shiraz

Rotgut Reviews: Yellowtail Shiraz

by alec on January 29, 2005

For #2 in the Rotgut Reviews series, I picked the Yellowtail Shiraz ($11.45 at the LCBO).  This is currently the #1 selling wine in the US, and therefore worthy of review.

The winery description speaks lovingly of lifted berry aromas, spicy hints, generous ripe fruit, and vanillin flavours delivering a long and soft finish.  The LCBO description speaks of blackberry, red licorice (twizzler?), vanilla bean and plum aromas, with flavours of plum and ripe berry and a long spicy finish.

Sounds intriguing.  So what’s it really like?  Vanilla, vanilla, vanilla. Tannins provide structure, to be sure, but the overwhelming impression is of drinking vanilla extract mixed with grape juice.

R.H. Phillips New Closures Stink

by alec on January 14, 2005

Picked up a bottle of one of my favorite inexpensive wines yesterday — R.H. Phillips Dunnigan Hills Syrah (or Shiraz, as they’ve rechristened it).   The wine is still excellent, but their new packaging stinks… here’s what I wrote to their marketing department.

—-

Folks,  this is a little not-so-gentle feedback from a longtime customer and fan. I have bought and recommended Phillips, Toasted Head, Kempton Clark, and EXP wines for years, and thoroughly enjoyed them. Your new screwcaps, however, are terrible. 

Please don’t think I am one of those "gotta have a cork" traditionalists. I am not opposed to alternate closures — not in the least.  I buy lots of wine with screw tops, and synthetic corks.  However, the closures you’ve chosen are the worst I have ever seen.

1. Esthetically, they make your wine look cheap.  They look like soda caps, not wine.

2. The thread on the bottle is very deep, and the shoulders of the RH Phillips Shiraz bottle are very high.  As a result, it is NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE to pour from this bottle without dribbling wine everywhere.

Speaking of bottle shape, has nobody in your marketing department noticed the resemblance between the Shiraz bottle and the bottle from that old german rotgut called Black Tower?  They’re virtually identical.

Please give me a better closure, a bottle with a longer neck, and less pronounced threads.  Please don’t cheapen the image of your wine with gimmicky closures, and goofy bottle shapes.  The wine can stand on its own merits.

Cheers,

A.

d’Arenberg “The Laughing Magpie”

December 17, 2004

I picked up a bottle of d’Arenberg’s 2003 "The Laughing Magpie" over the weekend. I was quite excited, actually, because I thought the combination of Shiraz and Viognier held great promise.  However, I was disappointed.  Do not buy this wine unless you have a cellar and lots of patience.  It is undrinkable right now. Although there [...]

Read the full article →

Other shopping

September 20, 2003

The other bit of shopping I did today, other than my new PC, was to visit the LCBO Vintages store.  Vintages brought Rosemount’s remarkable GSM (year 2000) in today.  This is a fabulous bottle of wine, albeit a little pricy at C$34.95.  I still have nine left from the 1999 vintage which are just starting [...]

Read the full article →

Thierry and Guy Fat Bastard Shiraz

September 6, 2003

I picked up a bottle of this wine at the LCBO last week because it had such a lovely name.  Fat Bastard is a wine with an Australian name (Shiraz) but a French vitner.  Unfortunately, it doesn’t live up to the name.  It’s not a fat wine at all.  In fact, rather thin and vinegery.  [...]

Read the full article →
Alec on LinkedIn Alec on Twitter Alec on Facebook Calliflower on Youtube RSS Feed Contact me