Tránsmontano, Bucelas, VR Lisbon and Carcavelos. This is part of an occasional focus on Portugal over the next month or two and I’ll try to get my hands on more of the country's wines. Thanks to O'Brien's for their help with this selection. Any tips or help will be most welcome!



Esporão Reserva Alentejo (DO) 2020, 14% ABV, €29.95  O’Briens Wine


Sparsely populated Alentejo, not as well known perhaps as the Douro or Dao, is a well regarded wine region in the east of Portugal and is where this multi grape blend, “typical of the best Alentejo wines”, comes from.  Colour is an intense ruby. Aromas are rich, of black fruit jam with toasty notes. Made with estate grown grapes, it has an intense rich character. Rich and complex with more black fruit, with spice, on the palate, tannins on the lips. Long and persistent finish.


Varieties used in this Esporão are: Alicante Bouschet, Aragonês, Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz / Syrah, Touriga Franca, Touriga Nacional, Trincadeira. List may not be precise and may vary from year to year.


It has spent 12 months in American (60%) and French (40%) oak barrels. After bottling, at least another 4 months of aging in the bottle followed. Good match for roast and grilled red meats and stronger cheese. Very Highly Recommended.


Back to the current wine, the first wine made by Esporão in 1985. “A classic obtained exclusively from our organic grapes. The diversity of Herdade do Esporão, together with the different characteristics of the grape varieties, the soils, the maturity of the vines and the character of those who make this wine consistently over the years, results in a rich, intense but always harmonious wine.”


We are used to associating amphorae with wine in the likes of Georgia. These large clay vessels see wine rest on its pulp for long periods. Colour and flavour is enhanced and often the white wines produced are called orange wines. Alentejo is the home of amphorae in Portugal where they have a long history (since Roman times) and are called talha. As it happens Esporão make some wine by this method. See their short video here.


They say: Reflecting the characteristics of vineyards and carefully selected grape varieties, these wines are vinified in old clay amphorae (talhas as we call them in the Alentejo), using ancient local techniques brought to the Alentejo by the Romans. Using an artisanal process, and spurning the use of yeasts, we aim to produce natural wines that are straightforward, authentic and vibrant.


To read more about the history of the Talha in Alentejo (and the story of Portuguese wine in general) read the very informative Foot Trodden.





Setúbal with Península Das Vinhas Vinho Tinto (Vinho Regional Península De Setubal) 2021, 13.5% ABV,  €10.00 (down from €14.45) O’Briens Wine



This dry robust red from Setúbal, with its blue and white striped neck reminding me of a lighthouse, is a blend of a little of Alicante Bouschet and mostly of the local variety Castelão (that the World Wine Atlas says may be described as “warm-climate Pinot Noir”). 


Castelão’s reincarnation in the area in a lighter fresher style has led to it being widely planted in Setúbal where the sandy soils and plentiful sunshine suit it. According to the label, the Alicante Bouschet adds colour, body, black fruit fragrance and a hint of spice to Castelão’s fresher red fruit palate. Castleão is now a major red grape across Portugal's main areas of production, and used in a variety of wine colors, styles and blends.


The aromatics of our Tinto indicate ripe red fruit with a hint of smoke. And that rich fruit, now with a spicy spike, is part of full bodied tannic wine that has character enough to take on a host of dishes though Wine Searcher.com suggest hearty dishes such as Pork and Bean Soup or Mushroom risotto. “Grilled light meals such as grilled chicken thighs would also match well.” So bring it to the BBQ in the months ahead. Highly Recommended.


Made by Casa Ermelinda Freitas, a significant  family-owned established in the area in 1920 and run by successive generations of dynamic women, this is a supple, juicy red which may be enjoyed on its own or with a host of dishes. However, if you are lucky enough to have some Portuguese famous custard tarts at hand then the wine you need is the region’s famous Moscatel de Setúbal.


The Setúbal Peninsula is the Portuguese wine region immediately southeast of Lisbon, crossing the Tagus estuary. The terroir in the area ranges from the sandy coastal plains to the rugged, limestone-rich hills of the Serra Arribida.


I got my first taste of Setubal wines, and an indication of their quality and good value about ten years ago, when Maurice O’Mahony’s Wine Alliance imported quite a few to Ireland. The area has a long history of wine but only recently began making a name for itself abroad. More here 


Casa Ermelinda Freitas Vinhos was founded in 1920  and from the beginning made the quality of its vineyards and wines a top priority. The year of the company’s new beginning in wine making didn’t come 1997, when a red wine “Terras do Pó Tinto”, was the first to be produced and bottled on the premises of the Ermelinda Freitas winery.


