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Mr Scruff

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

241 months

Monday 28th September 2020
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Mrs Scruff has a significant birthday coming up soon, and COVID has kinda ruined all our plans piece by piece!

As a fallback I was thinking of getting a wine tasting we can do together at home. Problem is that Mrs. S is a bit of a wine connoisseur and while I enjoy it I’m somewhat ignorant about it.

I’ve Googled ‘home wine tasting’ and there are a lot of results but does anyone (who knows more about wine than I do) have any recommendations?

otherman

2,265 posts

191 months

Monday 28th September 2020
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So you want to get someone to come and do it? Or just buy a good selection and do it yourself?

I assume we're talking reds are we, or white as well?

Mr Scruff

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

241 months

Monday 28th September 2020
quotequote all
No, wasn’t thinking anyone would come in, more buying a selection with some accompanying tasting notes - like this:

https://club-vino.co.uk/product/red-wine-box-with-...

As we move into autumn she tends to move from white to red so probably more inclined towards that.

Ace-T

8,345 posts

281 months

Monday 28th September 2020
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Have a watch of the Wine Show on Amazon for some wine tasting ideas.

Plus she will appreciate the two main presenters. biggrin

otherman

2,265 posts

191 months

Monday 28th September 2020
quotequote all
You could visit a wine shop (not Majestic IMHO) and ask for some recommendations. An Australian Shiraz is often a good thing, and we like a Red Zinfandel - particularly the Carnivor sold widely in supermarkets for £8 to £10. In fact today it was £9 in Sainsbury's with the 25% offer on, so a snip at £6.75.

omniflow

3,669 posts

177 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
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When you say "a bit of a wine connoisseur", what do you mean?

Can she identify a specific grape / vintage by tasting blind, or is it more a case of she's not that keen on that £5.99 shiraz you bought from Aldi?

How much does she normally spend on a bottle of wine you'd drink at home? £6, £10, £15, more.....

You need to figure this out, and then go two or three steps higher than this if it's a special occasion. One option would be to get a decent bottle of a well known wine from various countries, so a Rioja from Spain, a Claret from France, a Brunello from Italy, etc. £30 / bottle will get you some very nice wine and 3 or 4 bottles from different countries will make for an interesting tasting session.

Or, you could get bottles of the same wine from different vineyards, i.e. 4 different Cabernet Sauvignons from the Napa Valley - see if you, or she can actually tell the difference.

Somewhere online, or Berry Bros. Avoid supermarkets.

21TonyK

13,108 posts

235 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
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I've not tried any myself but the Wine Society has a lot of online tastings (you need to join which probably a good idea anyway)

https://www.thewinesociety.com/shop/TastingCalenda...

Are you anywhere near Bristol by any chance?

hiccy18

3,891 posts

93 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
If she's buying wine from the supermarket at the moment how about https://www.thewinesociety.com/tastings-at-home ? Get her a membership and some bottles to go along with the guide, so a sparkling, a sherry, couple of Bordeaux reds and a white.

After checking out the options we joined in January and have been very impressed, spent far too much there over lockdown, usually £7-10 range getting markedly better wines than similar range in the supermarket. Although the membership costs £40 up front you get £20 back on the first order and you get a presentation boxed share certificate which would make a nice prezzie smile You could even pop some credit into the account for her.

ETA: LOL at 21TonyK smile

CardinalBlue

1,302 posts

103 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
I did a few through lockdown with Corney & Barrow - https://www.corneyandbarrow.com/ - which I highly recommend.

If you give them a call they will be able to match something to your requirements, rather than a 'off the shelf' tasting so to speak.

AlfaPapa

281 posts

186 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
Depending where you are based, check your local independent wine dealer.
We did a few cheese and wine tastings through lockdown with Loki Wine https://www.lokiwine.co.uk/product-category/online... and they were really enjoyable (plus the cheese and wine were delicious!)

Mr Scruff

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

241 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
omniflow said:
When you say "a bit of a wine connoisseur", what do you mean?

Can she identify a specific grape / vintage by tasting blind, or is it more a case of she's not that keen on that £5.99 shiraz you bought from Aldi?

How much does she normally spend on a bottle of wine you'd drink at home? £6, £10, £15, more.....

You need to figure this out, and then go two or three steps higher than this if it's a special occasion. One option would be to get a decent bottle of a well known wine from various countries, so a Rioja from Spain, a Claret from France, a Brunello from Italy, etc. £30 / bottle will get you some very nice wine and 3 or 4 bottles from different countries will make for an interesting tasting session.

Or, you could get bottles of the same wine from different vineyards, i.e. 4 different Cabernet Sauvignons from the Napa Valley - see if you, or she can actually tell the difference.

Somewhere online, or Berry Bros. Avoid supermarkets.
Thanks for all the replies, some good points being raised.

Usual spend would be around the £12, give or take. Hard to quantify her knowledge, I'd go for 'enthusiastic amateur'; at present she's very much into old world wines and researching different regions and areas, not to mention pairing with foods. I suspect she'd be able to identify grapes but not vintages. The idea of buying a level or two up from specific 'classic' regions is a good one, though a little out of my comfort zone.

21TonyK said:
I've not tried any myself but the Wine Society has a lot of online tastings (you need to join which probably a good idea anyway)

https://www.thewinesociety.com/shop/TastingCalenda...

Are you anywhere near Bristol by any chance?
We're not I'm afraid, High Wycombe.

CardinalBlue said:
I did a few through lockdown with Corney & Barrow - https://www.corneyandbarrow.com/ - which I highly recommend.

If you give them a call they will be able to match something to your requirements, rather than a 'off the shelf' tasting so to speak.
That looks like a good option, thank you. I might give them a call and see what they suggest.

AlfaPapa said:
Depending where you are based, check your local independent wine dealer.
We're based in High Wycombe - sadly I'm good with different beers and breweries so other than Majestic and Laithwaite's I'm not really up to speed with independent wine dealers. To Google I suspect.






omniflow

3,669 posts

177 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
Mr Scruff said:
We're based in High Wycombe - sadly I'm good with different beers and breweries so other than Majestic and Laithwaite's I'm not really up to speed with independent wine dealers. To Google I suspect.
Personally I avoid Laithwaites like the plague - they're very much style (not much of it) over substance.

There is an independent wine shop in Cookham - I've only been there once, but the people in there were really nice and the selection of wines was pretty decent. As I remember, they do on-prem wine tastings. It's only a small place, so it may not be massively expensive to get them to lay something on for you. It's called Old Butcher's Wine Cellar.




omniflow

3,669 posts

177 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
As always, a flash of inspiration just after hitting submit.

There's also Oddbins - take the train into Marylebone and there's a branch in Melcombe St which is on the way to Baker St.

If you're not comfortable using the train at the moment, there's also a branch in Oxford - you'll have to google the address.

Mr Scruff

Original Poster:

1,391 posts

241 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
quotequote all
omniflow said:
Personally I avoid Laithwaites like the plague - they're very much style (not much of it) over substance.

There is an independent wine shop in Cookham - I've only been there once, but the people in there were really nice and the selection of wines was pretty decent. As I remember, they do on-prem wine tastings. It's only a small place, so it may not be massively expensive to get them to lay something on for you. It's called Old Butcher's Wine Cellar.
Thank you for that suggestion, I had a very positive chat with Old Butchers Wine Cellar earlier on. Extremely helpful and knowledgable, seemed to understand my ramblings and hopefully coming back with some suggestions!

Happy days. Cheers!

darty

202 posts

310 months

Tuesday 29th September 2020
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PM sent Mr Scruff