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Spherified Sherry Pearl Canapés

January 18, 2011  |  BLOG, PAIRINGS, RECIPES  |  No Comments

The President of the Secret Sherry Society is pleased to present this week’s author on “Sherry Blogger of the Week,” Linda Miller Nicholson of Salty Seattle. Be sure to check out her blog for more tips and tricks and follow Linda on Twitter as @saltyseattle.

Each week we will feature a new wine blogger committed to sharing with readers their passion and knowledge of wine. If you are a wine blogger and are interested in being featured on our website please email us at secretsherrysociety@gmail.com.

Linda Miller Nicholson

Spherified Sherry Pearl Canapés

By Linda Miller Nicholson

Spherified Sherry Pearl CanapésE-to the-U-to the-REKA, Eureka! A whole realm of liquor-drenched possibility just ensconced itself in my kitchen-cum-laboratory.  I mean, when you can transform sherry into concentrated, raisin-like pearls, the world really is your oyster. And when you hit upon the technique through the grueling process of research and development (aka drink lots of sherry and experience the miracle of a happy accident) it’s all the more satisfying.

Spherified Sherry Pearl Canapés closeupI recently read a review from El Bulli wherein Ferran Adria was said to have spherified sherry into raisins, thus my interest was piqued. I could find no information on the actual process, so I set about experimenting. I’ve done typical calcium chloride/sodium alginate spherification with alcohol and other acidic liquids before and was less than pleased with the results. That’s because you have to add an acid-balancing chemical (sodium citrate) that I feel adversely affects the final flavor.

agar agar-infused liquid I knew it was time to embrace a new spherification frontier, and I’ve been playing around with gelling techniques and agents recently, so why not spherify with one such as agar agar or gelatin? I read somewhere that someone dropped agar agar-infused liquid into cold oil and pearls were formed, so I figured I’d give it a go with sherry.

sherry spheres in agar agar-infused liquid I got very lucky by simply following my preferred agar agar to liquid ratio (1.25:100) and dropping the mixture via kitchen syringe into freezer-chilled canola oil. Not only did it spherify, it proved just the right amount of agar agar to form an exterior skin while still remaining perfectly gushing on the inside.

sherry spheres Now that I’ve accomplished this feat, it’s like I played god for one brief moment. I have to wonder why the original god- Yoda, some nymph-mermaid hybrid, whoever that elusive god-creature really is- didn’t make raisins this good in our existing universe. I mean, if you can pack an 18% whollop of sweet but not too sweet high-brow alcohol into a sphere the size of a pinkie-toe and make it taste good with fewer ugly wrinkles than the passé raisins of my youth, why wouldn’t you?

sherry spheres Remember when you used to trade chocolate chips for raisins in the lunchroom and there was always some snot-nosed social-climbing weirdo who would give you all her chocolate chips in exchange for your palm-sweat coated raisins? Well all bets would be off with these “raisins” let me tell you. Kids would fight tooth and nail over them. Mormon entrepreneurs-in-training would quickly realize they could sell these sherry pearls to their classmates for a premium and once again they would take over a hedonistic hotbed of sin, just like their elders have done with Las Vegas. It would be drunken fifth grade mayhem of the highest order if only we’d serve sherry raisins to students. Seriously gives new meaning to No Child Left Behind, doesn’t it? Alas, a girl (who entertains brief delusions of deity) can dream…

Spherified Sherry Pearl CanapésBack to the reality of my kitchen for a moment: I chose to showcase my favorite flavors of España along with the sherry pearls- at least for their inaugural outing. I topped a puff pastry round with manchego cheese foam, slid in a sliver of Marcona almond, and dappled the canapé with the sherry raisins. It was simple, elegant and worthy of serving to your most discerning food-critical friend.

Speaking of simple, many feel that techniques which may or may not fall under the label “molecular gastronomy” are soulless sleights of science. This dish is emphatically not so, and would be a great launching point into that world since it is easily done with fairly accessible ingredients straight from a well-stocked grocer. Agar agar is easily sourced in both powder and strip form at natural foods or Asian markets. The other ingredients may be considered “gourmet” by some, but nevertheless can be found in any major city and most progressive towns across the US.

