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WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

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WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Robin Garr » Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:22 am

Vinho Verde, cheap <i>and</i> good

The conventional wisdom about Vinho Verde, the so-called "green wine" of Portugal, has long been simple and frustrating: To enjoy it properly, you need to drink it <i>in</i> Portugal, as it's too fragile, fresh and light to bear the rigors of trans-Atlantic travel.

But now at least one mass-market brand is defying that wisdom - and making a compelling case - with a Vinho Verde that sells in the U.S. for as little as $4 to $6 for a bottle.

Gazela, a brand from Portugal's giant Sogrape, the corporation that brought us (and indeed still brings us) the much-maligned Mateus rosé, appears to have solved the Vinho Verde problem through two simple measures. First, it now prints a bottling date (not a vintage) in fine print on the back label, making it possible for consumers to choose the freshest wine in stock.

Second, in a move that some might consider a sign of the End Times in a wine from the home of the international national-cork industry, Gazela now comes tightly sealed under a sturdy metal screw cap. This is a strong positive, both for retaining freshness and for banishing the possibility of "cork taint" that has been a serious issue with Gazela in the past, perhaps because the economics of producing a wine at this low price point can't accommodate the cost of quality control in natural cork.

Despite its name and an undeniable brassy glint in some samples, Vinho Verde isn't named for its color but its youth. "Green" wine, as noted, is best enjoyed within a year after bottling at the most. Just to confuse the color issue a little more, the Vinho Verde wine region (<i>Denominação Origem Controlada</i> in Portugal, echoing the Italian DOC) lies along Portugal's misty moisty Costa Verde ("Green Coast"), north of the Port region and bordering Spain's Galicia on the coast of the Atlantic.

Some of the more authoritative Vinho Verdes are made from the Alvarinho grape, Portugal's translation of the Spanish Albariño. Most of the less expensive, light and frothy bottlings, though are made from less-familiar indigenous grapes, which like the Spanish Cavas featured in Wednesday's edition may add a few more little-known grape varieties to your life list. Gazela, for instance, incorporates four such grapes: Loureiro, Trajadura, Azal and Pedernã.

Crisp, usually dry (although some export labels add a bit of sweetness), relatively low in alcohol and given a light fizz by injecting carbonation - much like a soft drink - Vinho Verde is hardly a wine to contemplate or conjure with. But a decent brand, and Gazela certainly qualifies, rewards the taster with clean, crisp refreshment and no "off" flavors.

<table border="0" align="right" width="110"><tr><td><img src="http://www.wineloverspage.com/graphics1/gaze0905.jpg" border="1" align="right"></td></tr></table>Gazela Vinho Verde

Straw color, transparent and very pale, glints of brassy green. It pours up with a very brief froth and leaves random bubbles behind, but it's <i>petillant</i>, not truly sparkling. Simple, delicate white-fruit aromas focus on a hint of musky melon; light carbonation adds a prickle to the crisp, dry flavor. Simple, sufficient acidity for balance, light in alcohol at just 9 percent, very refreshing. Sealed with a Stelvin-type metal screwcap to retain its clean, fresh character and banish cork taint. Top value for the price - a fine everyday quaff for summer sipping. U.S. importer: Evaton Inc., Stamford, Conn. (Sept. 5, 2007)

<B>FOOD MATCH:</b> Splendid as a refreshing summer aperitif, fine with all manner of shellfish, it was an excellent match with the simple, quick shrimp-and-ham paella featured in the Sept. 6, 2007, <i>30 Second Wine Advisor FoodLetter</i>.

<B>VALUE:</B> A single-digit price might not buy complexity, but at the $6.99 price I paid, it's a whale of a bargain, and better still at its widely available price points in the $4 to $5 range.

<B>WHEN TO DRINK:</B> Soon. Vinho Verde is made to drink young and fresh, and even a year will diminish that a bit, although the sturdy screwcap on more recent bottlings will help preserve freshness. Check the back-label bottling date and choose the 2007 if you possibly can.

