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Brian K Miller
Passionate Arboisphile
9340
Fri Aug 25, 2006 1:05 am
Northern California
Made from a jumble of little-known grape varieties in the northern corner of Portugal, this wine can be either white or red, though most of what comes to the U.S. is white. It’s something crisp to go with summertime clams, crabs, lobsters, and shrimp.
Background
One of the least-known, least-fashionable white wines in the American marketplace, this "green wine" is called such because the Portuguese habit is to drink it when it's super-young, or metaphorically, when it’s green. Nothing that costs four bucks a bottle will ever be fashionable.
Shopper’s Tips
Find last year’s vintage. Many of the Vinho Verdes on American wine shop shelves are not as young as they should be, which means they won't have the bracing freshness they should. In summer 2003, you should be drinking Vinho Verde from the 2002 vintage.
Look for a bottling date. On the back of the bottle is a serial number, followed by a slash, then a date. That date tells you the year in which the wine was bottled. The wine is always bottled after January--so if the number reads 349871/2001, it means that you have a wine from the 2000 vintage that was bottled in 2001.
Go for dry and sparkling. In Portugal, the wine is always very dry; unfortunately, some producers sweeten theirs a bit when they ship it off to sweet-tooth America. Those wines are much less attractive to me. Also, in Portugal, Vinho Verde always has a lovely sparkle to it; sometimes here it has gone flat. The best way to know if you have a good Vinho Verde on your hands is to taste it.
Recommendations
Some of the producers that most reliably ship authentic Vinho Verde to the US:
Adega Coopertiva de Ponte do Lima
Rei do Minho
Cruzeiro Lima
Mesa do Presidente
Quinta da Avaleda
-David Rosengarten
Victor de la Serna
Ultra geek
292
Fri Sep 22, 2006 12:50 pm
Madrid, Spain
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11034
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
Victor de la Serna wrote:Vinho verde is made with a variety of grape varieties of inconsistent quality, like pedernã and loureiro. The word 'alvarinho' must appear if it's indeed made with the same grape (basically, produced only in the area of Monção on the Minho river, at the Spanish border) that's called albariño in Spain.
Victor de la Serna
Ultra geek
292
Fri Sep 22, 2006 12:50 pm
Madrid, Spain
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11034
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
Brian K Miller
Passionate Arboisphile
9340
Fri Aug 25, 2006 1:05 am
Northern California
Victor de la Serna wrote:Let's see... Vinho verde is a Portuguese appellation for the northernmost wine producing area in the country. There are red, white and rosé Vinho verde wines. Alvarinho, known as albariño in Spain, is one of the admitted white grape varieties in the region - the most prized of all. When a Vinho verde is an alvarinho varietal, it is allowed to have ythe word, 'alvarinho', printed on the label.
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