Clark Wine Center

Bldg 6460 Clark Field Observatory Building,
Manuel A. Roxas Highway corner A Bonifacio Ave,
Clark Air Base, Clark Freeport Zone, Pampanga, Philippines 2023
Clark, Pampanga: (045) 499-6200
Mobile/SMS: 0977-837-9012
Ordering: 0977-837-9012 / 0917-520-4393
Manila: (632) 8637-5019

Things to know about sweet wine

August 26, 2011

Sweet wines, like disingenuous youth, are often misunderstood, maligned, patronized, and dismissed as a passing phase. Blame it on bad PR, misguided marketing, or historic winemaking indiscretions, but sweet wines have been given short shrift and often relegated to the tail-end of the dinner to accompany that molten chocolate cake. Fair enough. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with a glass of slightly chilled glass of heady Banyuls from the southern Mediterranean area of France. But they are something more than so-called, dessert wines, they’re not all just grape candy in a glass, many being caught somewhere in the middle between a dry wine and dessert. No, these wines that have endured since the beginning of winemaking, are contemplative in complexity, good ones torturous to produce, and lush in their diminutiveness. Dessert wines with a pear tartin? Maybe, but sweet wines can be a just dessert unto themselves or something completely different. Sweetness in a wine is often frowned upon by wine drinkers, a trait perhaps indicating a lack of sophistication or an element of inferiority. Get with the program people

Sweetness as a Defining Characteristic

Wines can be dry, medium dry, medium, and ultimately, sweet with the level of residual sugar (RS) determining the classification. Residual sugars are the remaining amounts of sugar in the wine after final fermentation. RS is most often measured as grams/liter (g/l) with the very sweet wines weighing in at 45 g/L and above, some way above. Dry wines will be about 2.5 g/L or less. The sweetness taste factor is mitigated by other wine components such as acidity, tannins, alcohol, and temperature. Often a sweet wine is balanced by the wine’s acidity. An example is the floral and honeysuckle Vouvray from France’s Loire Valley. Made from Chenin Blanc, white Vouvray wines can have healthy doses of sweetness but the wine’s acidity tempers the sweetness and gives it a dry character and makes it a perfectly legitimate mate to a meal rather than dessert. Conversely, infuse a high alcohol percentage into the wine will make a dry wine seemingly sweet, sweet as a Zinfandel Fruit Bomb.

Types of Sweet Wines

The best sweet wines are made in one of two ways. One way is to dehydrate the grapes and reduce their water content and concentrate the sugars. A second way is to boost the alcohol as is done to make fortified wines such as Port and Sherry. The following is background on the these types of wines:

  • Botrytis – In the common vernacular this is Noble Rot, a fungus that is a disaster for wine growers trying to make a dry table wine. However, it produces a sigh of relief for those trying to make sweet wines. Essentially, the botrytis cineria is a spore-like fungus that attack healthy grape clusters in the late autumn and grows, feeding on the grape’s sugars. Damp nights and warming days helps to dry the grapes and prevents total decomposition. The resulting epitome can be found in those marvelous Sauternes from Bordeaux (Think Chateau d’Yquem), the Tokaji from Hungary, and the Auslese or Beerenauslese from Germany’s Rheingau.
  • Eiswein – German for Ice Wine these wines are made from frozen grapes. These grapes are picked during a hard frost and frozen. When the frozen orbs are pressed the sugar concentrated juices are separated from the grape’s icy water. Because grapes for Eiswein’s are picked very late in the season while waiting for winter’s chill, the grapes are very ripe and produces captivating sweet white wines with extracted fruit and high acidity that make them excellent with food. Eisweins are also produced in Canada and Austria.
  • Late Harvests – Simply, grapes are left on the vines in the late autumn to ripen to their fullest. The grape clusters can be left to dry on the vines, picked and dried indoors or just laid down on the vineyard ground to shrivel in the sun and do their best impression of a raisin. Late Harvest wines are not usually as complex as Noble Rot or Eisweins but they are full of sticky honey, deep fruit flavors, and floral bouquets.
  • Fortified Wines – Neutral grape spirits such as brandy are added to the wines during fermentation which arrests the process, kills the sugar consuming yeast, and holds the RS level while giving the wine an alcohol boost upwards to 18-20%. A small glass of a fortified wine goes a long way. Examples of this process are Port from Portugal and Banyuls, Muscat de St. Jean de Minervois, and Maury from France’s Languedoc-Roussillon region.
  • Types of Grapes