<B>PRONUNCIATION:</B>
<B>Vinho Verde</B> = "<I>Veen-yoo Vehr-deh</I>"
<B>Gazela</B> = "<I>Gah-zeh-lah</I>"

<B>WEB LINK:</B>
For a short fact sheet on Gazela Vinho Verde, scroll down to the section on "Sogrape Vinhos" and click the link for "Gazela 'Vinho Verde' White" on this importer page:
http://www.evaton.net/products.html

<B>FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:</B>
Look up retail vendors and compare prices for Gazela Vinho Verde on Wine-Searcher.com:
[url=http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Gazela%2bVerde/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP]http://www.wine-searcher.com/
find/Gazela%2bVerde/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP[/url]

<center>Subscribe to The 30 Second Wine Advisor</center>
Last edited by Robin Garr on Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by RichardAtkinson » Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:39 am

We've been drinking this all summer. Perfect for a hot day. But I might inject a bit of caution. Its a lot better with food. Sometimes the combination of carbonation and fairly high acidity can bother your stomach...if you are prone to that sort of thing.

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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Robin Garr » Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:49 am

RichardAtkinson wrote:We've been drinking this all summer. Perfect for a hot day. But I might inject a bit of caution. Its a lot better with food. Sometimes the combination of carbonation and fairly high acidity can bother your stomach...if you are prone to that sort of thing.


Thanks for the warning, Richard! I'm lucky to have a cast-iron stomach, most of the time, but it's best to be prepared ...
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by MattThr » Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:58 am

You lucky swine. I first discovered Vinho Verde on holiday in Portugal and loved it.

Turns out it's hard enough to get hold of here in the UK, never mind crossing the Atlantic. I always did wonder why it wasn't exported - thanks for answering the question!
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Bill Hooper » Fri Sep 07, 2007 8:32 pm

We've been swimming in Vinho Verde (Christ!!! we even have red and Rose Vinho Verde in Minneapolis) for a couple of years now and I have to say that it is surely the new Pinot Grigio. I advise sneaking a bottle into your local movie theatre and enjoying it with a big bucket of popcorn. With the exception of the higher end stuff though -Robin, remember the Dorado? I can't give it a 100% blessing. Not when there's great Muscadet and GV out there for $10-$12.
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Tom H » Fri Sep 07, 2007 9:35 pm

This is a funny thread for me. My wife is Portuguese and every time there is a function it seems to be in a restaurant in the Ironbound section of Newark. Every table will have a bottle of red and a bottle of Vinho Verde on it and a new one appears before the opened one is finished. By the way my wife doesn't like it.
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by James Roscoe » Fri Sep 07, 2007 10:34 pm

The Gazela is nice, but there is a boatload of better vihno verde for a buck or two more. Of course if you have a wedding or other summer function coming up next year, you could do worse than to get some cases of this wine for the reception.
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Robin Garr » Sat Sep 08, 2007 11:34 am

James Roscoe wrote:The Gazela is nice, but there is a boatload of better vihno verde for a buck or two more. Of course if you have a wedding or other summer function coming up next year, you could do worse than to get some cases of this wine for the reception.


The two things about the Gazela that please me (other than the price) is the screwcap and the open year-of-bottling date. Taken together, these elements make it possible to enjoy VV <i>fresh</i>. I'm much more wary of VV without them.
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Re: WTN /Wine Advisor: Vinho Verde, cheap and good

by Clinton Macsherry » Mon Sep 10, 2007 10:53 am

I picked up a bottle of the Gazela over the weekend, and noticed that the Sogrape folks also produce a VV (called "Nobilus" or something) for just a buck more. I don't recall for sure if was under screwcap, but I think not. Robin's point about the reliable freshness of a dated and capped bottle is a good one, but has anyone (James?) compared the two?
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