I don’t believe in creating esoteric food just for the sake of it being esoteric. I do, however, constantly strive to make things better, and these sherry raisins elevate both sherry and raisins to a level suitable to be served on the dinner plate, which is a place you don’t often see either.

Manchego Foam Canapes with Sherry “Raisins”

Makes 24 canapes

For the sherry raisins:

  • 2 cups canola oil that has been frozen for at least four hours in a dish wide enough to drop sherry into
  • 100 grams water
  • 3.75 grams agar agar powder or strands (note- do not use agar agar that has been pre-mixed with sugar as the concentration is diluted and you won’t achieve proper spherification)
  • 200 grams Sherry (I used Pedro Ximenez)
  • 1 kitchen syringe, baster, or squeeze bottle.
  1. Bring the water and agar agar to a boil over medium heat stirring constantly until agar agar dissolves.
  1. Add to agar agar mixture to sherry and blend completely. You may wish to blitz it with an immersion blender to ensure complete uniformity. Place mixture into syringe, baster or bottle.
  2. Working quickly to ensure your oil does not get above 20°F, drop raisin-sized droplets of sherry mixture into oil. My oil container is about 3×5” and I can usually get about 20 droplets per batch. Remove oil droplets with a slotted spoon to a mesh strainer after one minute. You should have perfect, raisin-sized spheres. Repeat with remaining sherry, however you will need to re-freeze your oil periodically as it must not go above 20°F.

For the canapés:

  • 1 sheet puff pastry barely thawed
  • ¾ c grated manchego cheese
  • ½ c heavy cream
  • 24 marcona almond halves
  1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
  2. Using a 1.5” cutter, make 24 rounds of puff pastry. Nestle rounds into cups of a mini-cupcake pan and bake until golden brown and puffed, about 15 minutes. You can make a light indentation with your finger in the cups in order that the toppings will sit well, if you wish.
  3. Meanwhile, place manchego and cream in a small saucepan over medium heat. Stir frequently until manchego melts into cream. Blend with an immersion wand until fully incorporated,then chill in an ice bath until needed.

To assemble:

  1. Place scoops or quenelles of manchego foam on the puff pastry rounds. Wedge in a marcona almond half. Drop one or two sherry raisins on top and serve.

Sherry and Sweet Somethings

January 10, 2011  |  BLOG, PAIRINGS  |  No Comments

The President of the Secret Sherry Society is pleased to present this week’s author on “Sherry Blogger of the Week,” Jennie Schact of Farmers’ Markets Desserts. She is founder and principal of Schacht & Associates, a consulting firm working with public and not-for-profit health organizations. Jennie also works with other authors to help them to develop and strengthen their book proposals, recipes, and books. Learn more at http://jennieschacht.com, “like” Farmers’ Market Desserts on Facebook, or follow Jennie on Twitter as @ckbks.

Each week we will feature a new wine blogger committed to sharing with readers their passion and knowledge of wine. If you are a wine blogger and are interested in being featured on our website please email us at secretsherrysociety@gmail.com.

Jennie Schacht-HeadShot

By Jennie Schacht

That the holidays are over should not foretell an end to celebration. Nor to dessert! With a new calendar year to adjust to, and Valentine’s Day around the corner, there’s plenty of cause for enjoying good food and wine with friends—and that includes indulging in sweets with sherry. If you thought that January was the time to pare back, think again. Desserts based on the bounty from your local farmers’ market can help you get your five-a-day without threatening any of your New Year’s resolutions.

As co-author with pastry chef Mary Cech of The Wine Lover’s Dessert Cookbook [http://jennieschacht.com/books.html], I have had the great enjoyment of pairing sherry with a variety of sweet somethings. Right off the bat, let’s remove the notion that pairing desserts with wine has to be intimidating. In fact, the only true rule is to eat and drink what you like, either separately or together. That’s right—toss out the guidebooks! What’s most important is your own personal preference. I mean, come on, it’s dessert after all. Let’s not get overly serious.

