What are you eating and drinking tonight?
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Hobgoblin, Black Sheep, Pedigree, Flat Cap, Landlord.... not necessarily in that order. Wasn't a wine evening William, bombay mix was about as sophisticated as the culinary delights got. Anyway, it is bedtime now, Christmas kicks off for me tommorow, and I won't be coming up for air til January.
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LOL!Lord Kangana wrote:Hobgoblin, Black Sheep, Pedigree, Flat Cap, Landlord.... not necessarily in that order. Wasn't a wine evening William, bombay mix was about as sophisticated as the culinary delights got. Anyway, it is bedtime now, Christmas kicks off for me tommorow, and I won't be coming up for air til January.
I've got a potential pub evening coming up with a good, good mate who sent me a text a week ago saying we hadn't just had an evening at a pub for ages and how about it...
Good luck with the christmas rush, hope it's profitable for you, and you get to see the whites in the new year...

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Gestos by any chance? Had a organic Argie malbec at the weekend too - it was surprisingly poor and left me with a nagging hangover for several hours. Shan't be buying that one again.Bruce Rioja wrote: LK - I have a bottle of Argie Malbec here. It's telling me that 50% of the grapes are from 1,100 mtrs asl, whereas the remaining 50% are from 700 mtrs asl. Is that significant in some way? It's very nice by the way, and although 14% abv isn't a tongue peeler by any stretch.
- Bruce Rioja
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I think I've turned the being able to drink red wine corner. Wine and cheese night last night for Classics Society, bloody lovely. Today Lamb Rogan Josh, with pasta, nom nom, and a South African merlot I nicked from last night. S'all good.
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Life takes on a redder glow... South african Merlot is likely to be pretty high in the stuff (tannins) that some people find they react against with red wine... If you enjoy that you'll be fine with more interesting things to come...Prufrock wrote:I think I've turned the being able to drink red wine corner. Wine and cheese night last night for Classics Society, bloody lovely. Today Lamb Rogan Josh, with pasta, nom nom, and a South African merlot I nicked from last night. S'all good.
Mmmm... I'm remembering the first bottle of red wine that meant more than 'let's get pissed...'
Many years ago, at university, a celebration (birthday?) with a friend who drank wine ( which, up until then had been something you did at Yates's, and beer was my real drink)...
The bottle was a Chateauneuf du Pape that seemed incredibly expensive, but i tasted, with curiosity, and thought i had never had anything so delicious... a whole drinking habit changed by a single glass... Though it was years before i could afford the next bottle of Chateauneuf du Pape... and i've tasted many better wines since...
Still do the beer though...

