
It is exceedingly rare that I toss a wine down the drain but that's where the rest of the glass went. It was not corked, just horrid. Sour, dead on the palate. Cooking with it would make whatever I cooked taste bad too, so now I sit with it. 2007 Cheverny, Le Domaine du Moulin: Pinot Noir and Gamay. Avoid.
Blegh.
And tonight I bought a bottle of overpriced South African Chenin Blanc, made by the fabled Teddy Hall.
It was a 2006, and as flat as a pancake, though the wood was still evident, and that's about all.
So I am cross.
Below?
My guilty pleasure to wash away the nastiness, though I mess with the timeline. Hey, it's my blog. This was laaaast week. A...blush...Moscato. In other words: sweet. That explains it, they crow! She has no taste, of course she hated a wooded Chenin Blanc and a risky red. She's a cretin.
No man. Those two were bad. I know bubbly Moscato is not serious, not proper, is naive, is shallow...but...I liked it!

And it's good for sipping chopping vegetables (I chop vegetables instead of chopping people), or dessert. It tastes just like the Moni's grape juice I drank as a child on special occasions, when the adults were quaffing special wine.
Thash my shtory an I'm schticking to it.
Thinks: maybe that's why I almost sliced my thumb off!
This timeline is indeed as complicated as a bad Transylvanian story... But come to think of it, bad red wine will fit in well.
ReplyDelete"Look, root vegetables. That proves I have gravitas."
ReplyDeleteHilarious! I Laughed out loud.