The Grape Escape
There’s simply no finer way for a gourmand to traverse the globe than with a glass of wine in hand. Sip and swill your way through your next holiday, says Clinton Cawood
There’s simply no finer way for a gourmand to traverse the globe than with a glass of wine in hand. Sip and swill your way through your next holiday, says Clinton Cawood
All aboard for a trip through the ages to discover the wines of Croatia, a country with vinous history going back to Roman times. A tour bus won’t do for this exploration of the Croatian coast. Instead you’ll be aboard the small luxury cruise ship Esperanza for seven nights, traversing the Adriatic Sea. Get to know the region’s indigenous grapes first hand, from posip to vugava, as well as the up-and-coming wines of Istria. The packed itinerary includes a number of tastings with local wine producers and what promise to be some memorable Croatian meals. One highlight of the itinerary is a tasting and lunch with Croatian wine pioneer Miljenko Grgich at his winery. Another is a meal at Bartulovic Winery with owner Mario Bartulovic. Expect plenty of grilled fish and vegetables paired with crisp white wine and azure seas along the beautiful Dalmatian coast.
If you can’t leave your running shoes at home when setting off on
holiday, but still want to enjoy the finer things in life, the Médoc
Marathon is the perfect break for you. This is a full-length route
(42km) to be run at whatever pace you want to set. As you jog
past some of Bordeaux’s most famous châteaux, such
as Mouton Rothschild and Lynch-Bages, there are stands
offering wine, oysters, steak and more. And if that’s not wacky
enough, there’s a dressing-up theme too. For this year’s
marathon, held on 9 September, it’s ‘Music in 33rpm’. There’s
plenty of wine-related fun before and after the event, with a preparatory pasta dinner party the night before the race, for
example. If you can still use your legs the day after the race,
there’s a more sedately paced 10km walk in the Médoc on the
Sunday, followed by a lunch for 1,500 people at Château Livran.
So start training now – maybe interspersing it with the occasional
glass of wine. And don’t forget to pack that fancy dress.
There are few destinations that can satisfy the gastronomically inclined quite like Tuscany, packed as it is with chianti producers, as well as some hefty culinary tradition too. What you need when immersing yourself in the region is a good base and KM Zero’s Fall in Love with Tuscany tour does just that. Six nights are spent in a beautiful villa in the heart of the chianti classico area, with different experiences each day that have food and wine pairing at their core. One night will be a supper of Florentine steak, one a ‘saffron experience’, with the zenith a white-truffle hunt with a cooking class at the end. If you visit during September, there are plenty of grape harvest festivals to witness, and you might catch the start of the olive harvest too.
Where to begin when it comes to soaking up the rich and vibrant
food and wine scene in Spain? Well, a great place to start your
journey is the beautiful Basque city of San Sebastián on the
country’s northern coast. Fortify yourself with some local
pintxos (tapas on sticks) before diving headlong into the
country’s best-known wine region, La Rioja. The tempranillo
grape is king here, but there are other reds and some lesser-
known white wines to enjoy too. This self-drive trip will take you
from San Sebastián to Logroño in La Rioja for a full day of wine,
with winery visits, tastings and Riojan tapas. Towards the end of
the trip you’ll spend two nights in Valladolid, where you’ll learn
all about another of Spain’s important wine regions, Ribera del
Duero. Here a platter of suckling lamb, perfectly paired with the
local wines, is a meal you’re unlikely to forget anytime soon.
An enduring symbol of luxury and celebration, champagne is also a fascinating wine in its own right. This suitably decadent trip offers a behind-the-scenes look at some of the region’s most famous producers, while tasting some of the best wines they have to offer. Over four days you will visit six champagne houses, from big-names such as Ruinart, Billecart-Salmon and Veuve Clicquot, to small, family-run producers. These visits will be interspersed with gourmet meals and historic sightseeing, but perhaps most exciting will be learning the art of sabrage – the opening of a bottle of champagne with a sword. And with everyone getting a go, there’s always plenty of fizz to go around after. Just like there’s never a bad time to pop open a bottle of champagne – with or without bladed weapon – there’s no bad time of year to visit the beautiful Champagne region. The vines will, however, be vibrant, green and leafy in the late summer months, and harvest in September is an interesting time to visit.
As a jet-setting wine lover, you’d be remiss to not check out the exciting winemakers right on your doorstep. Surrey is a good place to start because it boasts the country’s largest vineyard. That honour goes to Denbies, the first stop on this one-day, three-vineyard tour. In contrast, the more diminutive sparkling wine specialist High Clandon is your next stop. Here, much like in Champagne, the focus is on chardonnay, pinot noir and pinot meunier. By this point, two wineries in, you’ll be ready for lunch and a spread of regional produce at The Queens Head in East Clandon. At the nearby organic winery Albury, the focus is also on sparkling wines made from classic champagne varieties. You’ll find that there’s no better way to round off a tough day of wine tasting than with a G&T. Luckily, Albury Estate is also home to the relatively new Silent Pool Distillers, where there’s no shortage of its eponymous gin. While you’re more likely to catch some summer sunshine if you visit June to August, the harvest is when the action starts in the vineyard. Picking usually commences in this region around late September.
