
If you're interested enough in wine to be visiting this site, let me encourage you to widen your horizons to wines that are neither dry white not dry red - if you're not already in the habit of doing so. If you fail to buy sweet and strong wines at this time of year, when will you ever wallow in the unique pleasure to be had in gently sipping something special for a change?
(And by the way, isn't it time for another good book on sweet wines? The last I can remember was Stephen Brook's Liquid Gold published by Constable in 1987. Yet there are all these people in places like Tokaj, Sauternes, Vouvray, Ontario and all over Italy toiling away for little reward to make better and better sweet wines.)
Sweet wines can even be served and drunk instead of dessert at the end of a meal. And they go beautifully with cheese whereas many a fine red can be wrecked by a seriously runny brie or strong blue. Those who are planning particularly politically incorrect meals can even savour the distinctively Gallic pleasure of sweet white wine with their foie gras.
This is the season to be merry - and over-indulgent. So I for one will be laying in extra stocks of milk thistle, the herbal dietary supplement which helps the liver cope with a heavy load, plus several bottles of pale, bone dry, ultra-tangy sherry, one sip of which before a meal seems to kick-start the appetite.
The wines below are listed in ascending order of price per cl and UK stockists are specified. For international stockists, see WineSearcher.
Sweet Wines
Château La Caussade 2000 St Croix du Mont
Concha y Toro Late Harvest Sauvignon Blanc 2001 Maule
MR Málaga 2002 Telmo Rodriguez
Maculan Dindarello 2001 Veneto
Château Liot 2001 Sauternes
Nackenheim Rothenberg Riesling Auslese 2002 Gunderloch
Tesco's Finest Sauternes 2001
Château Bastor Lamontagne 1999 Sauternes
Niederhäuser Hermannshöhle Auslese 2002 Hermann Dönnhoff, Nahe
Leiwener Klostergarten Eiswein 2002 Carl Loewen
Dry Fortified Waitrose Fino Sherry
La Gitana Manzanilla Hidalgo
Manzanilla Pasada Pastrana, Hidalgo
Henriques & Henriques 10 year old Sercial
Sweet Fortified Waitrose Solera Jerezana Rich Cream Sherry
Late Bottled Vintage Port 1997
Quinta do Noval Late Bottled Vintage 1997
Banyuls Cuvée Tradition 2001 Domaine de la Casa Blanca
Dow's Crusted Port 1998
Rutherglen Grand Muscat, Chambers of Rosewood
Andresen Colheita 1982
20 year old Tawny Port
Maury 1990 Mas Amiel
Dow Quinta do Bomfim 1995
Henriques & Henriques 15 year old Verdelho
£8.99 Majestic
A special parcel (so limited stocks) from one of Bordeaux's
less glamorous sweet white districts but the wine is extremely
rich for the (full bottle) price with just enough acidity to keep it fresh.
£4.99 Safeway
A remarkable bargain from Chile which is now officially
allowed to send such well-priced, satiny, sweet-yet-refreshing
marvels to Europe.
£8.50 for 50cl Adnams of Southwold
This is the second wine of the even more concentrated Molino
Real (£19.99), a revival of historic 'Mountain' sweet
white from hills not far from Marbella, made by Spain's most
peripatetic winemaker Telmo Rodriguez (born and raised in
Rioja). White peaches and real life.
£7.89 a half Oddbins
Tingling, densely fruity, north east Italian with distinct
peachiness but rather more lift than the average sweet white
bordeaux.
£9.79 a half, Waitrose
Great value - full, rich, broad from a very fine sweet white
bordeaux vintage.
About £21 from Averys, Four Walls, Haslemere Cellar,
Justerini & Brooks, Raeburn of Edinburgh and Seckford Wines
A baby but what a bouncing one. Great richness and tingle.
Already delicious but it should last another 15 years or more.
In fact Justerini's can offer the 1996 at almost exactly the
same price, and this older vintage is a favourite of this
merchant's fastidious wine buyer.
£11.99 a half Tesco
Pretty good stuff from this lovely vintage for sweet white
bordeaux via négociant Yvon Mau.
£25 top 58 Waitrose stores
Very, very rich and toasty. Massive and already lovely to
drink. Another delicious Sauternes from Waitrose.
