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When should you drink Yquem?

Not a question I normally have to trouble my head about, I admit but which was prompted by an extraordinary wine dinner I went to last week at The Don in St Swithin's Lane.

It was organised by an old friend Maria Adderley who now runs a PR and events company which specialises in laying on top level wine dinners for City boys and other well heeled punters. Not only was there Yquem but Smith Haut Lafitte, Mouton Rothschild and Margaux (both from the 1995 vintage and both in magnum) and Anglus and Tertre Roteboeuf 1998. An embarassment of riches.

Anyway the Yquem issue. Whether to drink it first - with foie gras, natch - or last. It was the 1996 vintage bottled in half bottles - really spectacular even by the standards of the other wines that were presented by MW Richard Bampfield. I think that alone should have probably dictated it should have been the finale but the dish it was paired with - a creamy, caramelised foie gras ‘brulée’ (below) that was more like a pudding than a starter made it an uncomfortably rich start to the meal.

It also dictated that the second course had a note of sweetness so the switch to savoury was not too much of a shock, in this case a dish of scallops with lime and vanilla beurre blanc which was paired with the 2007 Smith Haut Lafitte and Laville Haut-Brion Pessac-Lognans. (Although I love Smith Haut Lafitte whites - the 2010 is amazing - I thought the tauter, more minerally Lavill Haut-Brion worked best but at a dinner like that you’re hardly going to quibble.)

We were on safer ground with a rack of lamb with a light rosemary jus with the Mouton and the Margaux (good to avoid an over-extracted sauce) and the cheeses stacked up fine with the Tertre Roteboeuf and the Anglus which was my favourite wine of the evening. Interestingly the cheeses were quite bland - deliberately chosen I suspect - with no stinky washed rind cheeses, strong blues or even a farmhouse cheddar to disturb the equilibrium of the wines.

To tell the truth the whole experience, while fascinating, was slightly overwhelming. It seems churlish to cavil but I think I’d have rather had one or two great wines than nine. (There was a pair of Smith Haut Lafittes in the middle which were shown on their own). Still who’s going to turn down the chance to attend a dinner like that? Certainly not me.

I attended the dinner as a guest of Wine Connections.

What to match with the world's best Bordeaux-style reds

What to match with the world's best Bordeaux-style reds

The Bordeaux wine region produces a multitude of top class red wines that these days tend to be blends of four main grape varieties, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot.

Typically top quality Châteaux in the Médoc are 70% Cabernet Sauvignon, 15% Cabernet Franc and 15% Merlot whilst in St-Emilion and Pomerol, Merlot and/or Cabernet Franc tend to predominate in the blend. As it happens my favorite Médoc and Pomerol are atypical: Château Pichon Longueville Comtesse de Lalande often has over 35% Merlot whilst Vieux Château Certan can have as much as 30 % Cabernet Franc/10% Cabernet Sauvignon.

Winemakers in the New World and Tuscany have replicated this formula and created successful blends in their respective areas – in the US often labelled Meritage. Wines like Ridge Monte Bello, Pahlmeyer Napa Valley Proprietary Red in California and Super Tuscans like Sassicaia and Ornellaia are examples of world class “Bordeaux Blends” not made in Bordeaux. I therefore treat the aforementioned wines in the same way as the Bordeaux equivalents.

I tend to side with the view that the top classed growths in Bordeaux and the New World equivalents will on average require 10 years minimum age whilst the best Cru Bourgeois and second wines 5–7 years. Having recently drunk some 1961, 1982 and 1985 First and Super Second growths, what is clear is that you need patience to experience the best of the best.

Because of the variety in blends and effects of bottle ageing matching food to red Bordeaux offers considerable scope, ranging from classic robust beef, game and lamb roasts or stews right through to cheeses like Camembert, Brie and Roquefort. I have also had a very good dish of monkfish both cooked with and accompanied with red Bordeaux.

Some specific great recent matches include Ridge Monte Bello 1999 with a superb Côte de Boeuf cooked by Racine, Chef Patron, Henry Harris and Château Pichon Longueville Comtesse de Lalande 1982 with roast Pauillac Lamb (Blanche du Massif Central) at a private dinner party in Bordeaux.

When entertaining at home, I often follow a main course with cheese as this gives you the possibility of selecting a wine with the main course that will carry you through to the cheese. Stronger cheeses tend to work well with the tannins in these type of wines. A cheese like Roquefort also works well with Sauternes so both cheese and wine can lead you on to dessert. When matching food and wine transitions should in my opinion be factored in, and to this end red Bordeaux can be an excellent solution for the central part of your meal covering at least two courses.

Personally I find that Roquefort works better with a well aged red Bordeaux than say a sweet dessert wine, simply because the dryness and the tannins enhance the taste of this cheese which would probably be the last savoury experience before moving on to dessert. I prefer the linear, savory to sweet eating trajectory especially with European cuisines like French, Italian and Spanish. Therefore I more likely to drink a white Alsatian with foie gras and red Bordeaux with Roquefort than Sauternes.

With this quality of wine and winemaking the key is the assemblage which is more important than the individual grape varieties. The wines are complex and subtle and therefore matching needs to be geared to food that enhances the wine drinking experience and visa versa.

You can read more about Dino's gastronomic adventures on his blog The Epicurean

Image credit: Matthew Hintz

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