Gus Clemens on Wine
Gus Clemens on Wine explores and explains the world of wine in simple, humorous, fun posts
What’s your favorite wine 6-5-2024
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What’s your favorite wine 6-5-2024

I enjoy many wines, how about you?
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This is the weekly column


“If you could only drink one wine for the rest of your life, what wine would that be?” I get that question often.

As a Catholic, my tongue-in-cheek answer: “Consecrated communion wine because I am in Hell.”

Related question: “What is your favorite wine?”

As a humorist, my quip: “Whatever you are pouring.”

The answer to the base question: I enjoy all competently-made wines. When I taste sweeter wines, although not my first choice, I strive to evaluate the wine from the perspective of someone who prefers sweeter wines. And share fair comments with readers.

That said, there are wines I am more likely to pour:

• Pinot noir. Lighter body, delicate, nuanced flavors, good acidity, restrained tannins, elegant and silky mouthfeel. Versatile pairing from fish to poultry to white meats and lighter beef. Delicious as a red wine, a key component of many Champagnes.

• Sauvignon blanc. Good to great acidity; pairs with with huge range of foods.

• Red blends. I prefer blends over pure varietals because blends can deliver more complexity and depth, although I can enjoy a pure varietal play. Blend examples include:

• GSM. Grenache-syrah-mouvédre. Wonderful blend of three varieties I enjoy.

• Bordeaux blend. Cabernet sauvignon, merlot, cabernet franc, sometimes petite verdot, malbec, carménère. Classic big reds.

• Spanish blends. Tempranillo-garnacha (Rioja). Garnacha-cariñena (Priorat). Tempranilo-cab, merlot, malbec (Ribera del Duero). There are excellent Spanish white blends, too.

• Italian blends. Sangiovese with a variety of blenders.

• Sparkling wine. From Champagne, to Spanish cava, to Italian spumantes and proseccos.

• Chardonnay. So versatile. Can be made in almost every style; a key component of Champagne and other sparklings.

• Australia. Shiraz, perfect for beef pairing.

• New Zealand. Sauvignon blanc and, increasingly, pinot noir.

• Chile and Argentina. Huge values. Is there a better value-for-price play than malbec?

• Portugal. Wide selection at fantastic price points.

• Zinfandel. Bold ripe fruit, soft tannins, potentially high alcohol. What’s not to love?

• Others: riesling, vinho verde, grüner veltliner, maderia, gewürztraminer, viognier, pinot gris/grigio.

Happy to narrow it down for you.

Tasting notes:

• Hope Family Wines Treana Sauvignon Blanc, California 2022: Smooth, very approachable; retains food-friendly acidity. $18-20 Link to my review

• Lake Sonoma Winery Russian River Valley Chardonnay 2020: Fulsome, substantial expression of Russian River Valley chard. Rich, engaging in the mouth. $20-25 Link to my review

• Privé Vineyard Pinot Noir, Chehalem Mountain AVA 2022: Refined, reserved joy in the mouth. Solid reason Willamette Valley is world-class provider of pinot. $60 Link to my review

• Dobbes Family Estate Patricia’s Cuvée Pinot Noir, Willamette Valley 2021: Rich, opulent, hedonistic delight; excellent fruit, impressive complexity, wonderful texture, mouthfeel. $60 Link to my review

Last round

Somebody stole Satan’s hairpiece! There will be Hell toupee. Wine time.


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Gus Clemens on Wine
Gus Clemens on Wine explores and explains the world of wine in simple, humorous, fun posts
Gus Clemens writes a syndicated wine column for Gannett/USA Today network and posts online reviews of wines and stories of interest to wine lovers. He publishes almost daily in his substack.com newsletter, on Facebook, on Twitter, and on his website. The Gus Clemens on Wine podcast delivers that material in a warm, user-friendly format.