Jerez Recommendations
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smiller

Original Poster:

12,284 posts

224 months

Tuesday 11th November 2008
quotequote all
In as much as the regional fortified wine, thereof!

There must be more to it than Harvey's, and Amontillado used for cooking and I remember some cooking programmes where the resident wine expert would wax lyrical about sherries. Can't remember any of them though.

Any recommendations? Not fussed whether it's light / dark / dry / sweet etc. Just good examples of the different styles.



Noger

7,117 posts

269 months

Wednesday 12th November 2008
quotequote all
Fino - Tio Pepe, whilst widely available is excellent. Manzanilla is worth a go too. La Gitana is always good. Some Jamon, salted almonds and olives to go with it. Lovely.

Also worth trying an aged dry Oloroso if you can get it.

Pedro Ximenez - liquid christmas pud smile Gonzalez Byas Matusalem is a fave, although technically an Oloroso, it is sweetened with the sticky PX.



HiRich

3,337 posts

282 months

Thursday 13th November 2008
quotequote all
It's quite tricky, so I'd suggest:
- Step 1: find a decent retailer with proper sherries (any house). Half bottles are particularly handy.
- Step 2: get your head around the styles first, before learning about the houses.
Wikipedia is as good a start as any. The styles are significantly different, so you need to find the one(s) that appeal to you.

Fino's dry, very dry. I can't comment as it does nothing for me. I'm not even a fan of nutty flavours, so don't really experiment. But I certainly won't turn down a small Amontillado as an aperitif (or cook's assistant). Amontillado's for going down the chef's throat, not the trifle!

smiller

Original Poster:

12,284 posts

224 months

Thursday 13th November 2008
quotequote all
HiRich said:
Step 1: find a decent retailer with proper sherries (any house). Half bottles are particularly handy.
Do Tanners in Shrewsbury have a decent reputation for stocking sherries? I only ask as they're local.

I suppose what we're after is one that's not too cheek-puckeringly dry, but not so sweet as to make your teeth itch. Talk about sitting on the fence.....

madala

5,063 posts

218 months

Friday 14th November 2008
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>>>>>>Fino - Tio Pepe, whilst widely available is excellent. Manzanilla is worth a go too. La Gitana is always good. Some Jamon, salted almonds and olives to go with it. Lovely.<<<<<<

....Jeez Noger.....you could have been reading my mind...lol...;-)