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Bitter-sweet symphony: vermouth is more than just another cocktail ingredient

1 day ago
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I like to think of vermouth as the Nile Rodgers of drinks, a backbone of good times known more for big hit collaborations than for its solo work,It is a foundation of any self-respecting cocktail cabinet (though it should be kept in the fridge), and also a family of drinks with many individual talents, which are now at long last being more widely recognised – Waitrose’s most recent Food & Drink report even touted vermouth as a 2026 trend, with searches for the stuff up by 26%,The Guardian’s journalism is independent,We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link,Learn more.

A fortified wine that originated in 19th-century northern Italy, vermouth is most associated with western Europe, but these days it’s produced in or close to many wine-producing regions across the world,It is made by aromatising a base wine with botanicals – traditionally wormwood, from which it takes its name (wermut in German), but also gentian, citrus peel, herbs, spices and others – before that’s bolstered by grape spirit or brandy, generally taking the ABV to between 15% and 18%,This is a gladiator of a wine: it has brawn, but also plenty of complexity,And yet, historically, its complexity has been chronically underrated,A vermouth is usually identified simply by its colour and/or dryness, rather than by its unique tasting notes.

I only started to appreciate its nuances when I lived in Spain, where a vermut arrives on the rocks, singing from a tumbler with just a simple orange and olive garnish, which allows you to taste something of the base wine with which it started, the flavours of the botanicals used and/or the cask in which it might have been aged.A side-by-side tasting of Atamán and Golfo – both imported to the UK by Brindisa, and very different beasts, made respectively with palomino (sherry) grapes in Jerez and old vine tempranillo in Ribera del Duero – is a case in point.The old-school vermouth brands are usually a bit woolly about grape varieties.Noilly Prat and Dolin, for example, two French vermouths from regions known for their viticulture, use unnamed local grapes.Meanwhile, brands such as Cocchi from Turin, where vermouth production first began, are explicit about the varietals, denoting a sense of craft and regional flair; its Vermouth di Torino Extra Dry uses cortese grapes (those used in gavi wines), and there’s moscato in its sweet red vermouth and nebbiolo in the Barolo Chinato, which has notes of cardamom and rhubarb.

In much the same vein, winemakers such as Matthiasson in the Napa Valley have in recent years released vintage craft vermouths with named grape blends and homegrown botanicals such as cardoons,As a general rule, I don’t keep any vermouth that I wouldn’t as happily drink on the rocks as in a cocktail,I always have a bottle of good dry (not extra dry) white vermouth on the go for martinis and a sweet-bitter number such as Cinzano Rosso for negronis or as a digestif, to bookend an evening as naturally as a Nile Rodgers LP,Martinez Lacuesta Vermut Blanco £16,99 (750ml) NY Wines, 15%.

The perfect dry white vermouth, best for a martini.Atamán Vermut £38.25 (1 litre) Brindisa, 17%.A long-aged, complex vermouth from sherry country.Delicious with nuts and salty snacks.

Cinzano Vermouth Rosso £11 (750ml) Ocado, 15%,A cocktail classic that’s a must-have in negroni, but it’s just as happy on the rocks, perhaps with tonic,Vault Aperitivo Forest Red Vermouth £42 (750ml) Forest Wines, 16,6%,Craft red vermouth made in London using British wine.

Dolin Chambery Dry Vermouth £12.50 (750ml) Waitrose Cellar, 17.5%.A favourite with bartenders, this delicate white vermouth is made with alpine wine.Matthiasson Vermouth No 5 £49 (37.

5ml) The Good Wine Shop, 17%.Spicy, nutty and made with a blend of aromatic grapes grown in California.Not one for mixing!
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Subsidies for Rolls-Royce might seem a bit rich, but they are inevitable | Nils Pratley

Rolls-Royce, the engine-maker and defence firm that is spitting out so much cash it can shove £7bn to £9bn towards buying back shares over the next three years, would like UK taxpayers to find a few quid – reportedly up to £200m as a first slug – to help fund one its big bets. The company would “appreciate” financial support from the government to smooth work on a new engine, says its chief executive, Tufan Erginbilgiç.Outrageous? Well, corporate welfare for Rolls is obviously absurd in the abstract. If there is a definition of a company that can afford to pay for its own research and development, this is it. One might also say Rolls owes us a favour since it was the recipient of billions of pounds worth of loan guarantees from the UK’s export finance agency when the Covid wolf was at the corporate door in 2020

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Drax to stop burning controversial Canadian wood within next year

The owner of Drax power plant has started reducing the amount of Canadian wood pellets it burns, and will stop burning trees from British Columbia entirely within the next year.The FTSE 250 company Drax Group said its Canadian wood pellet plants, which once supplied millions of tonnes of biomass to be burnt in its North Yorkshire power plant, had cost the company almost £200m in financial impairments last year.The company said the pellet production plants, which have come under criticism from environmentalists, faced a “challenging outlook” after a decision in the second half of last year that, from 2027, the Drax power plant would burn pellets sourced only from the US.Despite the writedown, Drax shares soared to 20-year highs to give the company a market value of about £3bn after it reported better than expected full-year earnings of £947m for 2025 and raised shareholder dividends by 11.5%

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Met police to pilot facial recognition identity checks, mayor confirms

Metropolitan police officers are to start scanning citizens’ faces using automated facial recognition technology to check their identities, in a move backed by the mayor of London but described as “alarming” by opponents.The pilot was revealed on Thursday when Sadiq Khan said 100 officers would use the roaming technology – commonly deployed on smartphones – for six months. The mayor was responding to questioning from an opposition politician amid rising concern about the rollout of AI-powered policing tools. The Met’s website still states it “does not presently use the so-called operator initiated facial recognition”.Face scanning has already been deployed by police with cameras on vans and in fixed locations including in Croydon, Manchester and South Wales

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Instagram to alert parents if teens repeatedly search self-harm terms

Instagram will start alerting parents if their kids repeatedly search for terms clearly associated with suicide or self-harm.The announcement on Thursday comes as Instagram’s parent company, Meta, is in the midst of two trials over harms to children.A trial under way in Los Angeles questions whether Meta’s platforms deliberately addict and harm minors. Another in New Mexico seeks to determine whether Meta failed to protect kids from sexual exploitation on its platforms.The alerts will only go to parents who are enrolled in Instagram’s parental supervision program

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Brady Tkachuk decries White House’s AI video of him insulting Canadians after US gold

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Golfer Andrea Pavan ‘thankful to be alive’ after reportedly falling down lift shaft

Italian golfer Andrea Pavan is “thankful to be alive” after reportedly falling three floors down a lift shaft.The 36-year-old, a two-time European Tour winner, was scheduled to be playing in this week’s South African Open Championship at Stellenbosch Golf Club but was forced to withdraw after the incident on Wednesday.According to reports the accident, which happened in his private accommodation, occurred when the lift doors opened but there was no lift car in the shaft and Pavan fell, sustaining multiple injuries.Italian media reports say he underwent a six-hour operation to reduce several vertebral fractures and implant a plate in his shoulder and is in a serious but not life-threatening condition.Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'

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