The Independent's journalism is supported by our readers. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn commission. 

Wines of the week

The white wines you need for a magical Christmas

Although this year’s celebrations will look a lot different, one constant we can rely on is the food and the drink

Friday 04 December 2020 14:06 GMT
Comments
(The Independent)

Your support helps us to tell the story

This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting. Your support allows us to keep sending journalists to the story.

The Independent is trusted by 27 million Americans from across the entire political spectrum every month. Unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock you out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. But quality journalism must still be paid for.

Help us keep bring these critical stories to light. Your support makes all the difference.

One thing is for sure this Christmas: however we celebrate, if we are only allowing ourselves a couple of meals with family and friends or if it’s just that Zoom celebration, we need to do it as well as we can. And that means serious wines.

While red wines can often seem to dominate at Christmas, we do need full-flavoured whites in our cellar as well, for aperitifs and oysters, for smoked fish and canapes, and for centrepieces such as salmon wellington, baked sea bass and vegetable and vegan mains. And many of us do prefer a rich white with our turkey or chicken.  

First of all then, some chablis, which, with its clean, citrus and stone-fruit flavours and its dry minerality, is the perfect aperitif or accompaniment to those oysters or smoked salmon. Both the Fournillon Chablis 2017 (£15.95 stroudwine.com; £16.50 reservewines.co.uk) and the Nathalie and Gilles Fevre Chablis 2018 (£16.99 robertsandspeight.co.uk; £19.50 jnwine.com) embody these qualities; they are precise, lean, mineral wines of gorgeous poise and persistence. 

For something much weightier, the old chardonnay vines and extended lees ageing of the Daniel-Etienne Defaix Chablis 2015 (£22.50 tanners-wines.co.uk) deliver greater concentration, depth and fuller-flavoured complexity for richer dishes such as salmon as a main course. 

Moving south to Burgundy and the Cotes Chalonnaise, the Domaine Jacqueson Rully Blanc 2018 (£22.95 thewhiskyexchange.com) has toasty, creamy flavours that work fabulously with roasted white meats like turkey and chicken, as well as baked fish. 

So much for the classic wines of France, but other parts of the world produce fabulous special-occasion chardonnays that do not have to be over-oaked. We don’t really associate chardonnay with Germany, but the Furst Astheimer Chardonnay 2017 (£33.28 laywheeler.com, £39 jnwine.com) is very mineral, with some floral notes and precise, nutty, citrus flavours. 

California is well known for its chardonnay and although some tends to be over-oaked, the Marimar Estate Russian River Valley Acero 2018 (£26.50 farehamwinecellar.co.uk) from the Californian venture of the Spanish Torres combine, is the opposite; taking its name from the Spanish word for steel, signalling that oak is absent here, it remains full flavoured and creamy on the palate. Both these wines are versatile enough to match with a range of white meat and fish dishes.  

Moving away from chardonnay, but returning to Germany, the organic Weingut Frey Pinot Blanc 2019 (£17.00 shaftesburywines.co.uk; £17.00 thelittlewineshopandsocial.co.uk) from the Rheinhessen region is very different again: smoky notes, some slight honeysuckle, pear and apriot flavours, but finishing very dry. Complex and interesting and a great wine for smoked eel, one of my favourite Christmas starters. 

Now for a riesling, but not from Germany: the Gilvesy Rajnai Rizling 2017 (£15.95 davywine.co.uk) from Hungary has characteristic lime, lemon and pure mineral flavours and is another one for smoked fish and oysters or other shellfish. In my book, sauvignon blanc is the perfect wine of spring, but it’s also a refreshing aperitif and, like all these wines, great with shellfish and vegetable dishes. 

Try the Smith & Sheth – Cru Wairau Sauvignon Blanc 2019 (£18.50 winedirect.co.uk), which is benchmark Marlborough sauvignon, with expressive hedgerow and gooseberry flavours and that bracing minerality. 

But for something that will really match up to substantial special-occasion dishes, John Duval, the man who once made what many consider Australia’s greatest wine, Penfolds Grange, has combined two southern French staples – roussanne and marsanne – with a healthy shot of viognier into an enticing whole: the John Duval Plexus Barossa Valley 2018/19 (£22.99 or £19.99 if bought as part of a mixed six bottle purchase majestic.co.uk; £20.40 fieldandfawcett.co.uk) has rich but not overbearing flavours of pear and nectarines and some honeysuckle aromas. A big wine for the big occasion. So, that’s a white Christmas sorted. Now for the red one next week…

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in