Western Living Magazine
7 Homes with Outdoor Fireplaces and Firepits
Pamela Anderson’s Ladysmith Home Is a Whimsical, ‘Funky Grandma’ Dream Come True
Before and After: Stunning Photos from a Vancouver Beach House Renovation
9 Ways to Make the Most of Your Summer Fruits
6 Recipes for Your End-of-Summer BBQ
5 Perfect Recipes for Your Next Summer Garden Party
Survey: What Are You Looking for in a Vacation Rental?
Wildfire Resource Guide: Essential Links for Live Updates, Personal Preparedness and More
Local B.C. Getaway Guide: Hidden Gems on Vancouver Island’s East Coast
Fired Up: 5 Barbecues Perfect for End of Summer Grilling
Rebellious, Daring and Dramatic: The New Lotus Eletre
Trendspotting: Highlights from Milan’s Salone del Mobile 2024
It’s Back! Entries Are Now Open for Our WL Design 25 Awards
Announcing the 2024 Western Living Design Icons
You’re Invited: Grab Your Tickets to the 2024 WL Designers of the Year Awards Party
Raising a glass to an unbeatable holiday gift.
If you read most wine reviews these days, you’d think that everyone now spends their time alternating between Champagne and riesling, with the odd light red (served chilled) thrown in. And while I actually love all those styles, once in a while I want to dive into an absolute sledgehammer of the red which comes on hard with fruit, structure, tanninsthe type of wine you need two hands to hold.
There are a few ways to approach it servicing this need: you could go for Zinfandel, but the fruit can often overwhelm everything else and it’s tricky finding freshness. Ditto Aussie Shiraz. For me the happy big place is California Cabernetwhich, when made right achieves bigness and balance at the same time. The only trick has been the ever-increasing $$$ of said wines. Caymus Special Selection, perhaps the very paradigm of the type of wine I’m talking about, now pushes $200.
So when a new wine enters into this pricey fray at a significantly lower tariff, my ears (and wallet) perk up. The secret to getting all those elements above while stills till staying in a two-digit price zone? Look south, young manas in Paso Robles, the central California that’s been steadily on the rise for the past two decades. Paso is hot and its stock and trade has always been on big, ripe reds. For the first act, they focussed on the Rhone Varietals (Syrah primarily, but also Grenache, Mouvedre), but a few years back the winemakers, no doubt looking at some of the prices their Napa brethren were fetching for Cabernet, and figured “How hard can it be?”
Well, quite hard, it turns out. Give Cabernet nothing but heat, and you get the proverbial fruit bomb that lacks freshness and finesse. All of which makes this wine from Austin Hope something of a unicorn: $80, loaded with black fruit, vanilla but with a line of freshness throughout that keeps it balanced. Full disclosure: this wine was just named #10 in the Wine Enthusiasts Top 100 (and that’s how it came to my attention) but, weirdly, it’s still pretty widely available.
So, if you know the recipient of your vino largesse likes ’em big and bold…I feel like I’ve just saved you $40+ dollars. So Merry Christmas!
Are you over 18 years of age?