![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
Any help is appreciated.
Cheers
Ian
I kinda think they were after something more specific..Mahmoud Ali wrote:Buy the best pinot you find (preferably lower in alcohol), cellar it for 15+ years, then decide if you like pinot or not. The reason behind my advice is that this year a couple of 17 year-old pinots from Chile and Australia have wowed me. They were single bottles bought on reputation and a recommendation. Should I have bought more, you betcha!
Cheeers ............. Mahmoud.
Was going to say pretty much this! Amisfield is a good lunch spot, and the wines are decent. Heard good things about the Mt Difficulty cellar door too, but not been.JamieBahrain wrote:Personally, the better experiences are the long-lunches at the wineries. Closest being Amisfield I think? Another option is the wine shop in Queenstown where you can settle down with a platter and sample glasses of hundreds of local wines in coravin. Pretty cool but like anything in Queenstown its very expensive.
Rippon is worth it for the views alone...Nick wrote:G'day Ian
If you can justify the drive across to Wanaka (which is a stunning drive, and probably only about 90 minutes), Rippon and Maude were probably our two favorite Otago cellar door experiences, ahead of anything else we visited on the Queenstown side. We also organised a tasting at Burn Cottage, whose Pinots were as good as anything we tasted while we were over there. Kika (tapas bar) in Wanaka was also pretty solid.
Have a great trip.
Highly unlikelyJamieBahrain wrote:He will return but .... as his palate drifts toward Pinot !
You've nailed it Ian, many New Zealand chardonnays are excellent and Riflemans is most definitely one of them. A 2007 a few months ago was still pristine and elegant, the epitome of glorious chardonnay.ticklenow1 wrote:What did impress me was the quality of New Zealand Chardonnay. The Sacred Hill Riflemans was the best wine I tried on both trips. Stunning Chardonnay.