We sometimes joke that the biggest threat to our health here in Alentejo is the amazing price of Portuguese wine.
And with a half-century hospital health-care check-up already in the diary we’ll soon find out just how right we are.
I’m sorry, but where else in the world can you buy an annual guide to the best wines “between two and 15 euros”?
The Portuguese Popular Wine Guide scores every value bottle – and even the odd box – like the finest of fine wines and compiles its annual top one hundred across all categories and regions...and there are some real gems in there.
Actually I’m not sorry: so much wine, so little time.
Living off grid in Portugal has been life changing in more ways than one.
After years of staring at walls of wine in supermarkets and offies, in bottle shops and liquor stores, and using price as a guide to the quality of wine my dinner guests or hosts might expect, all bets are now off.
We’ve recently discovered a €3.19 bottle of Portuguese white (that sells for €18 in nice Lisbon restaurants) which would condemn a tenner’s worth of anything French to the spittoon.
But we’ve also celebrated some beautifully subtle reds (I believe “elegant” is the word) in the over €30s bracket.
And there are some incredibly fine wines – currently above our budget – that would bankrupt us anywhere else and are here just waiting to be discovered.
So finally, after barely playing at it for 18 months, we’ve decided to go legit: to calibrate our taste buds, hit the books, and get certified.
The first question was what’s the best, most affordable and accessible wine course out there to formalise decades of semi-hazy tastings from Cape Town to California.
We loved the documentary Somm (currently on Netflix I think), but thought trying to join the Court of Master Sommeliers with everything else going on might be a bit of a push.
And then someone recommended the Wine & Spirit Education Trust (WSET) and we started digging.
We found a few places in Portugal offering entry levels one and two, including a fantastic looking course at the Plansel wine school and vineyard in Alentejo, but it’s a long commute and so we settled on an online course based in London to get us started.
Ana’s the most certifiable as she’s the one with the best nose for wine.
One fabulous tasting day in Franschhoek she famously sniffed a fancy South African champagne (a Method Cape Classique or MCC) and declared “bacon” to the smart sommelier who after the initial shock agreed she had a point.
We’re going straight in at Level 2 and while also trying to keep up with the reading I am focussing my efforts far more on the weekly tastings.
And I can report that after week one we have learned a little bit more of the lingo and have a really nice structure to methodically follow in pursuit of the perfect tasting note.
We’ve spent years scoring wines on random scales such as “14 out of 17,” “five out of 11 starfish” and “three and half terriers out of a mastiff” (with apologies to Simon & Garfunkel) in order to own something we felt pretty uncomfortable with.
But now we’re learning to go through the checklist of appearance, nose and palate while learning to pick out aromas and identify fruity flavours.
We need to separate our citrus from our stone fruits, our herbals from our herbaceous and train our tongues for tannins, associate acids and then draw some convincing conclusions.
“Taste is something we are not taught from childhood,” Ole Martin Siam told us at our local Vicentino vineyard when we interviewed him for our podcast.
“I could point at your shirt and say exactly that the colour is not blue: it's slightly turquoisey or ocean blue: you have words to describe down to the smallest detail,” he told us.
“We never learn that in taste, but it's the same kind of organ that you can develop and it can have words you can recognise.”
He used a smelling set to train his nose to isolate aromas – I’ve had a go and it’s actually really hard to identify something as simple as strawberry without any visual clues.
But with smelling sets selling for hundreds of euros we’ve decided to train our noses at markets and in the kitchen, which is perhaps why Ana as the chef in the family already has an advantage.
The only drawback to taking a wine tasting course remotely is all the wines they usually provide as benchmark tasting examples are hard to get here.
Sourced from all over the world, they’re insanely expensive to order online (for two), and there’s no guarantee they’ll ever get to off-grid home in the wilds of Alentejo anyway...at least not in time for our tastings!
And so we started our own side-project to find Portuguese wines that could play a similar role: to taste the difference between sweet and dry, oaked and unoaked, and high or low acid or tannins.
It’s also been a great excuse to widen our Portuguese wine knowledge at the same time and with everything set for the next few weeks of tastings all we have to do now is learn to spit the stuff out.
After a few weeks languishing in customs I finally received a book I’ve been inhaling since it arrived: “The Wines of Portugal” by Richard Mayson.
He had a vineyard in Alentejo for a while and has a deep knowledge of Portuguese wines, so it’s great background reading as we plan a big wine adventure of our own.
We’re hoping to plant some vines here and eventually make our own wine, but in the meantime need to immerse ourselves in some practical education…
If wine’s not your thing, every week I also write a blog called Off-Grid and Ignorant in Portugal about how Ana and I are trying to live off the grid deep in rural Alentejo. Sign up for that below!