I can, however, offer a couple of suggestions about learning to taste. First, sample, sample, sample. Most dessert wines keep well for a week or more after you open them. (Vintage-dated reds are best consumed within a day or two.) That means you can keep a nice range of sherries on hand for sampling with desserts. Any time you make a dessert, try it with several different wines and pay attention to how the dessert’s flavors are enhanced or masked by the wine, and how the wine affects a bite of the dessert. In fact, why not have a dessert potluck? Pop open a few bottles of sherry, invite some friends to bring over their favorite dessert, and explore the combinations together.

Second. get to know your local wine merchant. A wine buyer tastes hundreds of wines, whittling the list down to what you find in their store. Once you find a wine shop with selections you tend to like, you can count on them to carry others that mirror your taste. Don’t be shy to chat with the sales folks. As they get to know your preferences they can introduce you to new wines you’re likely to enjoy.

You might wish to keep a few guiding principles in mind when pairing sherry and other wines with desserts. These are not intended as hard-and-fast rules, but rather as things to notice and think about as you taste.

  • It’s generally best if the wine is a bit sweeter than the dessert it’s sharing your attention with. A less sweet wine may taste flat or even sour next to a sweeter dessert.
  • Think about matching the weight of the wine to the richness of dessert, pairing fuller-bodied wines with richer desserts.
  • Look to complement, marry, or gently contrast the dessert’s flavors with the wine.
  • Don’t make your wine and dessert fight for attention. If the wine is complex, show it off with a simpler dessert. To highlight a dessert with many elements or flavors, choose a more straightforward wine.

I don’t need to extol the virtues of sherry in this forum. You are in good hands with the Secret Sherry Society to learn everything you need to know about this wondrous class of fortified, oxygen-exposed libations that range from dry to sweet.

Thinking specifically about desserts, sherry has a special affinity for almonds owing to oxidation in the winemaking process, which imparts nutty flavors and aromas. In Spain it is customary to snack on the two together. Almonds are one of two hundred species in the rose family, along with stone fruits like apricots, cherries, and peaches. So it’s no wonder that many of these fruits are compatible with that nut, and also with sherry. Sherry can also show walnut or hazelnut flavors, making it a stand-out pairing with many nut-based desserts. That extends to other flavors that tend to pair well with nuts. In fact, nuts can act as the bridge between a dessert and wine, helping to seal the match.

In our extensive, ahem, scientific experimentation, we found that sherry shared the dessert plate most amicably with the rich dairy flavors of butter, cream, and custard, sweet syrups (caramel, honey, butterscotch), warm spices, and of course toasted nuts. Chocolate often worked well, too. We found ourselves loving it as a match to many of the desserts in The Wine Lover’s Dessert Cookbook, from gingered pears to holiday fruit tartlets, and from a rich and sticky caramel apricot pecan tart to simple almond wafers.

I didn’t actively seek to pair the desserts with wines in my latest book, Farmers’ Market Desserts [http://tinyurl.com/yar3t8v]. But you can pretty well bet that any desserts with those classic flavors of butter and cream, honey and caramel, or toasted nuts will afford a lovely pairing with sherry.

Right now, in the dead of winter, try a belly-warming glass of sherry with a Farmers Market Desserts cookbookCranberry-Pecan Tart in a Cocoa Crust, Oven-Steamed Persimmon Pudding with Honey-Lemon Hard Sauce, Roasted Pumpkin Pie in a Maple-Pecan Crust, or that lingering slice of Not-Your-Typical Holiday Fruitcake. In autumn, think Apple, Pear & Quince Galettes, Baked Apple Dumplings with Cinnamon Caramel, and Amaretti-Filled Caramel Roasted Pears. And when summer rolls around, keep a bottle of sherry on hand for pairing with an Aprium Almond Tart, which also has almond meal in the crust. Year round, sherry is the perfect complement to Hazelnut-Almond Biscotti.