Symington Altano Organic Douro (DOC) 2020, 13.5% ABV, €18.45 O’Briens Wine



The Douro is perhaps the best know of the Portuguese wine regions, mainly because if its historic connections with Port. And the Symington family are one of those old (originally) British families that were involved in the trade for no less than 130 years. But now, like quite a few other Port families, they are making more and more still wine.


The British love of Port goes back centuries, at least to the late 17th when it was used as a replacement for claret that the Brits couldn’t get their hands on due to war with France. And they fell in love with the fortified sweet wines.


Meanwhile, the locals were enjoying their own simple table wine, even the infants were drinking wine rather than water, according to the chapter on the Douro in Foot Trodden.


Back then, only the poorer grapes not wanted for Port were used for the local wine but it is a different story nowadays and the quality of Portuguese wines is rising all the time even if consumers don’t have the easy way of knowing the grapes as they do with mono-varietal wines from other countries, say Sauvignon Blanc from New Zealand or Malbec from Argentina. But consumers are learning all the time and Portuguese wines are becoming widely appreciated.


The Douro Valley is a spectacular place and draws all kinds of tourists including of course wine lovers. As you know, much the same grapes are used for port as for still red wine. 


The grape varieties for our Altano are Touriga Franca, Tinta Roriz, Tinta Barroca, Touriga Nacional and Tinto Cão; it is one hundred percent organic. The advice is to serve it at 14 to 17 degrees centigrade. It is evidently ready for immediate consumption but “has the potential to continue developing favourably up to 6 years”.


Colour of this beautifully balanced organic red wine is a deep garnet. Scents of ripe red fruits are noted. On the palate it is fresh, smoothly intense, a sweet hint of smooth tannins and, with noticeably good acidity, is harmonious all the way through to a long finish. This elegant wine is Very Highly Recommended.



It has been and is a winner for the Symingtons whose expertise clearly shows in this gorgeous organic red.

.“For five generations we have combined our passion for producing premium ports and wines with a deep commitment to the region's land and people. Our family was amongst the pioneers of modern Douro wines. In the 1990s we began producing Douro DOC wines from the same vineyards and indigenous grape varieties that had always made great port. We released the first Altano red in 1999 and we haven't looked back. Today, the Altano range enjoys global distribution and the wines have received widespread recognition for their quality and distinctiveness.”


Dão


Fonte do Ouro Tinto Dão (DOC) 2020, 13.5% ABV, €17.25, O'Briens Wine 


Like many Portuguese wines, this is a blend. All three grapes used are popular in the region. The Alfrocheiro adds depth of colour, Touriga Nacional (with its expressive violet scent) is considered to be the country’s finest, while Jaen is the local name for the what the Spanish call Mencía. By the way, Touriga Nacional probably started “life” in the Dão, mostly a granite plateau with the eponymous river running through it.


Importers and distributors O’Brien’s: A delicious red, showcasing the quality of winemaking in the Dão region of Portugal. Aged for 6 months in French oak it is a blend of indigenous grapes: primarily Touriga Nacional. 


Dão is one of the oldest established wine regions of Portugal, located just south of the famous Douro Valley. The mountainous region is home to Touriga Nacional, the principle variety of port wine, and only became a DOC in 1990.


The region’s wine industry, for so long shackled by the dictator Salazar’s imposed cooperative system that rewarded quantity over quality, certainly needed the improvement in quality which has taken place in the last 30 years or so.

Ironically, Salazar himself had vines in the wild and rugged regiona and a string of coops were set up but the emphasis was always on quantity not quality. Even though Salazar departed in 1968 and the Carnation Revolution of six years later finally ended the influence of his policies and those of his like-minded successors, the Däo was in the doldrums until well into the 1990s when EU policy and its monetary help provided the kiss of life and the area began to put its reputation for producing what Jancis Robinson termed “some of the…. most uncharming wines in the world” behind it.


The top Dão wines are now some of the most highly rated in Europe, winning consistent praise on both sides of the Atlantic, says wine-searcher.com. “It is in the north of the country. It takes its name from the Dão river, along which the majority of the region's vineyards are located.” More praise from the World Atlas of Wine saying they are now “..far juicier, friendlier, more elegant wines”.


A government study in 2017 listed no fewer than 230 indigenous varieties in Portugal and, according to the marvellous Foot Trodden, there are many many more yet to be identified. No wonder there are so many blends in the country.


