bitsnpieces wrote:I really enjoyed a certain old wine. I don't know the name of it or if it was just kept down the cellar a long time but it was sweet. Rather than the wine tastes you have today, this one was sweet and very very nice whilst providing that warm feeling that modern wines do.
Could it have been a (Hungarian) Tokaji/Tokay? Either that or a fortified wine like sherry or port? Here's a page about ozzie sweet wines
http://www.wineaustralia.com/global/Win ... .aspx?p=35Good luck finding it again.
I'm no expert (apart from drinking the stuff

), but I don't think that wine as we know it is particularly popular in China, with more emphasis being placed on beers and rice wines/spirits. I would guess the cellar you saw was elsewhere, or contained substances rather more noxious than wine

EckoZero wrote:Good wine?

I haven't had any truly good wine for a while now. Any you can recommend for me? (Trying to keep the price under £20... I'm a poor student you see...)
If you're talking about the price for a bottle, you shouldn't have any trouble finding a pretty decent wine for under that unless you're a proper connoisseur. I've particularly enjoyed these three:
http://www.majestic.co.uk/webapp/wcs/st ... ctId=11019
http://www.thedrinkshop.com/products/nl ... ?prodid=19
http://www.tesco.com/winestore/controll ... escriptors
EDIT: It seems the majestic link relies on sessions or something, so it doesn't work. The wines were Mouton Cadet Rouge 2003 (£7.89), Wolf Blass Yellow Label Cabernet Sauvignon 2004 (£7.99), Faustino V Reserva Rioja (£8.53)
£20 for a case of good wine is more of a challenge I think. A few years ago there were drinkable bulgarian cab savs in supermarkets for this price, but I'm unsure of the current bargains.