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Next weekend I'm doing the dessert course for a "safari supper" where we go to different house for each course. I'm doing a variety of desserts incl strawberry mousse, lemon meringue roulade, maybe a cheesecake. I've got to supply drink ie a dessert wine, not something I've ever drunk. I've bought a bottle of sweetish wine called Sichel from Morrisons but any other suggestions would be welcome. Also, should dessert wine be chilled or at room temperature?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Any wine lover expecting a dessert wine would be extremely dissapointed to be served Lancers (a Mateus Rose knockoff), or a white Zinfandel from anyone.
A dessert wine should be a luscious sweet wine with enough acidity to make you want another glass. They are usually sold in half bottles as you drink much less than a normal table wine.
If you know nothing about wine, go in a decent wine shop like Oddbins and ask for advice. If you shop in a supermarket look at the half-bottles in the white wine section. Sweet wines are more expensive - because they produce less wine during production - but you need less. I would suggest that Brown Brothers Orange Muscat and Flora at around �5 for a half bottle is well priced and delicious. I agree also with the suggestion of Muscat de Beaumes de Venise (also found in 75cl bottle sizes)
Sichel is the name of a wine producer/marketer.
Dessert wine should be well chilled.
I'm sorry if I've upset Clanad, but by definition a dessert wine is a very sweet wine, such as Sauternes, Tokay, late harvest, ice-wine, beerenauslese, or Port.
Wonderful though Lancers and white Zinfandel may be, they are not dessert wines. That's why a wine lover would be dissapointed if they came expecting a dessert wine.
Re your recommendation of Thunderbird I don't believe its available in the UK.