If you’ve ever wondered which wine glass to use, Joe Fattorini has the answer.
The reason wine glasses are shaped the way they are is more than just looks – it’s about aerating wine in the glass, releasing the flavours and allowing your senses to experience the different flavours and wine styles.
Perhaps your glassware cabinet has a mixture? That’s a great opportunity to find out the differences for yourself. From standard tulip-shaped glasses to Burgundy glasses and beyond, the glassware makes a big difference to the wine tasting experience.
For most wines, however, the classic tulip shape works wonderfully – whether you’re drinking a red or a white Bordeaux, you can’t really go wrong. In fact, the respected critic Jancis Robinson has even designed a glass that works for tasting any wine.
As Joe explains, there really is no wrong answer: he tells us a story of visiting a very famous château during the Marathon du Medoc – the only marathon that serves glasses of great Bordeaux wines to its runners! – and discovering that great wines don’t necessarily need the best wine glasses…
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What is Le Grand Voyage?
Beginning in August 2020, Le Grand Voyage will take you on a Bordeaux wine tour unlike any other. You’ll discover the reason cork is the preferred wine bottle closure, why wine tasting needs the right glassware, and how the region’s most famous grapes found their place. You will also hear the stories (and controversies) of French wine classification, and even a few tales of war and conflict that have helped shape and define Bordeaux and other French wine appellations over the last few centuries.
But it’s not just about wine: Le Grand Voyage is about stories. Joe’s love of Bordeaux wine (and French wine appellations in general) is as much about the history of the region as it is about the wines themselves. You’ll find out why Bordeaux is the wine of American presidents; why Irish and English names grace famous French wine labels; and why a sailing ship graces ours.
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We are Château Malartic-Lagravière, a Cru Classé de Graves of the Pessac-Léognan appellation in Bordeaux, France.
Our vineyards sit on the finest gravelly soils of Léognan, south of Bordeaux city. Much of our plot is dedicated to the red wine grapes made famous by the Bordeaux appellation, but our terroir also holds the key to one of the region’s best-kept secrets: first-class Bordeaux white wines.
Château Malartic-Lagravière’s history dates back to the 18th century. We were one of only six wine producers in Bordeaux to enter the 1953 Graves classification for both red wine and white wine. These same varieties are still grown in our vineyards today: Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Sauvignon Blanc and Sémillon.
The Bonnie family now takes care of the vines and wines using traditional techniques and
modern sustainable agriculture practices to produce wines of incomparable character,
complexity and sophistication.
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