Don’t wait until the year flies by and you find yourself preparing for the 2011 Holidays (gasp!). Start living this year now, with friends, something sweet to share, and a glass of sherry.

Jerez’s Famous Sherry Producing Towns

January 3, 2011  |  BLOG  |  No Comments

The President of the Secret Sherry Society is pleased to present this week’s author on “Sherry Blogger of the Week,” Lance J. Mayhew of MyLifeOnTheRocks . Lance is also an instructor at Oregon Culinary Institute as well as the Contributing Writer for Whiskey at About.com.

Each week we will feature a new wine blogger committed to sharing with readers their passion and knowledge of wine. If you are a wine blogger and are interested in being featured on our website please email us at secretsherrysociety@gmail.com.


Jerez’s Famous Sherry Producing Towns

By Lance J. Mayhew, MyLifeOnTheRocks

When most wine educators and enthusiasts talk about the wine regions of Spain, there is a tendency to focus on political boundaries rather than the actual region itself. Luckily, when it comes to the political boundaries of Andalucia, its most famous wine regions all fall well within its borders. Jerez, the home of Sherry and its subregion of Manzanilla De Sanlucar de Barrameda, Montilla-Moriles, Malaga and Condado de Huelva are the recognized Denominacion de Origen (DO) categories of fortified wines. All have a long tradition of making fortified wines, but Jerez is clearly the most famous and the considered the highest quality.

While any short list of the great Sherries from Jerez is sure to do the region an injustice due to the overall quality of the Sherry industry, my two favorite styles of Sherry are Amontillado and Manzanilla, a style of fino Sherry that hails from the Sanlucar de Barrameda subregion.  While all sherries from Jerez are generally well regarded as high quality and one of the greatest values in the world of wine, production centers around three main centers; Sanlucar de Barrameda, Jerez de la Frontera and El Puerte de Santa Maria. All produce excellent Sherries, each with their own unique characteristics. Here are three of my favorite Sherries that represent a classic flavor profile from each town;

Sanlucar de Barrameda is a bit cooler and features a higher humidity than the surrounding areas of Jerez as it is a seaside town. This marine influence allows a slightly briny note to carry into the Sherry. My current favorite is from Bodegas Argueso, a Sherry bodega dating from the early 19th century. Their San Leon Manzanilla is a pale gold Sherry made from Palomino Fino grapes grown in the famous albariza soil of the region which is a combination of chalk, clay and silica which helps reflect sunlight back up the grapevines. The vineyard is located in a former salt marsh, and the marine influence is evident from the moment one begins to enjoy the bouquet. Toasted almonds, chamomile and a whiff of salt air appear before rich toasted almond and yeast tones dance across the palate. This is a very food friendly wine and one I like to pair with olives, Serrano ham, Manchego cheese and good bread for a quick and easy snack.

Jerez de la Frontera is the city at the cultural heart of Spain’s Sherry production.  A number of the best Sherry bodegas are located there and its location further inland than Sanlucar de Barrameda results in a climate that is warmer and drier. The oldest Sherry bodega in existence calls Jerez de la Frontera home, with records indicating the Valdespino family has been involved in Sherry production since at least 1430. With almost 600 years of experience and knowledge, the Valdespino Contrabandista amontillado is a relative newcomer to the Valdespino lineup with the Contrabandista solera being established in 1892. This amontillado spends 8 years aging under flor, a yeasty substance that appears on the top of some styles of Sherry, then spend at least another 8 years in the solera. The result is a dark, amber colored oxidized wine with notes of hazelnuts, Brazil nuts, cocoa, caramel and orange peel. A small amount of Pedro Ximenez is added to the predominantly Palomino Fino Sherry, adding just a touch of sweetness that is balanced by a bright acidity.  This creates a slightly raisin-like finish, with hints of cinnamon, butterscotch and fresh roasted coffee. I like to enjoy Valdespino Contrabandista with roasted rack of lamb and more recently, I’ve been pairing it with Chinese food with surprising success.

