Pages

Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Great-value wines from independent shops

When times are hard, raise a glass to your local wine merchant DE BORTOLI THE ACCOMPLICE SHIRAZ, RIVERINA, AUSTRALIA 2018 (FROM £5.99, BRAYVALLEYWINES.CO.UK; EYNSHAMCELLARS.COM; RFVINTNERS.CO.UK) A little moderate wine consumption is going to be part of the way many of us keep a bit of normality going in the next few isolated, isolating weeks and months. Where we buy the wine that helps keep us sane may also help sustain the networks of local merchants and suppliers until, maybe, things return to something like normal. Although I’ve come across the occasional story of rural wine merchants benefiting from second-homers staying away from London and stocking up with expensive wine (literally stockpiling burgundy, in one case), most have been struggling to fill the enormous hole lost by disappearing orders from bars and restaurants. If you’re going to be buying wine, then, don’t forget your local indie, who will be happy (desperate) to deliver, and contrary to popular belief, will have plenty on offer below a tenner, such as De Bortoli’s widely available, subtly oaked classic Aussie Shiraz at a bargain price. ROBERTSON WINERY WILLIAM ROBERTSON CHENIN BLANC, ROBERTSON, SOUTH AFRICA 2019 (FROM £7.95, DORSETWINE.CO.UK; BOTTLEAPOSTLE.COM; NOBLEGREENWINES.CO.UK; RAFFLES-WINE.COM) If you live in London, you’ll be spoilt for choice for indies, many of which have blossomed into mini-chains in the past few years, among them Bottle Apostle, which now has five stores around east and north London, where you can find, among many hundreds of other funky bottles, Robertson Winery’s brilliantly bright, fresh orchard fruity-tangy and very affordable chenin dry white. On the other side of town, Lea & Sandeman has five shops in West London, with a range that is particularly strong in modern Italians such as a fleshy but tangy and unusually fresh and vibrant Puglian red duo from Cantine de Falco: Salento Primitivo 2018 (£9.50) and Salento Negroamaro 2018 (£9.95). And the lists at wine bar-cum-shops Vagabond (eight venues from Battersea to Monument) and Vinoteca (five) are well worth perusing for gems such as sweetly spicy sticky Greek treat Samos Vin Doux 2018 (£8, 37.5cl, shop.vinoteca.co.uk). Continue reading...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.theguardian.com