Red

Santa Cristina, Toscana, Antinori, 1996 (very widely available, usually £5.99).

Santa Cristina, Toscana, Antinori, 1996 (very widely available, usually £5.99).

From Piero Antinori, the respected Tuscan producer who wrote the foreword to Wine for Dummies, a simple, inexpensive wine that still manages to taste (a) uniquely Italian and (b) genuinely appetising. Try it with pizza, pasta or grilled chicken.

Duas Quintas, Douro, Ramos-Pinto, 1995 (Searsons Monkstown, Vintry Rathgar, Grapes of Mirth Rathmines, Geraghtys Fine Wines Carlow, Wine Centre Kilkenny, Pettitts, O'Donovans Cork, usually about £7.99).

Succulent proof that the red wines now being produced in traditional port territory don't have to be alcoholic blockbusters. See Bottle of the Week.

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Chateau de Jau Cotes du Roussillon Villages 1997 (Tesco/Quinnsworth, Superquinn, SuperValus/Centras and many other outlets, usually £8.99).

"Smelling this wine from southern France, I imagine a big plate of vegetables all hot off the grill," writes Mary Ewing-Mulligan. The current vintage is spicy, with those earthy, rubbery aromas that are also typical of southern reds - but still a bit young. Decant it, I'd say - or wait for next year's hoped-for barbecues.

"Advice we'd like to give Irish restaurateurs (in the most well-intentioned way possible", Mary Ewing-Mulligan writes after a week of touring all over Ireland. "Please list the producers or brand names on your wine lists. And please use larger glasses, or have a few available for customers who order your finer wines. Your very good food deserves a very good wine experience." Too right. Le Coq Hardi, Ed McCarthy adds, had "the best wine list we encountered in Ireland; food also very good" and L'Ecrivain was "best overall restaurant; exciting food, very good wine list". So there!