Full Review

Tomasello

Tomasello
2020 Epilogue Ice Wine, Riesling, Outer Coastal Plain

Pair this wine with:
Cheese Dessert

Category: Ice Wine

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 10.7% RS: 20.00%
90 Points
Silver Medal
Exceptional
$35

Tomasello
2020 Epilogue Ice Wine, Riesling, Outer Coastal Plain

Pair this wine with:
Cheese Dessert

Category: Ice Wine

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 10.7% RS: 20.00%
Brilliant gold color. Aromas and flavors of honeyed sultanas, glazed dried apricots, tea with lemon, and honeysuckle with a velvety, bright, sweet medium-full body and a warming, intricate, long finish that exhibits nuances of peach-fig marmalade and apple cider with no oak flavor. A velvety and delicious ice wine that will rule with desserts and cheeses.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Fruity Juicy & Smooth New World Non-Oaky Rich & Full
Aroma Aroma: honeyed sultanas, glazed dried apricots, tea with lemon, and honeysuckle
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with nuances of peach-fig marmalade and apple cider
Sweetness Sweetness: Sweet
Enjoy Enjoy: with food on its own
Recipes Pairing: Creme Brulee, Camembert, Mixed Berries
Bottom Line Bottom Line: A velvety and delicious ice wine that will rule with desserts and cheeses.

The Producer

Tomasello Winery

The Producer
P.O. Box 440
Hammonton, NJ 08037
USA
1 609-561-0567

Ice Wine

Wine Glass Dessert.jpg
Serve in a Copita
Ice Wine is a dessert wine that is made from frozen grapes that are harvested very late, anywhere from December to early March. At peak, these frozen grapes have at harvest, a water content in which 80% remains as frozen crystals. Fermentation takes months to complete.

Ice wine is made from white and red grapes, primarily Riesling as well as Vidal, while Cabernet Franc is the leading red variety. Most examples of ice wine are still, but there are also sparkling versions produced.

Canada is a major producer of Ice Wine, most notably in the Niagara Peninsula in Ontario and the Okanagan Valley in British Columbia. Residual sugar is quite high (about 150 grams per liter, similar to Sauternes from France), but since the acidity is usually high, ice wines do not taste overly sweet.

Ideal consumption time is from eight to ten years; these are best enjoyed on their own or with blue cheeses.