best european wine 2015

In results announced today (14 June), Spain’s Miguel Torres scooped the international trophy for Red Bordeaux varietals over £15 for its Reserva Real 2010 vintage from Penedes in Catalonia. The wine is a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Merlot grapes and was created in the 1990s, following a visit of Spain’s King Don Juan Carlos to the winery. Torres’ victory in a Bordeaux category is a further example of Spain’s growing reputation for quality. Sarah Jane Evans MW, regional chair for Spain and Sherry at the Decanter World Wine Awards (DWWA) 2015, has said that Spain is ‘the most exciting thing happening in European wine right now’. Other Spanish wines taking international trophies at this year’s awards include Gonzalez Byass’ Cuatro Palmas, an Amontillado Sherry, which won Dry fortified over £15. International trophies are the highest accolade a wine can achieve at the DWWA. Wines that have already been awarded regional trophies – themselves all gold medal winners – are pitted against each other according to their style in lengthy blind tasting sessions, conducted by a select team of experts at Decanter’s purpose-built tasting room in London.

This year’s awards saw 35 international trophies awarded from a total 15,929 wines tasted at the beginning of the judging process, including eight for France, six for Australia and five for South Africa and four for Spain.
where to buy wine late in nyc Among the international trophy winners was Bay of Fires‘ Sauvignon Blanc 2014 vintage from Tasmania – produced by Hardys owner Accolade Wines – which won Sauvignon Blanc over £15.
what kind of white wine goes best with fish Back in Europe, Slovenia won the international trophy for Sweet wine over £15 thanks to Ptujska Klet Pullus’ Laski Rizling 2012 vintage.
best australian wine 2010 There were also signs of Bordeaux recouping greater recognition for dry white wines – as featured in Anson on Thursday – after Chateau Brown won White blend over £15 for its 2013 vintage.
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Elsewhere, UK retailer Marks & Spencer proved that good quality white Burgundy doesn’t have to cost a fortune by winning the international trophy for Chardonnay under £15 for its own-label Macon Villages, Cote Maconnais 2014 vintage.
best usa wine tours DWWA chairman Steven Spurrier said, ‘Our standards are high, and so are our expectations.
best white wine chinese foodWe only award medals to wines in which consumers can have the utmost confidence.’ This year’s awards were judged by 240 of the world’s best palates, including 85 Masters of Wine and 23 Master Sommeliers. We've received your email address, and soon you will start getting exclusive offers and news from Wine Enthusiast. Now you'll be the first to hear about: Exclusive discount offers on wine accessories and storage Food and cocktail recipes

Wine event invitations...and more! Top 100 Wines 2015 This year, Wine Enthusiast’s tasting panel reviewed more than 19,800 wines from around the globe, spanning Old World and New World wine regions alike. In the last two issues, we celebrated wine with excellent quality-to-price ratios (Top 100 Best Buys) as well as those cellar-worthy options that need a bit of rest before they’re best enjoyed (Top 100 Cellar Selections). So now comes the show stopper: The Enthusiast 100. This yearly roundup of the best-of-the-best showcases the incredible diversity of high-scoring wines on the market. Each was chosen for a myriad of reasons, including high quality-to-price ratios, good market availability and “buzz,” an x-factor that can’t be precisely defined. The wines span 16 countries, hitting every wine style imaginable—from dry whites and reds to sparklers, rosés and sweet wines. With an average rating of 93.84 and an average price of $38.55, this collection is sure to be your go-to list the next time you hit thewine shop.

Stock up on what you can find now, since these winners will be snapped up fast. Here’s to another fabulous year of savoring the best in the glass. If even half of the excitement around the 2015 wine harvest in some of Europe's best known regions, such as Bordeaux, Rioja and Burgundy, is reflected in the final wines, then the vintage could be one to savour. Many winemakers in regions such as Bordeaux, Champagne, Burgundy, Rhone, Rioja and Tuscany must be close to running out of positive adjectives to bestow on the 2015 wine harvest. Proclamations of greatness at this point are tentative, of course. It’s tough to generalise in a region let alone across swathes of a continent, and superlatives are always open to accusations of commercial realpolitik; ‘they would say it’s great, wouldn’t they?’ LEARN: What makes a great vintage? In Bordeaux, where they joke themselves of declaring each year a potential vintage of the century for the reds, it is believed that for Bordeaux 2015 four of professor Denis Dubourdieu’s five hurdles for a great vintage have been leaped in many cases.

The fifth – good weather during harvest – looks negotiable. Olivier Bernard, head of the classified chateaux union UGC, was offering writers at Decanter’s 40th anniversary lunch last week a glimpse of the weather forecast on his smartphone. It was all sunshine. There’s been some rain, and more is forecast – which may make things trickier for later ripening Cabernet Sauvignon, if not bring a smile to Sauternes – but the mood in general is very upbeat. In Champagne, Decanter contributor and author Michael Edwards believes it is a question of where the 2015 vintage sits on a spectrum ranging from good to great. Burgundy, too, is excited in its own understated way. Decanter columnist Andrew Jefford wrote late last month that Burgundy 2015 has the potential to be great, even if a temperate August means it does not scale the heights of the very best. In Rioja, ‘I would compare it to 2005’, said Rioja Alta winemaker Julio Saenz, in a nod to one the Spanish region’s best vintages.