Our blend has a dark ruby colour. Fairly rich aromas of blackberry, dark cherry and plum. There’s a great mix of the fruit flavours on the palate, with a touch of spice, smooth with elegant tannins and a very satisfying and persistent finish. This supple and fresh wine, full of vitality, has spent six months in oak and should be served at 16 to 18 degrees and will go well with red meats. 


Full of Dão character and Very Highly Recommended as is the book Foot Trodden!.


Sociedade Agrícola Boas Quintas, born in 1991, was part of the revival. It all began when Nuno Cancela de Abreu, representative of the 4th generation of a family with farming and winemaking tradition of more than 130 years, decided to devote all of his experience and all of his knowledge in viticulture and oenology, to the service of the project that would allow him to create high quality wines, full of character and personality. See more here.


Boas Quintas also make an excellent Fonte do Ouro white, a blend of Arinto and Encruzado, more details here 


Monday, May 15, 2023

Entries closing this Wednesday (17th) for Blas na hÉireann, the Irish Food Awards

 

Entries closing this Wednesday (17th) for Blas na hÉireann, the Irish Food Awards 

Entries for Blas na hÉireann 2023 are now open. Last year, following a two-year hiatus from an in-person event, the much-anticipated return to Dingle was a moment of magic as friends, colleagues, producers and makers finally got together again to celebrate, and the excitement for this September is already building. 


Blas na hÉireann is the largest blind-tasted food awards on the island of Ireland, designed to recognise and celebrate the very best Irish food and drink. Entries are open to producers across all categories of food and drink with the early bird discounted rate for entries running until 5th April. Entries will finally close for this year’s awards on May 17th.


“Being back together in person again last year reminded us all how important these awards are on so many levels,” says Blas na hÉireann Chairman, Artie Clifford, “creating a sense of community and support, as well as a feeling of pride and ownership in that community. The judges were blown away by the quality of the produce last year and the winners and finalists were genuinely so happy to be back in a room together again, celebrating their own wins and each other’s successes. I am looking forward as ever to seeing what this year has to bring, as well as discovering new products we haven’t seen before. We were particularly thrilled last year with the new addition of the Blas Village and Eat Ireland experience which we are bringing back again this year.”


This is the 16th year of Blas na hÉireann and last year saw a huge increase in entries to over 3,000, the highest on record, with many producers entering the awards for the first time. Together with the Food Science Dept of UCC and the University of Copenhagen, the team at Blas worked to develop a blind-tasting judging system that is now recognised as an industry gold standard worldwide. 


Winners are always the best Blas ambassadors, something to which over a decade’s worth of small producers, farmers, growers, bakers and artisan food makers who have won a Blas award and proudly put the winner’s sticker on their product can attest. Research has shown that the Blas accreditation has the highest recognition among Irish consumers and having the award logo on products encourages shoppers to buy – it is a recognised guarantee of a top-quality Irish product.


Entries for Blas na hÉireann are open and there is an early bird fee of €70 (ex VAT) until 5th April. The full entry fee, applicable from 6th April to 17th May is €90 per entry (ex VAT).

www.irishfoodawards.com 

press release


CorkBillyBeers #25. Craft Stout and Porter with Kinnegar, Tom Crean, West Kerry and Dot Brew

CorkBillyBeers #25

Craft Stout and Porter with Kinnegar, Tom Crean, West Kerry and Dot Brew

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Kinnegar Yannaroddy Porter 4.8%, 440ml can Bradleys Cork


Black, more like a Ford Model T than a ripe blackberry on the briar, is the colour here with a tan head that doesn’t hang about. Smells roasty. And the palate is full of those traditional dark roasted malt flavours and, eventually, there is a touch, a sweet one, of the coconut, which is actually listed in the ingredients. 


But it all returns to the more traditional porter characteristics as the long and very satisfactory finish progresses. For me, it is velvety smooth with good acidity on the way to a lip-smacking finish. That smoothness is quite amazing and no nitro was harmed while it was achieved.


Very Highly Recommended 


By the way, the Yannaroddy (based on European hops) is the 2019 Brussels Beer Challenge gold medal winner “whose surprisingly light profile delivers rich and complex flavours”.


Where did they get the name? Sounds Australian to me. But no, they found it in their own little corner of Donegal where they get all the names for their beers. A stone’s throw from the brewery is a field with the intriguing name Yannaroddy.


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Tom Crean Six Magpies Stout, 4.5% ABV, 440ml can, Carry Out Killarney


Magpie black is the colour of our Six Magpies Stout from Tom Crean, Kenmare’s independent brewery, and it has a soft tan head. Gentle coffee notes from the aromas. And that coffee streak runs through the palate with the hops also doing their subtle bit.  Excellent mouthfeel and a fine dry finish as well. 


