Match of the week

Wine and cheese: Rosemary and ewes’ milk cheese and (very) old white rioja
Last week I hosted a tasting for Wines of Rioja at Cambridge Wine Merchants. You never know quite how these things are going to work out on the day but happily most of the matches were spot on.
The standout pairing for me though was the extraordinary Lopez de Heredia Blanco 1998 - no that’s not a misprint! A 15 year old white made in an oxidised, almost sherry-like style having been aged for six years in cask. That sounds as if it might be unbearably woody but not at all - there was a sherried note to be sure but also a beguilingly honeyed character and a wonderful freshness at the end. An extraordinary wine.
I’d paired it for comparison with a younger oaked white rioja (the 2010 Amaren Rioja Blanco) and chosen a selection of tapas including almonds, ham from Teruel DO, and a delicious rosemary coated ewes’ milk cheese. The cheese and the Tondonia was just brilliant, one of those fabulous matches where each brings out another dimension in the other.
It underlines my conviction that white wine is just as good, if not a better match for cheese than red, albeit a less intuitive one.
You can currently buy the Tondonia Blanco from Cambridge Wine Merchants for £29.95, Fortnum & Mason for £29.50 and Corks of Cotham in Bristol for £28.99

Lobster and sweetcorn with Allende Rioja Blanco
I came across this pairing at a dinner to launch the London Restaurant Festival. It was held at Nuno Mendes Loft Project, a permanent East London pop-up - if there is such a thing - where he normally hosts visiting chefs of a similarly experimental bent. Mendes is one of the most talented chefs in London at the moment and normally cooks at nearby Viajante in Bethnal Green which I reviewed here.
It was an immensely complicated dish which, when quickly announced by our server, sounded like lobster, bread porridge, sweetcorn, confit egg yolk and girolles, a combination you'd never think of putting together unless you were mad or Mr Mendes. It also included a touch of chilli and fresh coriander which made it taste like an exotically spicy but rather wonderful brunch dish.
I'm not normally that keen on eggs in the middle of savoury dishes (a hot trend at the moment, it seems) but the yolk had been cooked to the point where it was firm but not hard and added another layer of unctuous richness.
The inspired pairing was an oaked white Rioja - the Allende Blanco 2008 which dealt with all the complex flavours marvellously. It was, I find, a recent Jancis Robinson pick of the week and you can read about it here. As she points out, it strikes a perfect balance between the new crisper Riojas and the more traditional heavily oaked style. Really quite lovely.
You can buy it from slurp.co.uk for £17.45 a bottle.
I ate at the Loft Project as a guest of the London Restaurant Festival and Wines of Rioja.
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