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Want to make wine dessert? Here is your guideline

by Staff Bona
Picture: Pexels

Let’s face it, sometimes that post-dinner chocolate craving needs a more sophisticated answer than sneaking a spoonful of Nutella straight from the jar (guilty as charged!). The answer? Dessert wines.

As if we needed another excuse to drink more wine! But, dessert wines are more than just sweet reds that go well with cakes and chocolate. You can sip them by themselves. Or, you can pick different kinds of dessert wines to pair with a few after-dinner snacks.

Picture: Pexels

What exactly is dessert wine?

Dessert wines, or fortified wines, have undergone a process where grape spirit, or brandy, has been added to it during or after the fermentation process. The taste of the dessert wine depends on when the spirit was added. If the spirit is added during fermentation, you’ll get that sweet wine you’re after. However, if it’s added after fermentation, it results in a dry wine.

If you have any inclining to dessert wines, Old Brown Sherry has probably been lingering in the back of your mind. But, there are several options you can go for that go beyond that old bottle of OBS sitting in your liquor cupboard.

Picture: Pexels

The different kinds of dessert wines

Moscato d’Asti is one type of Italian white sweet wine that falls under the dessert wine category, and any form of Sherry. You can get dry and sweet Sherries. Monis Pale Dry Sherry is a great dry sherry that has a crisp, dry lime flavour with a hint of cashew nuts. On the other hand, Sandeman Medium Sweet Sherry is a full-bodied, rich sweet wine.

Picture: Pexels

And, technically, vermouth is a fortified wine.

Oh, and we can’t ignore the fan favourite Port. Port is a Portuguese wine from Douro Valley. Ports are sweet, and often far more full-bodied and rich when compared to other sherries and sweet wines.

Compiled by Jade McGee

Also see:How to perfectly time boiled eggs

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