Drink In Some History With a New Wine Come to Town
A few befuddled wine writers, trying to untangle the mystery of why more drinkers don't demand Madeira, have posited the fortified wine's been done in by a storied past. They wonder if tales of Benjamin Franklin knocking back bottles while negotiating the purchase of cannons to fend off Redcoats have left Madeira looking dated and irrelevant.![]()
But smart drinkers don't begrudge Madeira's heritage - the Rare Wine Co., the California outlet that's largely responsible for the wine's American resurgence, celebrates it with its esteemed "historic series." The latest addition to the line-up has just reached Dallas, and it's terrific.
Each of the wines in the series is named for a leading Colonial city, and it's tempting to ascribe their various characteristics to the personalities of their namesakes. The New York Malmsey's powerful, the Charleston Sercial's genteel, and the newly-released New Orleans Special Reserve is a bit boisterous.
The Rare Wine Co.'s released the New Orleans cuvee only once before, in conjunction with a 2007 Katrina benefit. The wine's made from the Terrantez grape, which just about secures its specialness. But its quality cinches it: Supremely dry, the woodsy wine has notes of gingerbread and orange peel. Probably would have incited Franklin to set off a cannon.
New Orleans Special Reserve is available at Sigel's stores.