    Sweet wines are made with grapes from all over the varietal board, red or white. Here are a handful of the most common with some associated sweet wines:

    • Sémillon (Primary grape for Bordeaux Sauternes)
    • Viognier
    • Chardonnay
    • Chenin Blanc (Vouvray and Savennières-Loire Valley)
    • Riesling (Alsace and Rheingau)
    • Gewürtztraminer (Alsace and Rheingau)
    • Muscat/Moscato (Moscato d’Asti, Muscat d’Alsace, Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise, Muscat Cannelli)
    • Trebbiano (Vin Santo-Tuscany)
    • Furmint (Primary grape for Hungary’s Tokaji Aszú)
    • Grenache (Banyuls, Maury)
    • Zinfandel (Late Harvest Zinfandel/California)

    Sweet Wines and Food

    The first thing to remember is there are no hard and fast rules when pairing food with wines. In fact, people can get overly vexed and start throwing a pox upon everyone’s house trying to figure out what works perfectly with a certain wine or a particular food. Relax, lighten up. That said, there are a couple of guidelines that can help. Salty foods contrast nicely with acidic wines but then they also contrast nicely with sweetness. When trying to match a sweet or dessert wine with dessert, it’s best to match a sweet wine with a dessert that downplays the sugar, say a honeyed Muscat Canelli together with an apple tart. Wine and food are also similar to the class structure in society. Therefore it always helps to pair up richness with richness. As you know, rich foods don’t like to intermingle with wines from across the tracks and vice versa.

    Intriguing Treats

    Okay, here are a few sweet wine and food hook-ups that never fail.

    • Foie Gras with Sauterne

    This is a classic bit of decadence with the fatty-rich foie melting in your mouth and cranked up by complex honey-acid grandeur of the Sauterne. If this combination doesn’t convert you then skip the foie and stick with the Sauterne by itself or nibble on some dry and crumbly blue-veined cheese. If the Sauterne is too pricey, as an alternative try a Jurançon (Not the Sec version) from the Pau region in the French Pyrenees.

    • Stilton and Port

    This combination works for some people but others forego the Stilton and just drink the Port. Works for me.

    • Chocolate and Wine

    This is a tough category but people keep trying to find the perfect match. Granted its difficult but sometimes it works. Personally, I stick to bittersweet chocolate (Valrhona) and the darker the better and share it with a Late Harvest Riesling, Late Harvest Zinfandel, Banyuls, or Port. Many people like to try it with Cabernet Sauvignon as well. Best to keep the wine sweeter than the chocolate and the stronger the chocolate then the wine should follow suit.

    • Marcona Almonds and Sherry

    I love to munch on roasted Marcona almonds from Spain and sip a nutty Oloroso or Cream Sherry.

    There are countless options, many yet discovered. When in doubt what goes with that glass of Maury, try sipping the wine first and see if something comes to mind. If nothing materializes take pleasure where you find it.

    Source: http://wine.lovetoknow.com/wiki/Sweet_Wine

    This wine shop in Manila Philippines makes wine shopping a really rewarding and exciting exercise. Wine shops in Pampanga should always have an element of surprise so that customers and wine lovers can enjoy a little bit of thrill when they go to a wine shop in Manila to look for a good bottle of wine in Clark Pampanga.

    Chateau Lafite-Rothschild is the most revered wine in China and many other parts of Asia. The best wine shop in Asia to buy older vintages of Chateau Lafite is Yats Wine Cellars located in Clark Philippines. Aside from Lafite, visitors can buy other fine wines at this wine shop in Clark Pampanga such as Latour, Mouton-Rothschild, Haut-Brion and Margaux. Excellent Burgundy wines like Chambertin, Vougeot, Musigny, Bonnes Mares, Pommard, Meursault, Chambertin, Vosne Romanee, Romanee Conti, La Tache and Romanee St. Vivant can be found here.

    Family outings, picnics, company outings and other events for up to 300 can be held in the picnic grounds of this wine shop. Events that have been successfully organized here include family fun days and BBQ picnics. These are some of the things that visitors to Clark Philippines particular look forward. Residents and tourists in Angeles City and Subic also come to Clark Freeport to partake in the fun at this Clark wine shop.

