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Christmas Wine help?

BradMc

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well 7-11 has a great box set (Boones Farm) for $10.95, and with the $$ left u could bring dinner with the wine .......:nodlaugh:
 

BradMc

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Hey only trying to help out a bro..........heheheheh
I don't drink Wine Drew or I wouldn't have been screwing with ya .....good luck
 
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It really depends on your crowd. It also depends on your budget. If your budget is on the low end there is great value in the Barefoot and Little Penguin lines of wine. I am a chardonnay man and both are very good for their price. But both lines have done well with ratings. If you are about to go about 18-20 a bottle the best chardonnay IMHO is the Kendall Jackson. If you are a bigger spender I can't help you out.
 

PetersCreek

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White? Red? Dry? Sweet? Served with food? After dinner?

Aw, what the heck...I'll venture a couple of blind recommendations...

I don't think I've made any secret of the fact that I'm a fan of the wines from Washington state's Chateau Ste. Michelle. They have a newer white wine, slightly sweet and effervescent, that strikes me as appropriately holiday-ish: Moscato Frizzante. I sampled it on my last visit to the winery and I liked it a lot. I'm also very fond of the similar but non-fizzy Muscat Canelli...so much so that I bought a half case on the spot and had it shipped home.

If you want a dry white, I like the Horse Heaven Vineyards Sauvignon Blanc. More easily found are the current releases of their Pinot Gris or Riesling wines. The Pinot Gris is light, bright, and crisp...a perfect summer time wine but good any time of year. The Wife® and I recently enjoyed a bottle of the Riesling (~$8 a bottle) and found its balanced acidity a good match for rich, flavorful cheeses like a double cream gouda and a mustard seed gouda.

If you like big reds, Beaulieu Vineyards' Rutherford Cabernet Sauvignon is one of my favorite go-to wines. You might also look for the one of the Zinfandels from Rancho Zabaco.

Dammit...now I sound like a wine snob.
 

Kingston

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White? Red? Dry? Sweet? Served with food? After dinner?

Aw, what the heck...I'll venture a couple of blind recommendations...

I don't think I've made any secret of the fact that I'm a fan of the wines from Washington state's Chateau Ste. Michelle. They have a newer white wine, slightly sweet and effervescent, that strikes me as appropriately holiday-ish: Moscato Frizzante. I sampled it on my last visit to the winery and I liked it a lot. I'm also very fond of the similar but non-fizzy Muscat Canelli...so much so that I bought a half case on the spot and had it shipped home.

If you want a dry white, I like the Horse Heaven Vineyards Sauvignon Blanc. More easily found are the current releases of their Pinot Gris or Riesling wines. The Pinot Gris is light, bright, and crisp...a perfect summer time wine but good any time of year. The Wife® and I recently enjoyed a bottle of the Riesling (~$8 a bottle) and found its balanced acidity a good match for rich, flavorful cheeses like a double cream gouda and a mustard seed gouda.

If you like big reds, Beaulieu Vineyards' Rutherford Cabernet Sauvignon is one of my favorite go-to wines. You might also look for the one of the Zinfandels from Rancho Zabaco.

Dammit...now I sound like a wine snob.
Some good, sound, recommendations here. :thumbsup:
Answers to the above questions will definitely help narrow things down.
Budget and audience are things to consider as well.
 

PetersCreek

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I can't believe I forgot to mention that idea, JW! Good catch.

I got hooked on Glühwein when I was living in Germany. You can find it pre-mulled in the bottle...like Christkindlwein...or you can buy any decent table red and mull it yourself. If you like mulled wine but you've only had red, try mulling a white. My favorite vintner in Germany would set up a booth at the Christmas markets and bazaars and offer one or two of the semi-dry or semi-sweet whites mulled in 30-cup (clean!) coffee urns with whole cinnamon sticks, cloves, orange slices, etc. Their mulled Spätlese was fantastic.
 
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