The perfect wines for your Easter feast.
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Are you doing anything for Easter? I may
bake a ham. In principle I prefer lamb, that other, more traditional
meat of the celebration. But I feel there’s already an entire shepherd’s
flock running through my veins. For this I blame three things: a) the
happy discovery last autumn of a new local gourmet shop that sells an
excellent frozen shepherd’s pie (and to be an actual “shepherd’s pie” it
has to be lamb, not beef, or you’d have to call it “cottage pie”); b) a
deep-freeze I recently inherited; and c) a monstrous rosemary bush that
I have been growing for several years, transplanting indoors each
winter.
The rosemary bush – “forest” would be more
apt – sits in my TV room in a big planter, dozens of curly arms
stretched out like something from Little Shop of Horrors. If
it’s difficult to watch TV because green branches obscure your view of
Lisa LaFlamme, it’s time for drastic herb harvesting.
There
are other foods that pair well with rosemary, no question, including
roast chicken and my two standbys when I’m feeling ambitious: grilled
pizza with stinky taleggio cheese and caramelized onions; and a thick
pasta e fagioli soup with spicy tomato sauce. But I’m not ashamed to say
that most of the time this past winter I took the frozen-pie path of
least resistance.
This,
I boldly suggest, places me in a reasonably authoritative position to
recommend a few wines for your Easter lamb course, whether it’s roast
leg, grilled chops, braised shanks or humble sausage. Lamb is a gamy
meat. That’s why cooks often use herbs such as rosemary or a mint jelly
in their preparations. You want freshness and verve with the beasty
flavour. Sweet jammy fruitiness helps, too.
These
counterpoints can be accomplished by wine as well – whether it’s an
herbal red such as a southern Rhône blend, Loire-style cabernet franc,
Chilean carménère, a peppery syrah, jammy primitivo or zinfandel. The
list hardly ends there, but it’s a fine start.
I think the selections below could do justice to ham but also work beautifully with Globe columnist Lucy Waverman’s Scottish shepherd’s pie and British celebrity chef and Globe columnist Jamie Oliver’s vegetarian shepherd’s pie. The latter is made with lentils and sweet potatoes, and I call it Silence of the Yams.
La Célestière Tradition Châteauneuf-du-Pape 2010 (France)
SCORE: 91 PRICE: $47.95
A
big, full-tilt Châteauneuf that’s simultaneously fruity and gamy.
Pushing 15-per-cent alcohol, this red blend of mostly grenache delivers
flavours of plum preserves, licorice, lavender and roasted meat. The
alcohol peeks through slightly, but that should not be a problem at a
table where the centrepiece is a juicy, savoury leg of lamb or a salty
ham. Available in Ontario.
Rustenberg John X Merriman 2012 (South Africa)
SCORE: 91 PRICE: $24.95
Interested
in a well-structured Medoc red from Bordeaux? How about paying
two-thirds the price (or less) for this exemplary South African? A
classic Bordeaux-style blend of cabernet sauvignon, merlot, cabernet
franc, petit verdot and Malbec, it’s long-aged in oak barrels and would
undoubtedly stump many French experts in a blind tasting. Full-bodied,
it’s ripe but unheavy, with a film of fine-grained tannins providing
welcome backbone to the cassis-like fruit and savoury notes of tobacco
and spice. $26.99 in British Columbia, various prices in Alberta.
Descendientes de J. Palacios Petalos 2013 (Spain)
SCORE: 91 PRICE: $24.95
Alvaro
Palacios, Spain’s foremost New Age winemaker, treats us to an offbeat,
connoisseur’s red made from the still-too-obscure mencia grape, the
crisp, Beaujolais-like signature of the Bierzo district. Medium-bodied
and slightly chalky, it offers up flavours of blueberry jam and
raspberry, with ample fruity depth lifted by firm acidity. Various
prices in Alberta, $27.49 in Manitoba, $23.90 in Quebec, $34.95 in Nova
Scotia.
Henry of Pelham Family Tree Red 2013 (Niagara)
SCORE: 90 PRICE: $18.95
An
unusual and captivating cuvée, this combines syrah – a Rhône Valley
signature – with Bordeaux varieties merlot, cabernet franc and cabernet
sauvignon and includes a left-field dollop of gutsy baco noir, a Henry
of Pelham signature grape. Experimentation, even in the traditional
world of wine, can lead to good things. Peppery-plum notes from the
syrah mingle with smoked herbs and fresh acidity. Nicely done. Available
in Ontario.
Flat Rock Riesling 2014 (Niagara)
SCORE: 90 PRICE: $16.95
Considerably
sweeter than off-dry, here’s a smartly balanced white that weighs in at
an impressively low 9.5-per-cent alcohol. Think of fine German
riesling: sweetness countered by zesty lime and green apple, finishing
with a salty tang. A fine white for lamb or baked ham or pork dishes of
any kind. And a great value. Available in Ontario.
Villa Maria Cellar Selection Sauvignon Blanc 2015 (New Zealand)
SCORE: 90 PRICE: $19.95
This
wondrous, textbook New Zealand sauvignon blanc, from one of the
country’s leading producers, is an explosion of freshness, springtime in
a bottle. Grapefruit and passionfruit mix with a pasture’s worth of
fresh grass. Most people prefer red wine with lamb, but this lively
white from the land of lamb would be just as compelling. Various prices
in Alberta, $22.99 in Manitoba, $27.99 in New Brunswick, $26.28 in
Newfoundland.
Casa Rojo Alexander vs The Ham Factory 2012 (Spain)
SCORE: 90 PRICE: $36.95
There’s
a pig on the label. It’s wearing goggles and has metal gears around its
legs. I suppose it’s best not to ask. Bottom line: The wine is good,
full-bodied and very dry, with chalky tannins and flavours of juicy plum
and dark chocolate. Save the pork (sorry) and try it with roast lamb,
as the winery suggests. Available in Ontario.
Frescobaldi Tenuta di Castiglioni 2013 (Italy)
SCORE: 89 PRICE: $21.95
Medium-bodied
and smooth for a Tuscan red. Smartly tuned with cherry-plum fruit,
background savouriness suggesting leather and wood and a lively, salty
lift. $24.99 in British Columbia, various prices in Alberta, $21.95 in
Manitoba.
Santa Alicia Gran Reserva de Los Andes Carmenère 2012 (Chile)
SCORE: 89 PRICE: $17.95
Succulent
and ripe, this red shows racy carménère’s friendlier side. Full-bodied
and plummy, it delivers a smoked-herb, woodsy quality along with a hint
of green bell pepper. Available in Ontario.
Peninsula Ridge Barrel Aged Chardonnay 2014 (Niagara)
SCORE: 89 PRICE: $15.95
A
lighter-style of barrel-aged chardonnay, with crisp, bright-apple fruit
joined by toffee and a nutty overtone, finishing with herbal-lemony
zing. Impressive complexity for the money. Available in Ontario.
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