2008
Montes Quero Syrah, 2006
I said when I started posting these reviews that I’d post the lowest rated ones first, but that wasn’t quite true.
This Argentinian Syrah was the lowest rated wine of the evening, but it came not from Lidl but from Superquinn’s under €6 range. When I bought it I asked for a recommendation from this range and this was the one picked out for me.
I admit that I sort of expected this wine to perform quite strongly, in general I’ve found Superquinn is a really good place to buy wine, but I dread to think what the others in their budget range are like if this is the best.
The pity is that it started really well. On the appearance front things looked good, a nice deep colour and a rich appearance, though some people thought it a little cloudy.
It held up when it came to aroma too, with most finding it pleasantly if not outstandingly aromatic with some spiciness (pepper was mentioned) and a nice fruitiness. At this point things were looking very good.
But it totally failed to deliver when tasting started.
Words like hard, astringent and harsh were used, but most people simply found it dull and unpleasant. Comments such as “lacks any kick”, “this is really lame” and “thin and horrible” were typical, though perhaps one comment summed it up like no other: “if this wine was an American woman, it’d be a size 0″.
The wine scored really very low on taste - there were 1’s and 2’s - and was the only wine of the evening that nobody said they would buy again.
In discussing this wine a couple of people commented on the let down on tasting, given it’s definite promise prior to that, and suggested it might well be that it could improve with age and was too young rather than simply bad.
That may be true, but it’s not much consolation to those who pop into a supermarket looking for something inexpensive and drinkable. I seriously doubt that those who maintain cellars are shopping for cheap wine in Superquinn or indeed in Lidl.
Price: €5.49
Score: 9

This Australian Cabernet Sauvignon was the hit of the evening, in fact it was universally liked and was the bottle that everyone wanted to return to when the tasting phase of the evening was over (we fortunately had two).
Of the three white wines we tasted this Chenin Blanc from the Eastern Cape in South Africa was not only the most liked but also the cheapest.
From the north of Italy, this Pinot Grigio is apparently a very popular Lidl wine but it didn’t fare that well with our group of tasters. It wasn’t that anyone particularly hated it, more that it really didn’t taste of very much at all and so people could find little to like.
Now to the lowest rated red, Montecielo Rioja, which was also the cheapest red we tasted.