£18 a half Howard Ripley of London SW18
Fabulous nectar from one of Germany's great masters which
should ideally be drunk between 2006 and 2025 but is so
delicious - ethereal lime and lychee syrup, a sort of vinous
pick-me-up - that it could be sipped already thanks to the
German 2002 vintage's open, sunny character. Howard Ripley
also has the Brücke Auslese.
£19.50 a half Howard Ripley
The thing about Icewine is that it can, probably should, be
drunk much younger than wines that are sweet because of
botrytis, or noble rot such as the one above. This is a very
fair price for a wine made by people who had to pick frozen
grapes in substantially sub-zero temperatures.
£4.99 Waitrose
From Luis Caballero and, with Waitrose's wine department
bristling with Masters of Wine, you can be sure they keep the
shipments fresh - very fresh in the example I tasted. Crazy,
not to say sad, price for a blend based on six-year old wine.
£5.99 Majestic, Sainsbury's, Waitrose
I recommend a bottle of this light, bone dry pick-me-up in
every fridge door over the coming weeks.
£7.99 (£7.49 if two Hidalgo sherries are bought) Majestic
Extremely tangy and refreshing. More depth than the Gitana.
Perfect for Boxing Day.
£11.99 per 50cl Waitrose, Majestic (£10.99 if two are bought at Majestic), also from Lea & Sandeman
Drink this tangy, off-dry pick-me-up either pre- or post-prandially, slightly chilled perhaps.
£5.99 Waitrose
From Diego Romero - a really lively, appetising, raisiny blend
that would be lovely for sipping with cheddar and walnuts.
£6.99 Marks & Spencer
As last year, reduced from £8.99 by £2 until
the end of the year, this blend from Taylors is very lively
and exciting. Really fresh with vigorous personality.
£10-13 from a wide range of independents including
Bentalls of Kingston, Averys of Bristol, Fenwicks of
Newcastle, Hailsham Cellars of Sussex, Peckham & Rye of
Glasgow and Great Grog of Edinburgh
This handsome bottle of unfiltered, part foot-trodden wine is
streets ahead of most LBVs in terms of concentration and, for
a change, similarity to young vintage port. Some good special
offers until the end of the year.
£10.95 Handford Wines of London W11 and SW7
Red Grenache lightened by some Grenache Gris, this barrique-aged wine is still very tannic but is also richly perfumed,
appetising and definitely tastes like the essence of Christmas - France's answer to young port.
£13.49 Asda, Oddbins
Blend of wines from different vintages bottled at two or three
years old and then deliberately given bottle age so that the
wine has some sediment, or crust. Very vigorous, prune-scented, full-bodied wine that is already drinking well - a
sort of short-cut to vintage port.
£7.45 a half from Lay & Wheeler
Australia's greatest gift to the wine world, incredibly sweet
yet subtle liquid Christmas cake conjured out of the earth and
sunshine of north east Victoria, in this case the result of
years of warm barrel maturation. Not for nothing are these
sorts of wine called stickies.
£18.99 Laithwaites
A port oddity, a vintage-dated wine bottled only this year,
from a small, originally Danish house in Oporto. When you
consider that a 20 year-old tawny looks like a bargain at
under £20, you can see that this is also a
particularly good buy - lively, nutty, not too sweet. Would be
lovely with mature cheddar.
£19.99 top 150 Marks & Spencer stores
£9 more, and much, much more intense in flavour, than
the 10 year old, this wine from Taylors is full and gorgeous
but delightfully gentle. Serve very slightly chilled by a warm
fire. Regular Taylors 20 year old Tawny retails at more than £30.
30 euro in France and from mas.amiel.domaine1@libertysurf.fr
The inland answer to Banyuls from the foothills of the
Pyrenees - just down the Agly valley from the exciting
Fenouillèdes red wines I described here earlier this
year. Mas Amiel, in new hands since 2000, is the most famous
producer of Maury which, at 16.5 per cent, is much less potent
than port, which is usually closer to 20 per cent alcohol.
This wine is more obviously raisiny and, being based on
Grenache rather than Portuguese grapes, is lighter in colour
and altogether gentler. It would make a great partner for
chocolate.
£20.99 Budgen, Oddbins, £21.99 Majestic, also Selfridge's
Deep, lively, lots of fun with spice, licorice, tannin - vintage port characteristics in fact.
£16.99 for 50cl Waitrose, also from Lea & Sandeman
Wonderfully clean and bracing yet with just as much sweetness
as nerve. 'Coltish', I wrote, when tasting it. But this was
towards the end of the tasting.