- Bruce Rioja
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For me also. Many find Chateauneuf du Pape to be too peppery though. But yes, at that point I realised that you'll generally get what you pay for.William the White wrote: The bottle was a Chateauneuf du Pape that seemed incredibly expensive, but i tasted, with curiosity, and thought i had never had anything so delicious... a whole drinking habit changed by a single glass...
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I still love it with red meat and casseroles... But it has to breathe... two hours or a splash-decant...Bruce Rioja wrote:For me also. Many find Chateauneuf du Pape to be too peppery though. But yes, at that point I realised that you'll generally get what you pay for.William the White wrote: The bottle was a Chateauneuf du Pape that seemed incredibly expensive, but i tasted, with curiosity, and thought i had never had anything so delicious... a whole drinking habit changed by a single glass...
Though it's been superceded as wine of choice... An Hermitage, a Gevrey-Chambertin... and isn't in incredible that you can sometimes get Chateauneuf on supermarket offer for a tenner? That has to be tastes/fashion changing - market forces.
Yep, red wine before has always been the, if it's all that's left I spose I'll get it down. Last night was an eye opener, spose tastes change. Hated Guiness when I was 16, now it's my drink of choice (if I'm not smoking, Guiness and cigarette smoke is disgusting). Red wine always used to taste like someone had sicked up some white wine. Am glad I can enjoy it now. Next stop making myself like bitter.William the White wrote:Life takes on a redder glow... South african Merlot is likely to be pretty high in the stuff (tannins) that some people find they react against with red wine... If you enjoy that you'll be fine with more interesting things to come...Prufrock wrote:I think I've turned the being able to drink red wine corner. Wine and cheese night last night for Classics Society, bloody lovely. Today Lamb Rogan Josh, with pasta, nom nom, and a South African merlot I nicked from last night. S'all good.
Mmmm... I'm remembering the first bottle of red wine that meant more than 'let's get pissed...'
Many years ago, at university, a celebration (birthday?) with a friend who drank wine ( which, up until then had been something you did at Yates's, and beer was my real drink)...
The bottle was a Chateauneuf du Pape that seemed incredibly expensive, but i tasted, with curiosity, and thought i had never had anything so delicious... a whole drinking habit changed by a single glass... Though it was years before i could afford the next bottle of Chateauneuf du Pape... and i've tasted many better wines since...
Still do the beer though...
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
- Worthy4England
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Start with Joseph Holts' - everything else will seem like a breeze.Prufrock wrote:Yep, red wine before has always been the, if it's all that's left I spose I'll get it down. Last night was an eye opener, spose tastes change. Hated Guiness when I was 16, now it's my drink of choice (if I'm not smoking, Guiness and cigarette smoke is disgusting). Red wine always used to taste like someone had sicked up some white wine. Am glad I can enjoy it now. Next stop making myself like bitter.William the White wrote:Life takes on a redder glow... South african Merlot is likely to be pretty high in the stuff (tannins) that some people find they react against with red wine... If you enjoy that you'll be fine with more interesting things to come...Prufrock wrote:I think I've turned the being able to drink red wine corner. Wine and cheese night last night for Classics Society, bloody lovely. Today Lamb Rogan Josh, with pasta, nom nom, and a South African merlot I nicked from last night. S'all good.
Mmmm... I'm remembering the first bottle of red wine that meant more than 'let's get pissed...'
Many years ago, at university, a celebration (birthday?) with a friend who drank wine ( which, up until then had been something you did at Yates's, and beer was my real drink)...
The bottle was a Chateauneuf du Pape that seemed incredibly expensive, but i tasted, with curiosity, and thought i had never had anything so delicious... a whole drinking habit changed by a single glass... Though it was years before i could afford the next bottle of Chateauneuf du Pape... and i've tasted many better wines since...
Still do the beer though...
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Tonight at la Tasca... With downloadable 50% off voucher - which saved us £15...
reports on here that it's totally lost its way exaggerated in my view...
food tasty, good, hot... and, once more, best house red in bolton (a medium bodied tempranillo, v slight vanilla).
million miles from an LK gourmet night - but, hey, that's tapas...
reports on here that it's totally lost its way exaggerated in my view...
food tasty, good, hot... and, once more, best house red in bolton (a medium bodied tempranillo, v slight vanilla).
million miles from an LK gourmet night - but, hey, that's tapas...
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It really isn't absolute shite on thursday nights, 7.15-9.50... For the following: lamb in red wine sauce (ok), 'white fish' (so far from a Spanish tapa it may have originated in darcy lever), chicken in garlic (good), mushrooms in garlic (better), manchego cheese - really nice, but didn't need the tomatoes intended, I guess to make up the 'portion' - patatas bravas, no better than ok (but that's often the case in Spain, though not in Sevilla, where they zing!)... Obviously, this may be the only time and only dishes that are not disgusting, and we just landed lucky...Bruce Rioja wrote:Reader stunned. It's absolute shite. Good wine or no.William the White wrote: reports on here that it's totally lost its way exaggerated in my view.....
Enjoyed the company, the red wine, and the food ok and rather better than shite... but if you want something special... take a detour...
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Pedro himself was like a free cabaret once he got pissed at the end of the night, started singing and demonstrating his awesome ability with the porron, which, when he had white wine in it, looked like he was pouring piss into his mouth from a yard away... I liked the chilli as well as the steak sandwich...TANGODANCER wrote:I had my wine education in Taverna Pedro on Halliwell. Carafe of the house white and it went well enough with his steak sandwiches. That's about it.
Red wine with both of those, Tango, you feckin heathen!!!
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Difficul to tell what colour it was by the early hours.William the White wrote:Pedro himself was like a free cabaret once he got pissed at the end of the night, started singing and demonstrating his awesome ability with the porron, which, when he had white wine in it, looked like he was pouring piss into his mouth from a yard away... I liked the chilli as well as the steak sandwich...TANGODANCER wrote:I had my wine education in Taverna Pedro on Halliwell. Carafe of the house white and it went well enough with his steak sandwiches. That's about it.
Red wine with both of those, Tango, you feckin heathen!!!

Great character old Pedro though and (if you read those newspaper cuttings he had on the walls) , a real figure in the Spanish Cicil War.
Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
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He liked to pretend so - but actually he was in the border guards, and so found it comparatively easy to get over the border in 1939 when the Fascist victory was confirmed... that said, he lived in exile most of his life... and that is sad...TANGODANCER wrote:Difficul to tell what colour it was by the early hours.William the White wrote:Pedro himself was like a free cabaret once he got pissed at the end of the night, started singing and demonstrating his awesome ability with the porron, which, when he had white wine in it, looked like he was pouring piss into his mouth from a yard away... I liked the chilli as well as the steak sandwich...TANGODANCER wrote:I had my wine education in Taverna Pedro on Halliwell. Carafe of the house white and it went well enough with his steak sandwiches. That's about it.
Red wine with both of those, Tango, you feckin heathen!!!![]()
Great character old Pedro though and (if you read those newspaper cuttings he had on the walls) , a real figure in the Spanish Cicil War.
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