The Georgia Straight

Inniskilli­n turns Canadian winters into a blessing

- By Mike Usinger

We lovingly decant wines from the West Coast to Western Samoa and beyond, then give you a highly opinionate­d, pocket-sized review.

SPLASH DOWN

2018 Inniskilli­n Okanagan Estate Vidal Icewine

THEIR WORDS

“Aromas of pear, lychee, mango, and citrus that carry through to the palate. It is well structured with great balance between acid and sugar, with a long-lasting finish.”

SUGGESTED PERFECT PAIRINGS

Some people have an endless appetite for all things sweet: Seth Brundle in David Cronenberg’s The Fly; former queen of France and unabashed cake enthusiast Marie Antoinette; your six-year-old nephew with the three-pack-a-day Lik-M-Aid Fun Dip habit.

For those folks, Inniskilli­n Vidal will go wonderfull­y with a Tropical Cloud cake from Cadeaux Bakery or homemade khao niaow ma muang (go with Philippine mangos and don’t forget that you need sticky rice—not Thai, jasmine, or the fabled San Francisco treat known as Rice-a-Roni). For those on the savoury side of the vineyard, a sinfully sweet glass or three of Inniskilli­n will go smashingly with Nunes Farms’ spicy cocktail almonds from Gourmet Warehouse or a slice or seven of Roquefort Gabriel Coulet from Les Amis du Fromage.

DULY NOTED

Assuming you’re not a block-heater repairman, snowmobile collector, or outdoor ice-hockey enthusiast, Canadian winters are only good for making us appreciate spring, summer, and the fall. Looking on the sunny side of the frozen street, they’ve given the world the golden elixir known as ice wine.

You know the drill: grapes are harvested at about -8°C or lower after they’ve frozen on the vine. They are then pressed before the crystalliz­ed water within melts. Think concentrat­ed flavour bomb right off the starting line that turned into something sinfully honeyed and complex during the fermenting process.

So despite coming from the frozen tundra of the Great White North (Oliver, B.C., for those keeping score with an atlas), Inniskilli­n explodes with tropical flavours: luscious Okanagan apricot, citrus-kissed peach, exotic lychee, and fresh-picked mango. All of which is to say that if another four weeks of Canadian winter make you want to burn your Canada Goose Snow Mantra parka and Pajar boots and light out for Mexico, there’s an alternativ­e.

Learn to embrace the cold with Inniskilli­n Vidal, which rightly bills itself as “ideally suited to our endless winter season”. A raging bonfire in the middle of nowhere— preferably up North—will make an already fantastica­lly Canadian thing ever better, with the Lik-M-Aid optional.

 ??  ?? Inniskilli­n Okanagan Estate Vidal Icewine will help you embrace the cold last days of winter.
Inniskilli­n Okanagan Estate Vidal Icewine will help you embrace the cold last days of winter.

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