If pulling the cork on a fine wine isn’t the same if you’re not cooking up a storm to go with it, there’s a eight-day culinary tour in New Zealand with your name on it. It alternates cooking classes with winery visits, for a packed and wide-ranging trip covering a large part of the country; you’ll leave enthused and educated, not to mention well fed and watered. The tour starts with a ferry to Waiheke Island, including a visit to the excellent Man O’ War winery. A highlight a few days later is an exploration of the acclaimed Gimblett Gravels region, which specialises in red wine grapes such as merlot, syrah and cabernet sauvignon. Marlborough is another important stop on the wine itinerary, with its wineries such as No 1 Family Estate and Te Whare Ra, where you’ll try the region’s famous sauvignon blanc (and have the option to have few cases shipped home). You’ll eat well – sometimes food that you’ve prepared yourself. The responsibility for what to drink with it remains firmly with the winemakers.
Australia is vast, and perhaps the best way to sink your teeth
into its diverse wine country is to pick up a hire car and hit
the road. Starting in Adelaide and Naracoorte, you will jump
straight into the local wine production here with some winery
visits on the first day. Later in the trip you’ll visit McLaren Vale,
renowned for its shiraz. There’s also time to take in the world-
famous Barossa Valley, which is also famed for shiraz but,
like McLaren Vale, produces an array of other red and white
wines. It’s not just back-to-back wineries, though – there’s
something here for everyone. You’ll have some beach time in the
town of Robe, and experience natural beauty on Kangaroo
Island. There’s fishing, sightseeing and trekking. And, of course,
at every stop there is some world-class cuisine to be found
to accompany all of those superb local wines.
The Cape Winelands are renowned for their natural beauty, not
to mention the exceptional wines being produced there, from
South Africa’s own pinotage grape, to its white wine speciality,
chenin blanc. There’s something for everyone, and over the
course of this self-drive tour you’ll experience all of it. The first
few days are spent in Cellars Hohenort in the Constantia Valley,
where you can begin to appreciate the local wines in the peaceful
countryside, but you also have the option to explore Cape Town.
Subsequent days will take you to Robertson, into the Overberg
region and finally into South Africa’s gourmet capital,
Franschhoek, before returning to Cape Town. You’ll take home
memories of tractor rides into the Langeberg mountains, visits
to top-class wineries such as La Motte, and views that you’ll be
reminded of every time you try a bin from the region.
While all of your fellow oenophiles traipse the well-worn paths
of Burgundy and the Rhône Valley, branch out and discover
something new. Something like British Columbia’s Okanagan
Valley and its miles of lakeside vines, with all the potential to
become the next big thing. The waterfront resort Summerland is
located right among these vineyards, offering wine lovers plenty
of sunshine, beaches and blue skies, as well as everything you
need to fully appreciate the region’s wine scene. You have a
choice of two five-hour wine tours – either Bottleneck Drive or
Naramata Bench. Whichever one you choose, you’ll get five
winery visits with tastings at each, as well as a gourmet lunch.
The Okanagan Wine Tour package includes two nights in one
of the Summerland hotel’s luxury suites, and there’s lots to do
when you’re not swirling and sipping your way through the
region’s diverse wines – such as kayaking and wakeboarding.
You could go on a regular holiday and then subject your friends
to all of your holiday snaps. Or you could invite them round to
share a bottle of wine that you blended yourself in California. If
you’re heading all the way to the West Coast, you owe it to
yourself to spend some time in San Francisco, getting to know
this unique city and its surrounds. There’s everything from
awesome food experiences at the Ferry Plaza Farmers’ Market,
to a visit to famous hippie neighbourhood Haight-Ashbury. By
then the siren call of wine country will be impossible to resist
and it’ll be time to move on to Sonoma, first taking in the vintage
rail cars of the Napa Valley Wine Train, along with lots of wine
tasting. It’s at Ravenswood Winery, in a private blending lab, that
you’ll flex your creative muscles and put together a blend of your
own, with carignan, petite syrah and zinfandel to choose from.
Argentina’s dramatic landscapes deserve to be experienced first
hand, and this trip calls on you to put on your walking boots and
do just that. But what’s even more guaranteed than two to four
hours of walking per day is a succession of truly wonderful wines
at the end of each jaunt. The trip kicks off in Mendoza in the
heart of the country’s vineyards, and specifically that of malbec,
the grape that put Argentina on the wine map. And if there’s one
thing that partners perfectly with Argentinian malbec, it’s
asado, the country’s elevation of the barbecue to a fine art. You’ll
learn the secrets of preparing one, and then devour it very soon
after. After a few days focused on wine, the latter half of the trip
shifts its attention to beautiful scenery, specifically that of
Patagonia. Imagine a picnic overlooking the Perito Moreno
Glacier, for a start. A sight that could only be improved by having
a glass of Patagonian pinot noir in your hand, which you will.
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