Andrew Hunter

Andrew Hunter
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Andrew Hunter is a musician and composer. He abandoned his career in film and television to raise his kids, make music and drink wine.

My love of wine started with underage sips at the family dinner table. In college I fancied myself a sophisticate as I drank Chianti with pizza, back when Chianti still came in wicker 'fiasco' bottles. (I miss those, great candle holders.) I admit to still having a soft spot for Mateus. Cheap, sweet wine in a chubby bottle was just fine. Back then all I knew about wine was that there was red, white and pink (and girls really liked that white zinfandel!). It was years later, when I started to frequent some of Toronto's finer restaurants, that vinous epiphanies began to occur. Sips of wine that caused quiet pause and an exclamation of, "oh...wow."

I began to read everything I could about wine. I built a cellar and started collecting bottles. My taste evolved from sweet, easy-drinking, fruit-forward wines to the more old-world styles of France and Italy. I tend to prefer wines that are understated and complex over the super-extracted fruit-bombs which seem to be increasingly fashionable. I'll generally take Bordeaux over Napa and Tuscany over Australia. But there are always exceptions!

I'm a huge fan of sweet wines. I rarely meet an ice wine or Sauternes that I don't like. I also get along very well with Port.

Riesling is my favorite white, along with Viognier, Gerwurztraminer and Santorini Assyrtiko. Chardonnay is my least favorite. No matter how much I spend or how great the pedigree, I have yet to be blown away. Somewhere out there is a really delicious Chardonnay. I'm still looking for it.

My busy life leaves little time for blogging but at the very least I review every wine I taste.

There's nothing more subjective than art...Except perhaps wine. At our wine club I'm always pleased when someone prefers the $12 wine to the $50 wine (unfortunately it never seems to be me). For all it's pretentiousness and hype wine is a just a drink, either you like it or you don't. There is no right or wrong. It's all about discovering what you like!

In my wine reviews I try to describe the wine in a simple, unpretentious way. My aim is to help the reader decide if it's a wine they might like or want to avoid.

Of course, I'll tell you if I like it or not, but also, unlike many professional critics, I write with the clear assumption that what you like and what I like may very well be opposite. It doesn't matter. I'll tell you if a wine is sweet and fruit-forward and or dry, tannic and savory and let you decide.

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Reviews

Château La Fleur Terrien 2008, Ac Lussac Saint émilion Bottle
Château La Fleur Terrien 2008, Ac Lussac Saint émilion
Bordeaux, France
$15.00

A great Bordeaux for beginners.

New school Right bank all the way: Plush and ripe, soft and highly drinkable. Fairly simple, and a bit thin on the mid-palate, but it has good fruit and everything in decent balance. A bit too forward for my taste but at $15 you can't go wrong. Great value.

0.5 Stars0.5 Stars
None
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Finca Amalia Reserva 2005, Doca Rioja Bottle
Finca Amalia Reserva 2005, Doca Rioja
Spain
$15.95

Good, flavourful nose: Blackberry, oaky vanilla, christmas spice. Medium-full body, rustic tannin, smoky, stewed fruit. Decent balance but pretty average and unremarkable.

Expected better for a $20 reserva.

0.5 Stars0.5 Stars
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Lillet Blanc Bottle
Lillet Blanc
Bordeaux, France
$23.45

the only way to make a Vesper Lynde!

0.5 Stars0.5 Stars
High
(1000+)V
Château Saint Roch Chimères 2006, Ac Côtes Du Roussillon Villages Bottle
Château Saint Roch Chimères 2006, Ac Côtes Du Roussillon Villages
Languedoc, France
$19.95

'07: 89+
'06: 86+

I only had a taste but I enjoyed the '07 MUCH more than the '06. No proper notes but it seemed more dense and complex. I'll write more when I open a bottle and give it a proper go.

I still have an '06 in the cellar...curious how/if that has evolved.

Original review for the '06:

This is a good wine but a '92' seems generous.

Very restrained nose, and tight on the palate, quite dry and very minerally. Bright acidity and fine tannins.

The other bottle will benefit from a couple more cellar years.

A nice drink but I didn't find it lived up to the hype.

0.5 Stars0.5 Stars
None
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Perrin & Fils Les Sinards Chateauneuf Du Pape 2005, Ac, Rhone Bottle
Perrin & Fils Les Sinards Chateauneuf Du Pape 2005, Ac, Rhone
Rhône, France
$36.95

Pretty much the cheapest, weakest, most boring CdP you can buy.

This is not worth HALF of what it costs.

Perfectly drinkable, and perfectly ordinary.

Medium bodied, well balanced, a good wine..but nothing very interesting. And certainly not worth $40.

Treat yourself; spend $10 more and grab a half bottle of Beaucastel...taste what CdP should be.

I give it an 88...and that would be fair if this cost under $20.

Save your money. This sucker is riding on the giant "Chateauneuf De Pape" on the label.

They want $135 for this at Morton's..can you believe that!?

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