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A Quick Guide to Cognac
"Brandy is something you can make any place in the world." Cognac is a product that can only be made in the west of France, like champagne, the region speaks for the quality "That's what makes it unique," said Hugo Gallimard, Martell Cognac's brand education manager. "Ideal weather, combined with perfect soil, and a couple hundred years of experience." Wine, usually from ugni blanc grapes, gets twice distilled, then sits in French oak barrels for a minimum of two years before it can be called a Cognac like Courvoisier or Remy Martin, and thusly passed.
During the aperitif, the cognac is usually consumed neat, but adding a drop of water reveals more fruity, floral and spicy aromas and makes the tasting experience smoother. Similarly, adding two ice cubes will dilute the cognac and reduce the alcohol percentage, which reveals these aromas while making the taste more refreshing. The goal is that the ice cubes melt slowly, revealing new aromas at each step.
Cognac can even be consumed frozen, which makes the liquid very viscous (it does not freeze due to the high alcohol level) and gives an experience that is almost velvety in the mouth. This pairs particularly well with seafood: oysters, lobster, or sushi.
For a simple long drink as an aperitif, the cognac can be consumed with tonic or ginger ale. This brings out notes of fresh fruit, even liquorice, in a Rémy Martin VSOP. This is how cognac is normally enjoyed by the locals in the Cognac area as an aperitif.
The age of a Cognac is the first key to determining a good drop, and it only can be aged in French oak barrels which helps to add its diversity of flavours. Think colours and aromas of caramel, toffee, leather, and a warm spice blend which are produced from these special oak vessels. VS or Very Special Cognac indicates that the spirit has been aged in the barrel for at least two years. VSOP, or Very Superior Old Pale, has been similarly aged for a minimum of four years. XO or Extra Old Cognac has been aged for at least ten years.
Hennessy is the world's largest cognac house. The House of Hennessy, founded by Irish immigrant Richard Hennessy, controls over 40% of the global cognac market. From its V.S. to Paradise cognacs, Hennessy produces a wide range of high-quality products. Moet-Hennessy Louis Vuitton, a French luxury goods corporation, currently owns Hennessy.
Maurice Hennessy created Hennessy XO in 1870, and it was the first Cognac to be classified as X.O, or "extra old." The House of Hennessy also boasts the distinction of producing the first "very special old pale" cognac. In 1818, at the request of The Prince of Wales, who would later become King George IV of Great Britain, Hennessy created the first V.S.O.P.
Blue Swift is a roaring triumph that demonstrates how well Cognac and Bourbon can enhance one other. The spirit's colour is bourbon-dark, far darker than any normal VSOP you'll come across.
There's a lot going on the nose, with brandy's classic raisin-plum aromas blending wonderfully with oaky whiskey notes, as well as cinnamon, flamed banana, and a hint of almond.
That's followed up with aplomb by the palate. A light body gives way to luscious fruit with a hint of wood. Currants and vanilla, figs and chocolate, traces of peppermint and gingerbread meld into a remarkably unified whole that celebrates the finest of both the brandy and bourbon worlds.
The finish is light and airy, not thick, cloying, or exaggerated in any way. Rather, it's slightly drying and refreshing, with toasty wood aromas lingering and fruity raisin undertones.
The Rémy Martin VSOP is made with specially selected grapes from the famed Fine Champagne Cognac crus and is finely balanced to combine both strong and exquisite stone fruit and vanilla aromas. The eaux-de-vie of the Grande and Petite Champagne are renowned for their aging potential. This Cognac is a legend, and it has been recreated numerous times with a series of limited-edition Cognacs. It was first produced in 1927, when André Renaud, the Cellar Master at the time, put together the first VSOP Fine Champagne. History was made right there and then.
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