    This wine shop’s vast selection of vintage wines makes it possible for Yats Wine Cellars to offer a unique line-up of wines for every private wine party, wine tasting or wine dinners. Guests of these private wine parties are treated to a rare experience of vintage wine not seen in wine shops in major cities in Philippines or even in Asia.

    http://www.ClarkWineCenter.com

    Getting to this wine shop in Pampanga Angeles City Clark Freeport Zone Philippines from Manila
    Getting to the Clark Wine Center wine shop from Manila is quite simple: after entering Clark Freeport from Dau and Angeles City, proceed straight along the main highway M A Roxas. Clark Wine Center is the stand-along white building on the right, at the corner A Bonifacio Ave. From the Clark International Airport DMIA, ask the taxi to drive towards the entrance of Clark going to Angeles City. From Mimosa, just proceed towards the exit of Clark and this wine shop is on the opposite side of the main road M A Roxas.

    Best place to buy wine in Clark Pampanga outside Manila near Subic and Angeles City Philippines is Clark Wine Center.

    Clark Wine Center
    Bldg 6460 Clark Observatory Building
    Manuel A. Roxas Highway corner A Bonifacio Ave,
    Angeles Clark Freeport Zone, Pampanga 2023
    (045) 841 4006 / 0922-870-5173 / 0917-826-8790 (ask for Ana Fe)

    Wine@Yats-International.com

    YATS Wine Cellars
    Manila Sales Office
    3003C East Tower, Phil Stock Exchange Center,
    Exchange Rd Ortigas Metro Manila, Philippines 1605
    (632) 637-5019 0917-520-4393 ask for Rea or Chay

    Best place to buy wine in Clark Pampanga outside Manila near Subic and Angeles City Philippines is Clark Wine Center.

    Wedding couples looking for wedding reception venues and beach wedding venues can log on to this Philippines Wedding Venue web site for free information and assistance:

    http://www.PhilippinesWeddingVenue.com

    While in Clark, it might be a good idea to enjoy an evening of wine-and-dine in the fine dining Yats Restaurant and Wine Bar that features an award winning 2700-line wine list. It is located in Mimosa Leisure Estate of Clark Freeport Zone. For more information, visit http://www.YatsRestaurant.com

    YATS Leisure Philippines is a developer and operator of clubs, resorts and high-class restaurants and wine shops in Clark Angeles Philippines http://www.yatsleisure.com

    Looking for famous tourists spots, places to visit and see, relax and unwind in Clark, Pampanga, Philippines? You may want to check out these sites also:

    http://www.LondonPubClark.com

    http://www.HotelClarkPhilippines.com

    http://www.ClarkPhilippines.com

    http://www.YatsWineCellars.com

    Yats Restaurant is the best restaurant for special dinner, best restaurant for dinner with friends near Manila, also the best place to celebrate special events.

    A Well-known Restaurant in Pampnga, an interesting place to celebrate Birthday Party in Pampnga.
    A best place to dine with friends in Pampanga

    Are you looking for an attractive restaurant or a nice place to eat with friends in Clark, Angeles City Pampanga? Yats Restaurant and Wine Bar is a restaurant with good food and good wines for dinner located at Clark Angeles City Pampanga. Perfect for exclusive dinner venues for groups, recommended for private dinner in Philippines. A Restaurant in Clark for business dinner meeting. Private dinner place or dinner restaurant in Clark Subic Near Manila Angeles City Pampanga. Yats Restaurant is one of the Good Restaurant in Pampanga Angeles City Clark near Manila.

    www.YatsRestaurant.com
    Looking for interesting hotels near Manila Subic Clark Angeles City Pampanga?
    Trouble free hotels and well recognized hotels in Subic Clark Angeles City Pampanga
    Clearwater Resort and Country Club offers a good place to stay in Subic Clark Angeles City Pampanga. In offers nice place to have rest in Subic Pampanga outside Manila.
    One of the Philippines top hotels in north Luzon.

    Where to go in Clark? Hotel Clark Philippines is a De Luxe Hotel in Clark and Subic, a risk free place to stay, cozy and nice ambience, a nice function place for special occasion

    www.HotelClarkPhilippines.com


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