GK & Tribs - Shropshire & N. Yorks PSB
I'd forgotten GK - March is typical for normal land
When we lived in Lincolnshire, right on the edge of the Wolds, the very slight incline out of the Fens was quite fast and very strong land. Therefore you could grow a cauli with a solid curd before the heavy frosts in January and February.
My PSB was usually set out end of March, very maritime climate there, continual strong wind and very few frosts. I'd be eating it by November, and finishing it by Christmas, early January. Huge plants, 2ft 6" high and also 2ft wide. The tree trunk stalks had to be crushed with the back of an old splitting maul, before going on the compost heap ! Crazy, but grew great big long sweet corn there as well
We can't grow brasicca's here, even if we we had a large plot with few trees, the land is sandy and neutral / slightly acidic PH, and the still weather winters promote thick frosts, or drowning floods.
Tribs - The
'07 Belleruche is a lovely wine for £6.99 today (was 5.99, and on Tuesday back to 7.99) more dimensional than the TTD. At 14C just as GK has said with chilled shiraz, infact he described the chilled effect perfectly. Bonpas was best at 14C. I liked the Belleruche better at 17C, where you could actually tell it was a CdR
The garricke shrubland, herbie knarled brush and dusty boots flavours make a fleeting appearance
For £6.99 (5.99 was a snip) one of the best and most versatile of the ripe CdR's this Spring. Actually tastes more like a wine from the rural rhone valley at 17 / 18C !!!
It is spoken......Now everthing biodynamic at Chapoutier ....ground horn, rising moons, the plough, horse hair and goat dung