Chilled red wines and warmer white wines have more flavour

Wine is a complicated beast, but best rules to follow are: chill your reds lightly and let your whites warm a little.

Thomas Heaton | January 25 2018

Kiwis are drinking their red wines too warm and our whites too cold, according to expert sommeliers.

Refrigeration leaves white too cold, and chances are red is too warm in the current summer weather.

Wellington wine bar Noblerot served its wines at a range of temperatures according to the varietal; the prime range for red wine was between 18 and 22 degrees.

Noblerot Chef Joshua Dodd with co-owner and sommelier Maciej Zimny

Co-owner and sommelier Maciej Zimny said lighter, fruitier reds, such as pinot noir, lent themselves to being chilled to the bottom of that range.

During warmer summer weather, Zimny recommended chilling red wine from up to 10 minutes before serving, which would reduce the temperature by between three and five degrees.

“When you taste the wine, at a lower temperature it seems complete,” he said.

“Even when it’s slightly colder that it should be it will provide much more pleasure.”

That’s because of the alcoholic smell was exaggerated when it was warm, which was unappetising, according sommelier at Auckland’s French Cafe, Stephanie Guth.

She said. however, the sight of a chilled red wine was odd for customers.

“You want to do it justice but it’s such a weird thing for people to see, red wine in an ice bucket, even though you know it might benefit from it,” Guth said.

Twenty minutes in an ice-bucket before opening and drinking might help to boost the flavour in a pinot noir.

“The more complex the wine you have, the warmer it should be served,” Zimny said, referring to rich red wines such as merlot or Bordeaux varietals.

Conversely white wine should be served chilled, however complex oaky chardonnays should be served slightly warmer than other whites.

So chardonnay’s flavours lent better to slightly warmer temperatures than sauvignon blanc, about 14 degrees as opposed to 10 degrees, because it was important to make sure oak flavours were prominent.

Pinot noir and chardonnay hailed from the Burgundy region of France, and both were classically stored in the same cellar under the same conditions. He said wines have either been served too warm or too cold since the invention of refrigerators.

Cellar temperature was perceived as something quite different to what was initially intended, room temperature, Guth said.

Leaving white wine to warm up slightly released flavours hidden by colder temperatures.

“It doesn’t harm the wine but you tend to get a little more out of the aromas.”

The only reason one should drink a bottle straight out of the fridge was “if you don’t want to taste your wine”, she said.

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Pic’s Peanut Butter and Devonport Chocolate win at Great Taste Awards

Now available in five markets country-wide, Pic Picot's peanut butter has been making waves in the UK.
Now available in five markets country-wide, Pic Picot’s peanut butter has been making waves in the UK.

THOMAS HEATON | Last Updated 12:13, November 4, 2016

Two Kiwi palate-pleasing products have been named among the best in the world at the “food Oscars”.

Devonport Chocolates and Pic’s Peanut Butter have both been recognised with a single star at the international 2016 Great Taste Awards.

Run by the Guild of Fine Food; the competition involved more than 400 judges from various backgrounds. All 10,000 entrants were blind tasted over 49 days of judging.

Revered as the “Oscars” of the food world, Pic’s owner Pic Picot said the win was a marvellous result.

“It’s great to see our peanut butter hitting the right note with UK tastebuds,” Picot said.

Well-known for their chocolate high-heels, Devonport Chocolates took one star for their 80 per cent Single Origin Trinitario Moa Estate Samoan Islands dark chocolate.

Devonport is known for their chocolate footwear, but their 80% dark chocolate got them a star on the world stage.
Devonport is known for their chocolate footwear, but their 80% dark chocolate got them a star on the world stage.

The small-batch chocolate is made of beans from the Moa Estate in Upolu, Samoa, and blended with Bundaberg sugar in Devonport, Auckland.

Three stars are the highest rating a product can get, while the one-star status means the products are “simply delicious”.

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