I’m inclined to think this is the best of the Crean beers, at least is the one that has made the best impression on me. Of course, I’m not the only one, as it won gold in its category at the Blas na h-Éireann awards in 2002.


The brewery: A combination of 6 grain types, but that’s not where the name comes from! A traditional Irish stout, triple hopped and reminiscent of stouts before the addition of nitrogen. Subtle hop presence, perfect mouthfeel and classic combination of grains.


So where did the name come from? Brewer Bill was trying to settle on a name when he heard an almighty racket overhead. Looking up to the trees, he saw a bunch of magpies, six in all. (Brewers are sticklers for detail). He was aware of the old saying about the noisy bird: One for sorrow, Two for joy, Three for a girl, Four for a boy, Five for silver, Six for gold, Seven for a secret never to be told.


Suitably inspired, the brewer christened the beer Six Magpies. And, of course, it went on and won gold!


Very Highly Recommended. The beer, that is, not counting magpies!


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West Kerry Carraig Dubh Porter, 6.0% ABV, 500ml bottle, Carry Out Killarney


This is the brewery’s take: A rich luxurious porter brewed with bags of chocolate malt. This bold heavy porter is laden with coffee and chocolate tones. 


Enjoyed this previously over the Christmas and see little reason to change my notes. Black as you’d expect and it comes with a quickly vanishing head. Aromas coming from the malt are coffee and caramel. The roasted flavours are on the bold side, and really wake up those taste buds. Lots of chocolate malt here but there is also a balance and it never gets too sweet, just spot on. The aromas and flavours continue to make this a superb experience right through to the finalé. They also do a barrel aged version - must sometime try that (as Yoda might put it)!

Their original beer was Cúl Dorcha, a red ale (great with oysters, I’m told); then came Carraig Dhubh a porter “because we like the sound of the word as opposed to stout!” Hard for us amateurs to describe the difference between stout and porter if the professionals chose to call this one porter on the basis of how it sounds!

But agree we can (again Yoda) that this is quite a beer. Smooth, seductive, chocolate-y and there is no letting go as the lingering finish is along the same lines. One to sip and savour, arís is arís. Superb beers like this are making me think I may soon be drinking exclusively on the dark side.

It is bottle conditioned and made from malted barley, hops, yeast and spring water “from our own spring”. Traditional, yes. A bottle (or two) would go down well at the threshings I remember - but not too many threshings on farms anymore. 


Very Highly Recommended

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Dot Brew Spin off Series Dark Side Stout, 4.2%, 440ml can Aldi only

Colour is black, no surprise and the soft tan head reduces rather quickly. There’s a moderate chocolate and vanilla aroma, (the head has vanished by now as I type that). The liquid in the mouth is roasty and chocolate smooth, and a hint of vanilla towards the end which is dry and refreshing. All this at an Aldi price. How bad!


 

Their Instagram says its an approachable stout with a medium body. “Built with Irish pale barley / caraffa special II / pale wheat / flaked oats / carapils / chocolate malt, fermented with a not so traditional low rider yeast, Willamette hops to the hot side with an addition of natural vanilla post fermentation.” 

Yes, vanilla is listed in the ingredients.


Highly Recommended.

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Local and seasonal! The Diet Of The Skellig Island Monks

Local and seasonal! The Diet Of 

The Skellig Island Monks

Skellig Michael


On Skellig Michael, the six corbelled stone beehive huts and two boat-shaped oratories, the stone built terraces, retaining walls and stairways are visible proof of much Early Christian activity.


It is probable that a small groups of monks came here and established the monastery in the 8th century and that it was continually occupied until the late 12th or early 13th century. How did they survive on this bare and hostile rock? With little arable land available to grow grain, vegetable gardens were an important part of monastic life. Fish and the meat and eggs of birds nesting on the islands were staples.

Skelligs, as seen from Valentia's Bray Head


I got some more detail during a recent visit to the Skellig Experience on Valentia island, just above the bridge from Portmagee. It is quite a small centre but the exhibits, mostly without the aid of modern technology, still yield a wealth of information.


Where did the monks get fresh water? At the monastery on Skellig Michael, rain water falling on the rock face was channelled by hand-cut and natural ducts into 5 storage "wells" which still function today.

Sure-footed goats, like these on Ballycotton lighthouse island, would 
have done well on Skellig Michael.


The monks of course liked their meat but here had to rely on sheep and goats, surefooted animals who could survive here better than pigs and cattle, and were the ideal providers of dairy produce and meat for the situation.


