Scottish Ale growlers and duplin county wine

Scottish Ale growlers and Duplin County wine

I am hooked on Duplin Burgundy wine. It’s weird. I like warm red wine, not ice cold sort-of pink wine. After an initial encounter with Duplin’s Scuppernong wine, I was confident that my store bought alcohol days were over. Seeing the word “dry” on the Burgundy label had me intrigued, mainly because it was the over-the-top sweetness of the Scuppernong wine that made me not like it. Dry to me means less sweetness and more of an aged flavor. This turned out to be right, and now I’ve found a 100 mile wine (actually 49 miles) that I can honestly say that I like.

From the Duplin Winery site –

“Burgundy is the driest of our red wines. It is made out of the Noble grape, picked early in the season. Our Burgundy has a great complexity that can be only be achieved with careful bottle aging. This full-bodied dry wine is a perfect complement to red meat and cheese.”

My previous love was Pabst Blue Ribbon, a nice cheap beer that, while Union Made, comes from 1,032 miles away. Oh, Wisconsin and your retro-cool, hipster beer… As for local beers, it turns out we have several breweries here in Wilmington including Front Street Brewery and Azalea Coast Brewery.

I tried the Azalea Coast India Pale Ale recently. I received a $10 coupon for being the first to complete all the required staff trainings at work, so I blew it on some Nature’s Way mozzarella and two bottles of Azalea Coast IPA. In the last few weeks, I have also bought a few growlers of Front Street Brewery IPA and Scottish Ale.

The Scottish Ale is my new favorite. It is dark, a bit heavy and strong.

Scottish ale growler

Back to the wine – North Carolina has many, many wineries and is quickly becoming one of the largest wine producing states in the country. According to their website, Duplin Winery…

“…is the oldest winery in the State of North Carolina. Producing close to 175,000 cases of wine annually, Duplin Winery has become the largest muscadine winery in the world. Founded in 1976, the winery continues to hold fast to its Southern roots, strong religious beliefs and a commitment to family.

Duplin Winery, located in Rose Hill, NC boasts a 5,000 plus square foot Retail Room, complete with a 40 foot tasting bar. We offer banquet facilities, a dinner show theatre, and daily tours and tastings. We have visitors from all over the world that enjoy our Southern Hospitality and savor our sweet wines. We are also the home of the Bistro Restaurant at Duplin Winery.”

I have yet to try any of the other wines from this region, mainly because I have not seen any more with the “dry” label. If I find another I’ll let you know. For now I’ll stick with the Burgundy, the Scottish Ale and work on some of my rice and honey ferments. Chhang anyone?

2 Responses to Scottish Ale growlers and Duplin County wine

  1. Jessica says:

    Oooh, this is a topic I love. When we moved here from San Francisco, I thought our wine drinking days were over too, because, to be honest, I cannot tolerate the sweetness of the Muscadine grape. Fortunately NC really is blessed with lots of wineries. Sal and I have visited Yadkin Valley where there are about 16 wineries that produce mostly French and Italian varietal grapes (they can grow them there because of the cooler temperatures). You can find a couple of dry NC wines at Chelsea’s downtown, and can pick up Shelton wine at Harris Teeter. Silver Coast winery in Ocean Isle Beach also makes some great wines – their Touriga is my favorite. You can sometimes find that at HT or specialty wine stores…I might have to post on this myself….

  2. April says:

    I love PBR. Also have you tried the Duplin Christmas vintage? I’m pretty sure that I have one “fermenting” in my car as I type.

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