Amontillado

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An amontillado.

Amontillado is a variety of sherry wine characterized by being darker than fino but lighter than oloroso. It is named after the Montilla region of Spain, where the style originated in the eighteenth century, although the name 'Amontillado' is sometimes used commercially as a simple measure of colour to label any sherry lying between a fino and an oloroso. An amontillado sherry begins as a fino, fortified to approximately 13.5 percent alcohol with a cap of flor yeast limiting its exposure to the air. A cask of fino is considered to be amontillado if the layer of flor fails to develop adequately, is intentionally killed by additional fortification or is allowed to die off through non-replenishment. Without the layer of flor, amontillado must be fortified to approximately 17.5 percent alcohol so that it does not oxidise too quickly. After the additional fortification, amontillado oxidises slowly, exposed to oxygen through the slightly porous American or Canadian oak casks, and gains a darker colour and richer flavour than fino.

Varieties

Amontillado can be produced in several different manners. A fino amontillado is a wine that has begun the transformation from a fino to an amontillado, but has not been aged long enough to complete the process. Amontillado del puerto is an amontillado made in El Puerto de Santa María. Naturally dry, they are sometimes sold lightly to medium sweetened but these can no longer be labelled as amontillado. On 12 April 2012, the rules applicable to the sweet and fortified denominations of origin Montilla-Moriles and Jerez-Xérès-Sherry[1] were changed to prohibit sweet amontillado. They have to be labelled as Medium Sherry: Blend of Amontillado or suchlike.[2]

The classification by sweetness is:

Fortified Wine Type Alcohol % ABV Sugar content
(grams per litre)
Amontillado 16–17 0–5
Medium 15–22 5–115

Serving

A glass of amontillado sherry

Amontillado is usually served slightly chilled, and may be served either as an apéritif, or as an accompaniment to food such as chicken or rabbit. Classically it was served with a fine, or thin, soup, such as a beef consommé.

Storing

Due to its oxidative ageing and preparation, amontillado is more stable than fino and may be stored for a few years before opening. After opening, it can be kept for up to two weeks, if corked and refrigerated.[3]

In popular culture

Amontillado is known outside of wine circles almost solely for its use in the title of Edgar Allan Poe's short story, "The Cask of Amontillado": Fortunato, connoisseur in wine, exclaims in disapproval "Luchesi cannot tell Amontillado from sherry."[4]

It is also used in works such as Isak Dinesen's Babette's Feast[5] and Ben Bova's Grand Tour novel series.[6][7][8]

In Lincoln Child's and Preston Douglass novel Cold Vengeance, Special Agent Pendergast enjoys amontillado while pondering his next move, at his Louisiana mansion, Penumbra.

In the animated comedy Archer, when Mallory Archer believes her resident scientist, Dr. Krieger, has kidnapped her granddaughter, she threatens to shoot him and watch him die while drinking amontillado.

In the "Fathers and Sons" episode of the American television series Frasier, Frasier Crane comments that he is fond of an "Andalusian amontillado."[9]

In the " Twilight Zone" season five episode "The Jeopardy Room", a Russian defector is invited to drink Amontillado by his Russian pursuer.

References

  1. PLIEGO DE CONDICIONES DE LA DENOMINACIÓN DE ORIGEN «JEREZ-XÉRÈS-SHERRY»
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  3. How long can you store / drink a bottle of sherry?
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