leek wrote:And Pinot Noir can be very very good, so good, or Pinot can break your heart.
So true. I guess the question, Mr. Vital is, do you want to play the age old game of finding a satisfying pinot or not? If you find the right one, it can be the height of wine enjoyability. If not (which is way more likely), it will be just another bottle of unmemorable, expensive wine.
Trix reminded me that Judy Rodger's bread stuffing uses currants, giving a nice sweetness to it. An amarone, with its slight sweetness, would compliment it nicely.
Interestingly, the grapes used to make amarone (predominantly corvina) are picked, laid out on straw mats, and dried out in a warm, dark room for several months to create a raisin-like grape for sweetness.
I hope I haven't created the impression that this is anything near a dessert wine or anything, because it isn't. Just a unique, very full bodied red, with a very pleasant sweetness to it.