While recently staring at the wine shelves of a major supermarket chain, I heard a lady in front of me mutter in frustration: ‘Whatever happened to cheap wine?”
I was thinking exactly the same thing and was more than a little fed up of the so-called ‘half price’ offers that , in my opinion, disgracefully mislead shoppers into believing that lesser wines could ever have been worth ten or twelve pounds.
The majority of still wines are under £5 with many less than £4. They may be cheap, but are they any good? With more than a little reticence, I tried three of the more ‘expensive’ wines from the Aldi range and found, to my surprise, that they were highly drinkable, honest examples of their variety at a good price
Starting with a French Chardonnay from a value area of southern Burgundy, Macon Villages,.Henri de Lorgere 2011 (£4.99) has plenty of pear fruit on the nose with and a rounded structure and lots of modern style tropical flavours. It has a good length for the price together with a refreshing flinty / citrus attack and at £4.99, it would make a fine all rounder for food, especially oily grilled fish .
I think I will have to leave it till another day before I’m ready to try some of Aldi’s £2.99 wines but if I’m looking for some budget classics, without having the wool pulled over my eyes, I’ll know where to go.