WanderCurtis Wine

Wine tastings, corporate events, reviews and recommendations


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Sparkling Wines, Traditional Method, Cava.

A condensed summary of Cava wines including history,  regions, growing environment, vineyard management, grape varieties, wine making, styles, wine law and business.

Sources include: WSET Diploma Wines of the World, Oxford Wine Companion by Julia Harding and Jancis Robinson, various producer websites.

Note this document is intended for personal use only not for commercial or promotional use. We accept no liability for any omissions or errors that may be contained in the document.

© Kiran Curtis 2023. Personal use only not to be used for commercial or promotional purposes.


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Sparkling Wines, France, Cremant

A condensed summary of traditional method Cremant wines from France including history,  regions, growing environment, vineyard management, grape varieties, wine making, styles, wine law and business.

Sources include: WSET Diploma Wines of the World, Oxford Wine Companion by Julia Harding and Jancis Robinson, various producer websites.

Note this document is intended for personal use only not for commercial or promotional use. We accept no liability for any omissions or errors that may be contained in the document.

© Kiran Curtis 2023. Personal use only not to be used for commercial or promotional purposes.


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Massolino Moscato d’Asti DOCG 2021

Here’s a little bottle of joy that’s as far from serious, brooding reds or oaky whites as you can get, Massolino’s Moscato d’Asti 2021 is the wine equivalent of springtime in a glass. Hailing from the hills of Roero in Piemonte, this lightly sparkling, low-alcohol sweet wine is as fragrant and playful as a picnic in a wildflower meadow.

Pale lemon in the glass, it’s all about the aromatics from the moment you pop the cork. The nose bursts with an enchanting mix of orange blossom, rose petals, elderflower and honeysuckle. Beneath the florals, there’s ripe green apple, fresh grape, and juicy pear, all lifted by a zesty flash of pink grapefruit and rounded out by more exotic notes of lychee, peach and honeydew melon. It’s pronounced, perfumed, and completely irresistible.

On the palate, the gentle fizz gives it a creamy mousse that tickles rather than fizzes aggressively. It’s sweet, yes, but the sweetness is beautifully balanced by a wash of fresh acidity that keeps things lively rather than cloying. That aromatic fruit carries through with clarity, grapey, floral, and mouthfilling, with just enough citrus to keep it fresh. At only 5% alcohol, it’s feather-light in every way except flavour.

The finish is medium-plus, pleasant and fruity, though it doesn’t linger for ages. That said, this isn’t a wine made for deep contemplation or cellaring. It’s made to be drunk now, in its youth, when its delicate floral and fruity charm is at its most expressive.

Ever underestimated Moscato? This bottle might just change your mind.


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Quartet Anderson Valley Brut, Roederer Estate

When a California sparkler comes from the same hands behind Champagne Louis Roederer, expectations are high, and Quartet Anderson Valley Brut doesn’t disappoint. This is cool-climate Californian fizz at its finest: elegant, precise, and quietly complex, like Champagne with a west coast accent.

In the glass, it’s pale lemon, classic and inviting, but it’s the nose that really pulls you in. Bright green apple and ripe pear jump out first, quickly followed by zesty lemon and grapefruit. Then comes a lovely touch of soft white peach, a nod to its Californian ripeness. But it’s not just about fruit. Dig a little deeper and there’s a whiff of croissant, creamy butter and toasted brioche—like walking past a bakery at breakfast. A gentle hint of toasted almonds adds a final, subtle layer of richness.

On the palate, it’s crisp and lively with properly high acidity, but balanced beautifully by the ripeness of the fruit and a touch of residual sugar that rounds things out. It’s officially off-dry, but only just—you’d barely notice with the freshness driving the profile. That fresh orchard fruit carries through on the palate, joined by lemon curd, baked peach, a swirl of butterscotch, and a finish that leaves behind a memory of honey-drizzled pastry. The mousse is creamy and fine—no aggressive bubbles here—just a soft, persistent fizz that lifts everything effortlessly.

There’s complexity here for sure: bright, ripe fruit layered with subtle toasty and nutty notes that suggest a bit of bottle age and careful winemaking. It’s not just fresh and fun—there’s something quietly sophisticated about it.

While it’s drinking beautifully now it’s got the stuffing to evolve. The acidity and ripe fruit give it the structure to age gracefully over the next few years, developing more honeyed and nutty depth.

In short, this is a Californian fizz that seriously overdelivers and gives Champagne a run for its money.


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Traditional Method Sparkling Wine – Champagne

A condensed summary of Champagne including history,  regions, growing environment, vineyard management, grape varieties, wine making, styles, wine law and business.

Sources include: WSET Diploma Wines of the World, Oxford Wine Companion by Julia Harding and Jancis Robinson, various producer websites.

Note this document is intended for personal use only not for commercial or promotional use. We accept no liability for any omissions or errors that may be contained in the document.

© Kiran Curtis 2023. Personal use only not to be used for commercial or promotional purposes.


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Overview of Sparkling Wine

A condensed introduction to Sparkling wines including, regions, growing environment, vineyard management, grape varieties, different wine making methods, and styles.

Sources include: WSET Diploma Wines of the World, Oxford Wine Companion by Julia Harding and Jancis Robinson, various producer websites.

Note this document is intended for personal use only not for commercial or promotional use. We accept no liability for any omissions or errors that may be contained in the document.

© Kiran Curtis 2023. Personal use only not to be used for commercial or promotional purposes.


Leave a comment

Party fizzzzzzzzz

This is the season for hosting, and hopefully attending, a few parties and I’ve been doing both over the last couple of weeks.

Champagne is obviously great for oiling the social circuit. But even with the champagne houses feeling the squeeze, and beginning to produce some tempting offers, sparkling wine can deliver the same sort of quality as cheap champagne for a fraction of the price.

For my own do’s, I tend to go for the Wine Society’s Celebration Crémant de Loire. Made in the Loire out of chenin blanc, chardonnay and cabernet franc, it is bright and fresh, with a tasty chardonnay tang and refined littlish bubbles. Good enough to drink on its own. £9.95 a bottle when you buy a case of six.

I’ve also tried the Wine Society’s Saumur. Also from the Loire, but this time mostly chenin blanc. Its fine, but I find it a little gassy and lacking flavour, although great for mixing with peach juice or elderflower cordial. However at £7.95 a bottle for a case of six I’d go for the extra flavour the chardonnay brings to the celebration.

However I was knocked out by an Australian sparkling wine served at a recent party I went to hosted by a big London legal firm. Willowglen Brut is a blend of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. Serving fizz cold – but not freezing –  in nice, weightily tall champagne glasses really does help. But this sparkler really delivered a lot of flavour and depth in its own right. For me crispness is not everything, although this still had enough freshness and lift.
For a party, definitely a bargain.