El Puerte de Santa Maria is a bit further south than Jerez de la Frontera and Sanlucar de Barrameda. A seaport, this town was most famous for being the site of Columbus’s second expedition to the New World before the Sherry bodegas became famous. The world famous Osborne Sherry bodega is located in El Puerte de Santa Maria, and they produce a full range of Sherry styles from fino and Manzanilla (sourced from vineyards in Sanlucar de Barrameda), to Pedro Ximenez and even cream Sherry. My favorite though is Osborne amontillado. The Osborn amontillado has a slightly marine air hint as its vineyards are located much closer to the sea than the vineyards in Jerez de la Frontera.  Not quite as dark as Valdespino Contrabandista, this rich, amber colored amontillado features strong nut-like tones, along with caramel, butterscotch and cocoa.  There is a nice, lively acidity to balance just a hint of sweetness, which makes this amontillado a great pairing with cheeses and smoked seafood.

If you are curious about exploring the world of Sherry, my best advice to you is to just jump right in. From exploring the different styles of Sherry to exploring how the variations in the climate of a particular area can affect the flavor profile of the Sherries from that town, the world of Sherry is both exciting and affordable. You don’t even need a great wine shop to properly guide you through the Sherries of Jerez, simply identify a style you enjoy and try several within that category from different producers. Whatever may end up being your favorite bodega only your palate will decide, but the journey through the Sherries of Jerez will be a memorable and delicious one. I’d argue that the journey through the world of Sherry will more rewarding than any end result.

Postcard from Jerez, Spain

December 20, 2010  |  BLOG  |  No Comments

Jim White, Napaman

The President of the Secret Sherry Society is pleased to present this week’s author on “Sherry Blogger of the Week,” Jim White of NAPAMAN. Each week we will feature a new wine blogger committed to sharing with readers their passion and knowledge of wine. If you are a wine blogger and are interested in being featured on our website please email us at secretsherrysociety@gmail.com.

By Jim White


The international writing assignment breezed into my inbox: “Give us an original story about a white wine, which goes with seafood.”

I gave myself an even greater challenge: Find a white wine other than Champagne (way too predictable), which complements most seafood dishes.

Taking the Indiana Jones approach, I grabbed my brimmed, soft fedora and a corkscrew (who needs a bullwhip these days?) and hit the road to find such a wine.

Jerez, bullring

Spanish bullring

Now that I am in the southern crescent of Spain, called Andalusia, where there are, in fact, bullrings, and bullfights, perhaps I should have brought along my bullwhip after all.

After an exhaustive parade through numerous bodegas (wineries) here, I have good news: I have found a single white wine, which complements just about every seafood dish imaginable.

In a word: Sherry.

I am referring particularly to the palest, most delicate, most ubiquitous, and least expensive type of Sherry – Fino. Proof that you don’t have to spend top dollar to experience Liquid Poetry.

Jerez, Pedro Domecq tiles

Pedro Domecq is a well-known bodega in Jerez

Though not sparkling, Sherry is like Champagne in one respect: it is an ideal white wine to marry to all sorts of shellfish and seafood dishes. It’s great with oysters on the half-shell, great with grilled sea bass, great with a peppery seafood stew.

Unlike Champagne, Sherry is slightly fortified. Even so, it still qualifies as “wine.”

Jerez, stained glass window

A stained glass window, a tribute to Spanish winemaking

Sherry is always served well chilled, and by “well,” I mean extremely well, much colder than you would serve Champagne or other white wine. That’s the way the folks who make it in Spain serve it in Spain. They should know.

Jerez (pronounced “Heh-reth” by the lisp-endeared Spanish), is the Sherry capital of the world. I have just spent five days here, interviewing Sherry producers.

The Sherry industry association, which sets standards with respect to grapes, harvesting, production, bottling, branding, and what constitutes DOC (Denominations of Origin) Sherry, is the oldest wine trade group in all of Spain. The Consejo Regulador was established in 1933.

César Saldaña, director general, of the regional Consejo, invited us to his association’s headquarters in Jerez to explain the complicated way Sherry is made – using the solera system.

