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Dining in Estonia: Tallinn

Posted on June 14, 2019June 14, 2019 by Peter Kupers Posted in Food & Drinks Tagged Cider, Eiswein, Estonia, Foodie, Mosel, Natural Wine, Portugese wine, Tallinn, TravelLeave a Comment on Dining in Estonia: Tallinn

On a continent where economic growth is close to wishful thinking for many countries, the development of the Baltics over the last decades stands out. Most of the economic activity is centered on Tallinn. Compounded with the fact that 25% of the country’s population lives here as well, it should […]

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Dining in Helsinki

Posted on May 29, 2019June 14, 2019 by Peter Kupers Posted in Drink & Dine Tagged Austrian Wine, Foodie, German Wine, Helsinki, Natural Wine, Rheingau, Spanish wine2 Comments on Dining in Helsinki

It has been a while! Again! Who knew selling sake and other Japanese drinks would be so time-consuming? And then there is the old writer’s block popping up again, which I may have used as an excuse for laziness in the past, but which has come back for real to […]

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Bandol at its finest – Domaine Tempier

Posted on November 20, 2018November 27, 2018 by Peter Kupers Posted in Provence Tagged Bandol, Biodynamic Wine, French Wine, Mourvèdre, Provence, Red Wine5 Comments on Bandol at its finest – Domaine Tempier

There are a couple of estates whose reputation precedes their appellation. Chateau Simone in Palette, Huet in Vouvray, and of course Domaine Tempier in Bandol. As I mentioned previously, Lucien Peyraud played an enormous role in the establishment of the AOC, and has in many ways shaped the wines of […]

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Burgundian Bandol – Domaine de Terrebrune

Posted on November 7, 2018November 27, 2018 by Peter Kupers Posted in Provence Tagged Bandol, French Wine, Mourvèdre, Organic Wine, Provence, Red Wine, Wine3 Comments on Burgundian Bandol – Domaine de Terrebrune

Terrebrune is in more ways than one an outlier in the appellation of Bandol. It is the lone estate located in Ollioulles, whereas most of its Bandol producing colleagues can be found around La Cadière d’Azur or Le Castellet. Moreso, the wines also have a distinctiveness to them, with a […]

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A trip to the Mosel (II) – Prädikat wines

A trip to the Mosel (I)- Meisterwerke 2019

Bandol at its finest – Domaine Tempier

Burgundian Bandol – Domaine de Terrebrune

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An introduction to German Sweet (III) – The adolescents
To my own surprise, mirroring my previous article and naming this one ‘the old ones’ would not have done justice to the wines. Despite a couple of them nearing twenty years of age, the freshness and the life found in the bottles was stunning, and I can’t help but believe
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Pithon-Paillé, Bonnes Blanches 2013
In honor of Drink Chenin Day, back to the place where it all began: Anjou! The region produces some of the greatest white wines in the world, but is woefully under-appreciated. This is in large part the result of an overly complicated appellation structure. The first thing to understand is
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HM Borges – 20 year old Verdelho
A wine blogger’s end-of-year post has a certain predictability to it: either it looks back on the best bottles drunk in the year that has come to pass (often with a skew towards expensive, rare or cult bottles), or it looks onwards to trends spotted in the wine world (cue
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Dr. Crusius, Traiser Riesling 2013
Back to Germany this week with the very region that started my love affair with riesling, the Nahe. Smack in between the Mosel and Rheinhessen, the region used to have the sorry reputation of being a thirst-quencher, often ending up in anonymous blends. It wasn’t until German wine law recognized
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