Sister's Run Sunday Slippers Chardonnay 2022
A truly expressive Chardonnay grown in McLaren Vale. The colour is a vibrant, straw-yellow with beautiful highlights. There are clear aromas of stone fruit - nectarine, apricot, white peach with hints of watermelon and a faint and pleasing whiff of creamy and buttery oak. Ideally paired with light white meats such as chicken and turkey, soft cheeses and pasta with mushrooms.
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Flavours
- Citrus Fruits
- Mineral Flavors
- Apple
Glass
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ColdFood pairing
- Vegetables
- Fish
- Pasta
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Elena Brooks
Elena Brooks is the chief winemaker and CEO of Dandelion Vineyards. The wine produced there combines decades of experience, the fruits of the hereditary vineyards and the best traditions of artisanal winemaking. Dandelion Vineyards is a combination of old vineyards, a young winemaker and a few friends who help each other, and this creates the perfect winery. Elena Brooks comes from the old wine-growing region of the town of Lyaskovets. Already in high school, in the early 90's, she had the rare chance to translate professional conversations between Australian and Bulgarian winemakers, thus learning about the magical world of wine. Her passion for winemaking took her to Australia, where she became one of the first Bulgarian citizens to graduate as an oenologist at the University of Adelaide. From the hundred-year-old vineyards of Barroso, Eden Valley, McLaren Vale and Adelaide Hills, Elena Brooks has created high-quality wines that have won more than five hundred international awards.
All wines of the same producerChardonnay
Chardonnay is the world's most famous white-wine grape and also one of the most widely planted. Of course, the most highly regarded expressions of the variety are those from Burgundy and California, but many high-quality examples are made in Italy, Australia, New Zealand and parts of South America. Describing the flavours of Chardonnay is not easy. This is not thanks to the complexity of the varietal itself but usually due its susceptibility to winemaking techniques - such as Malolactic fermentation which gives distinctive buttery aromas or Fermentation or maturation in oak barrels which contributes to the wine with smokey notes of vanilla, honey and even cinnamon, and not last the lees contact while in barrel imparts biscuity, doughy flavours. And all these incorporated with the varietal aromas of tropical (banana, pineapple and guava) to stone fruits (peach, nectarine and apricot), sometimes even citrus and apple notes. Climate plays a major role in dictating which fruit flavours a Chardonnay will have - warm regions (California, Australia ) make more tropical styles; temperate zones (southern Burgundy, New Zealand) - stone fruit notes, while the very coolest (Chablis, Champagne) lean towards green-apple aromas.
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