Two names: one great grape

[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" excerpt="no"]

two-names-one-great-grape

Syrah – Shiraz … whatever you call it, this French/Aussie varietal can mix ’n’ match or stand tall on its own

Syrah, the great red grape of the northern Rhône, produces such superstars as Hermitage and Côte-Rôtie as well as Saint-Joseph, Crozes-Hermitage and Cornas. At their best, these long ageing wines are dark, dense and immensely concentrated with flavours of spice, leather, tar, game and blackberries. 

In the southern Rhône and the vast Languedoc, Syrah has enjoyed an extraordinary surge in popularity. Here it’s not consumed so much as a single varietal but as a component adding complexity and structure to blends that include Grenache, Mourvèdre, Carignan and Cinsaut.

The grape has also flourished in Australia since the first half of the 19th century, where it has always been identified as Shiraz, a name that may be better known to many consumers than the French original. Typically, Aussie Shiraz shows riper fruit and suppler texture than the Rhône examples.

Quick facts

• Syrah/Shiraz represents about 10% of the red wine produced in the Okanagan

• Penfolds Grange (shiraz) is Australia’s most famous and long-lived wine 

• Rhône Rangers: American winemakers producing Rhône varietals (Bonny doon)

• More Rhône — Gigondas, Lirac, Vacqueyras

• More Midi — Coteaux du Languedoc, Corbières, Vin de Pays d’Oc

Best way to enjoy

Food pairings: Hearty dishes: intensely-flavoured stews, meaty casseroles; Rich roasted meats: game, beef, lamb; Char-grilled meats; Baked dishes made with lamb, beef, pork, duck, sausages; Hard cheeses like an aged cheddar

Temperature: 18 to 21 C

Type of glass: good quality, large bowled, stemmed 

Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.

Progress 2017: Spotlight on Okanagan Business

Progress 2017: Spotlight on Okanagan Business

Watch for the Progress 2017 magazine coming out this week.  Progress 2017 brings you the latest from the following Okanagan businesses. We encourage you to support your communities by shopping local. Back to Earth Bags N All Bannister GM Baptist Housing | Village at...

read more
The Butchart Gardens bans the bottle for World Water Day

The Butchart Gardens bans the bottle for World Water Day

Move will eliminate 80,000 single-use plastic water bottles each year from the environment In recognition of World Water Day, The Butchart Gardens has removed the sale of all single-use plastic water bottles as an extension of their existing environmental practices....

read more

RiverBlue film screening marks World Water Day in Kelowna

RiverBlue film screening marks World Water Day in Kelowna The Okanagan Basin Water Board and its Okanagan WaterWise program are celebrating World Water Day, March 22. A  special screening of the award-winning film RiverBlue begins at 7 p.m.  at Landmark Cinemas –...

read more
Kelowna’s only new highrise over 70% sold

Kelowna’s only new highrise over 70% sold

Spring final sell-off features free trip to Vegas Kelowna’s only new concrete highrise available for sale, 1151 Sunset Drive, has sold over 70 per cent of its 109 condominiums in less than four months. “Kelowna is in demand,” says Leonard Kerkhoff, vice-president of...

read more
World win for Kelowna Icewine

World win for Kelowna Icewine

Summerhill Pyramid Winery takes top spot at France's Chardonnay du Monde Competition The top 10 highest scoring wines at the 2017 Chardonnay du Monde competition have been released from Burgundy, France. Topping the list is Kelowna's Summerhill Pyramid Winery 2014...

read more

Rearview: Beware of the alligators

As seen in[downloads ids="145461" columns="1" excerpt="no"]Current Issue[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" excerpt="no"] If I were granted an audience with President Trump, the one question I’d ask him is: who’s going to pay for...

read more

Making wine a greener enterprise

Making wine a greener enterprise

UBC grad student examines potential of sustainability from vineyard to market, looking at the impact of sustainable viticulture practices in the #Okanagan Valley