Many monks would have been skilled hunters and fishermen before joining and so they could provide meat and skin from seals and catch all kinds of fish (for the fast days). Skellig Michael's seasonal, summer seabirds, and their eggs, were abundant - and free. Yes, quite a few of those adorable puffins ended up in the monastery pots.

Seals were targets for the hungry monks


If you want a rather dramatic idea of what life might have been like in the early centuries of the monastery then perhaps find yourself a copy of the recent Emma Donahue book called Haven. It re-imagines the day to day life as rough and claustrophobic, pretty horrid, especially with a fanatical Prior at the helm. A lot of research went into Haven but it doesn’t seem to have captured the public’s attention in the way that her best-selling Room did.


Back to the exhibits: “The woody, fibrous roots of the Skellig Sea Pink are akin to poor quality peat, but major fuel supplies had to come from the mainland, as is still commonplace on many Irish islands today.” And that was how the monks kept themselves warm and dry and cooked.


The monks knew their herbs, grasses and plants. The leaves and shoots of the young Common Sorrel were used in salads, and could be used to make soup. It was also used to curdle milk for cheese making. It has a good Vitamin C content and was eaten as spinach.

Seabirds were at risk of ending up in a cooking pot


This Sow Thistle plant is rich in minerals. It could be used with other vegetables, when the boiling of the leaves removed the bitter taste. Also used in salads. The leaves of the young White Clover were added to soups and salads.


The portion of the stem below ground of the Common Polypody was chopped up and used in the treatment of coughs and chest problems and as a tonic. Scurvy grass was a source of Vitamin C. While the Scarlet Pimpernel was used in the treatment of rheumatism, liver and kidney ailments.


So the monks made the best of what was available before they eventually left the island and headed, it is said, for Ballinskelligs.

The battered gates 


The next group to make a home on Skellig Michael were lighthousemen. Beginning in August 1821, the Exhibits tells us, it took explosives, five and a half years' work, imported granite and sandstone, cast iron porches, tons of lead, one life lost, and one boat gutted by fire to master Skellig.


On 22nd. April,1987, the final lighthouse crew of Paddy Dirrane, Aidan Walsh and Michael O'Regan locked the Station's 25 doors and went ashore for the last time, leaving Skellig lighthouse with its new, radio controlled, electronic heart to battle alone. But the basic lighthouse infrastructure remains unchanged, as service tradesmen and technicians must still visit on occasions and stay while they carry out regular maintenance.

Breakfast at the lighthouse. Crested crockery though!


There is not too much detail on the menu for the lighthouse families and it seems that their breakfast consisted of wheatabix, boiled eggs and tea, all served in lighthouse cookery which had its own special crest. The crested crockery, "In Salutum Omnium", was once standard lighthouse issue. Now it is a rare antique - in which a cup of tea, made, with Skellig rainwater, would taste perfect!


Families lived here and children were born here. Lighthouse and family records tell that on 30th October 1897, James Martin King, second son of Thomas King and Mary Murphy, was born at Skellig lighthouse - the last child to be born there. 


The Experience displays have a few cartoons on lighthouse life. In one, the wife is having a go off the husband: You conned me into this marriage with your promises of night life and the bright lights!


The exhibits here may need a bit more space but it is well worth a visit. There is a corner on the local seabirds, lots of models and a interesting detail on each bird.


And don’t forget to take a look at that battered gate. That once stood some 150 feet above sea level but a massive storm uprooted it along with its concrete pillars and later it was found at the bottom of the sea, recovered and is in use here as an entrance. Just one illustration of how tough life can be just a few miles off the Kerry coast.

Very informative exhibit on seabirds.


Skellig Experience Centre is just past the bridge, on the left.  It has an exhibition area, an audio visual, gift shop as well as a fully licensed restaurant. And don’t worry, puffin is not on the menu. They offer regular meals such as Quiche Lorraine, Beef Lasagne, Irish Stew, salads and more. Check out the website here https://skelligexperience.com/skellig-experience-about/ or better yet go and visit. And by the way, they can arrange a boat trip to the Skelligs!

The Skelligs Experience (with its grassed roof)

Also on this trip:

The Lobster Waterville

Skellig Experience Centre - The Monks Dinner

McGill Brewery*

Royal Hotel, Knightstown

A Right Royal Progress Through The Kingdom

* Post to follow

Recent Kerry posts

Killarney's lovely Victoria Hotel

Dinner at The Ivy in Killarney

Dining at The Harrow Killarney

Excellent Lunch at Brehon Hotel

Seeing Red at the lovely Sneem Hotel

Lunch at Killarney Brewery & Distillery in Fossa.

Dingle Drive, Slea Head and more