Phoenicians brought grapes to this region more than 3,100 years ago and even during the 500-year Muslim conquest of the area (700 to 1400 AD), wine, Sherry by name, was continually produced here. In fact, “Jerez” is a transliteration of what the ancient Moors (Muslims) called the city – Sherish.

Jerez, when the Moors ruled Spain

When the Moors ruled Spain, they built architectural wonders, like the Alhambra, in Granada, pictured here

Sherry has changed styles over the centuries, as you might expect. The beverage we know as “Sherry” started being fortified in the mid-1700s, as exports ramped up; traders

sought wines for long sailing expeditions. They discovered that fortifying a wine with additional grape spirits kept the wine from spoiling.

Today, only three grapes are permitted to make Sherry: Palomino, Moscatel, or Pedro Ximenes, which sounds more like the name of a Spanish TV comedian than a grape. All three are white grapes.

Cesar Saldana

César Saldaña, director general of the Consejo Regulador

The chalky soil in this region is rich in limestone and calcium carbonate, which helps preserve what little moisture there is; vines of the three DOC permitted grape varieties, are forced to send roots deep into this cruel soil to reach the moisture. Scorching summer days produce grapes filled with high sugar content.

It takes clever winemakers to tame the fruit, grooming it into something palatable and delicious.

The grapes are pressed, fermented and the best lots are aged in American oak barrels where fermentation produces a particular “flora,” or micro-culture of yeasts, which transforms the liquid into a beverage with delicate, attractive, and nutty nuances.

A component of winemaking that is unique to this region is the maturation process. Every Sherry must spend a minimum of three years ageing in the solera system.

“The solera system” is not to be confused with “the solar system,” though it is possible to make comparisons; both are wonders of nature… and you can’t explain either on a single typed page.

Jerez, solera barrels

In Jerez, soleras are everywhere. This one is at Gonzalez Byass. The crest on each barrel head represents one of the countries in which GB Sherries are sold

Here’s the Solera System for Dummies version: Sherry producers age their wine in a series of tiered barrels, mounted three, four or five rows high. The upper tiers are called criaderas (nurseries) because they hold the youngest wine.

Each harvest, when new wine is made, it replaces the wine in the top-tier barrels. But first, the wine previously held for a year in this top row of barrels is transferred to the row of barrels just below… whose wine has been transferred to the wine in the barrels immediately below… and so on, down to the ground level.

In this fashion, the wine on the bottom row, which has been housed the longest in this tiered apartment house of barrels, is now ready for blending, fortifying and bottling. Solera, by the way, comes from the Spanish word for floor, or suelo.

It takes at least three years to make a Fino Sherry, as the wine drops down in successive years, from barrel row to barrel row, eventually hitting the ground tier.

In effect, a three-year-aged Sherry has a little bit of wine from each of three successive vintages. This helps winemakers produce Sherries of consistent color, taste and texture.

Please don’t start singing Man of La Mancha

The aged wine from the ground level of barrels is blended and fortified with distilled spirits. (You can technically call these spirits “Brandy,” as many textbooks do, but the term, to me anyway, suggests a spirit from France; the fact is that the distilled alcohol used to fortify Sherry mostly comes from grapes grown near La Mancha.)

Enough technical detail! This is not meant to be a primer on Sherry but is meant to introduce you to the wonderment of this beverage and the pleasures it can bring to the table.

I have visited numerous bodegas in Jerez and haven’t found a single Sherry I didn’t like. But irony of ironies, my favorite Sherry, Tio Pepe, is produced by the oldest and largest bodega here, Gonzalez Byass.

Gonzalez Byass building

Gonzalez Byass

Gonzalez Byass offers the closest thing to a Robert Mondavi Winery experience. Like Mondavi, GB was an original, game-changing winery in its homeland, though Gonzalez Byass had nearly a century’s head start on Bob Mondavi.

As at Mondavi, Gonzalez Byass offers the region’s premier educational tour. To see grapes growing in Jerez and learn how Sherry is made, book the Premier Tour.

My impressions of GB Sherries were heightened by two events: an intimate, first-class Sherry tasting led by the industry’s most respected senior taster/blender, Antonio Flores Pedregosa.

Table set in the cellar of ageing Sherries, at Gonzalez Byass

Table set in the cellar of ageing Sherries, at Gonzalez Byass

This was followed by a catered dinner in the Gonzalez Byass cellar, stacked high with many solera rows of ageing Sherry.

It also helped to sit at the multi-course, catered dinner with a director of the family-owned winery, getting his insider’s industry stories. Let’s be honest: Journalism may pay poorly, but it sure has its perks.

My take-away from Jerez is that Sherry, whether it’s the Tio Pepe, Fernando & Castilla, or Lustau brand, is a beverage of unique complexity and flavor.

Types of Sherries

Fino Sherry is the type I recommend to accompany seafood dishes. The pale gold wine has a taste of blanched almonds, fresh yeasty dough and the scent of pleasant herbs. Fino Sherry is an ideal complement to seafood, olives, or cured Iberian ham (or prosciutto – let’s not get too precious with the pairings!).

Manzanilla Sherry has a more prominent floral characteristic with hints of chamomile but it, too, would nicely complement many seafood dishes.

Amontillado Sherry is the result of blending two different types of Sherry (one produced “biologically,” one produced “oxidatively” – let’s not go into these distinctions here). Amontillado tends toward amber in color, and exhibits aromas of hazelnuts and tobacco. It is a great stand-alone aperitif and complements cheeses wonderfully. But I’m not thinking it goes so well with seafood.

Olorosso Sherry ranges from rich amber to deep mahogany in color. It is a warm, rounded, walnutty scented Sherry with sweet-ish top notes and flavors of toast, wood, and tobacco. Great with cured, or grilled, meats, but not a friend of seameats.

Pedro Ximenes is like treacle. Made from the “PX” grape, as locals call it, this Sherry sets the bar for sweet wine. Raisins, figs and dates jump to mind; the most recognizable scents are of honey, grape syrup and candied fruit. If 100 were the most sugary sweetness one could cram into a beverage, PX would rate 110 on the scale.

What is confusing to American consumers is that ALL these different styles of beverage are called Sherry. In the US, when we call a wine Cabernet Sauvignon, we kind of know what we’re getting into. Yes there may be bell pepper notes, or hints of blueberry, or the wine may be tannic, or oaky, but there is a bulls-eye, or target, of flavors, which define “Cabernet.”

Sherry, by contrast, is all over the place in colors, levels of sweetness, complexity of flavor and even in the process to make it  – “would monsieur like a ‘biologically’ produced Sherry or one ‘oxidatively’ developed…?”

In a world of short attention spans, having to go to school to learn about the confusing, complex and arcane methods of production to enjoy and understand the beverage is not going to win Sherry producers many Facebook fans.

The take-away from this story is: Fino Sherry is a wonderful beverage to complement most seafood recipes.

Tio Pepe bottle

As noted, my favorite Fino is Tio Pepe (which means “Uncle Jack” – named after a helpful uncle of the original owner of Gonzalez Byass). It is delicate, nuanced and complements many Mediterranean-style dishes, not just seafood. It is available in most US markets and, best of all, is not expensive. Which makes it one of those win-win-win beverages, proving that you don’t need to spend a lot of money to drink good wine.

A potential encore benefit: Sherry may be good for your health, though no one makes such a claim on a bottle. Alexander Fleming, discoverer of penicillin, scrawled this on the end of a barrel of Sherry, ageing in the cellar of one Jerez bodega:

If penicillin cures the sick, then Sherry resuscitates the dead.

Amen.

Another thing to like about Sherry; an opened bottle will keep for a month, or longer, if recorked and stored in the fridge.

If we have company to our home and serve prosciutto with chunks of Parmigiano-Reggiano as an appetizer, I often pull a previously opened bottle of Tio Pepe from the fridge. Each time, the Sherry remains bright, friendly and complementary to these foods. Thanks, Uncle Jack!