On March 15th, 2009, I changed blogging platforms, leaving TypePad for WordPress.
To see my latest postings, Click Here
Thanks for your continued interest.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
On March 15th, 2009, I changed blogging platforms, leaving TypePad for WordPress.
To see my latest postings, Click Here
Thanks for your continued interest.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
April 21, 2009 at 01:32 PM in Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: amusing musings, sideways wine club blog, wine blog
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
"Jeff is celebrating a birthday and we'd like you to join us for dinner!" When friends say that, we're inclined to jump at the chance. But when that dinner is at San Francisco's venerable Restaurant Gary Danko, and we're to be the guests of our friends, well...
"We'll bring the wine!" is all we could say. Knowing our selections would have to be worthy of the celebrated occasion (and Danko's $35 corkage fee), we rummaged in our cellar and pulled out a couple dusty, treasured bottles - one red and one white.
The white wine was a Sine Qua Non from the 1990's. When Danko's Sommelier performed the flawless tableside service, the cork was dark, the wine was gold with a brownish hue, and it was clearly several years past its prime.
I'd been afraid of this, but dared not say anything. Super wife and I have had recently had a discussion about why it makes sense to open an expensive wine on a regular old weeknight if it's nearing (or past) its peak. She didn't want to. I did. We didn't.
It's a difficult thing, deciding to pop the cork on an expensive wine for no reason other than "the helluvit". And I suspect it has much to do with these old wines being purchased in much headier times, and opening them brings home one more reminder that we are now living in a new age of frugality. Whatever the reason, my logic did not prevail, the wines remained saved for a special night, and now it was here. And the wine disappointed.
Moved to action, Super Wife went into the cellar with a flurry the next day, and soon we separated a 1990 Meursault from its cork. Same thing. Well past its prime.
So now we're working our way through three cases of expensive white wines, mostly from the 1990's. The majority are well past the point of drinking for anything more than curiosity and edification.
So I encourage you to celebrate the moment with that old bottle you've been saving for that special occasion that just never seems to come around. Open it tonight, even if you're dining alone, or having Chinese take-out for dinner. Better yet, invite some friends over for dinner and make the opening of the wine the special occasion.
Future Candidates for "Just Because" Cork Removal
J. Wilkes Wines, Vertical Tasting (2001 - 2003) - 6 bottles of Ultra-Premium Bien Nacido pinot noir in a wooden crate. On Sale for $199! The wine writers for the Wall Street Journal - Gaiter and Brecher - established "Open that bottle night" nine years ago, and every year they and their readers reserve a Saturday night to open a special bottle they've been saving for that occasion that never quite comes. These bottles would serve perfectly for that event. And at this price, each bottle is at the impossibly low price of $33, with the collectible box thrown in for free!
Budget Options - For those seeking lots of wine for a little money, our online specials represent wines that are almost sold out, with less than a case of each. These end-of-bin items provide great value for the thrifty wine shopper.
Premium Options - - we always seek value in our wine discoveries. But value exists at every price point, and our "Grand Cru" selections represent some of the best wines we've tasted in the Luxury price category ($45+). Whether you like Pinots from Brian Loring, or Bordeaux blends from L'Aventure, the big Syrahs from Clos Mimi or Big Basin, or... talk about excellent candidates for future delight, most of these wines provide great return on a small investment in cellaring!
Go ahead - invite some friends for dinner and open that special bottle. Better yet, make it an annual event. Even better yet - semi-annual! It's a great way to enjoy wine, food and friends.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
P.S. If you'd like to age a white wine, make sure it's built for it. We also liberated the cork on a bottle of 1986 Riesling (Spatlese) and it was stunning! Not all aged whites will disappoint. Others Crisp Chenin Blancs or Sauvignon Blancs of the Loire and other German and Alsatian wines can provide bottled pleasures beyond belief!
Quote of the Day:
"The night you open a '61 Cheval Blanc, that is the special occasion"
~ Virginia Madsen as "Maya", from the movie "Sideways"
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March 10, 2009 at 09:29 AM in Wine | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: aged white wine, maturity tables, open that bottle night
Thursday, February 26th, 2009
The wine industry gathered in Napa on Tuesday to share tips on how to sell more wine directly to wine-lovers. It was thought-provoking and worth the time and money. And today there are a hundred more wine marketers leveraging FaceBook and Twitter to attract the "Millennial Wine Lover".
One of the sponsors of this well-organized event was the venerable FedEx company, which has dedicated tons of resources to our industry. If you've ever ordered wine from me or any other online merchant, odds are good your package was delivered by FedEx. Along with UPS and Golden State Overnight, the three companies account for virtually 100% of the wine shipped directly to consumers.
So it was with great interest that I learned from a charming FedEx representative about an interesting and valuable test. She indicated FedEx has tapped a new technology that monitors the temperature of a package every few minutes as it travels from point A to point B, recording each update in a centralized computer. I presume the updates are sent via a wireless network, but I'm unclear on the communications technology.
Regardless of the inner workings, I was intrigued by the idea. My company has lost lots of potential profit on damaged wine, and since this is a thin-margin business I was very interested in whether the temperature monitor could tell me when to hold my wine for more weather-friendly days. I hoped FedEx would publish the results in real time, so our industry (and wine lovers) as a whole would know when it was safe to ship.
But the FedEx Rep believed the technology would prove it was safe to ship wine in all seasons, regardless of temperature. My skepticism was evident, apparently, as she asked if I was willing to bet dinner on the outcome. As I told her then...
...Yes I am!
But only if we can structure a meaningful test. I thought I'd open the discussion to those with a vested interest in its outcome - other retailers, wineries and the wine lovers we serve. I invite input to see if we can structure an unbiased test, and ask that you encourage FedEx to make the results public - preferably in real time. Here's what I suggest as a foundation.
To be tested - Can wine be shipped during periods of extreme temperatures without affecting the long-term life of the wine?
The results of this test will impact millions of dollars worth of shipping, and even more in the value of wine being shipped. Let's give FedEx kudos for applying the technology and also encourage them to give transperancy to the real-time results via the internet and the wine blogosphere.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
Quote of the Day:
"Accept challenges so that you may feel the exhilaration of victory"
~ General George S. Patton
February 26, 2009 at 11:08 AM in Current Affairs, Wine | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: cooked wine, Federal Express, FedEx, frozen wine, Golden State Overnight, GSO, UPS, wine ruined during shipping, wine shipping
Monday, February 23, 2009
A lot is being made of boxed wines lately. This is largely because wine lovers are seeking value in their every-day quaffs. Fortunately for the value-minded drinker, more drinkable wines are finding themselves inside boxes than just a few years ago.
Now I know that serving wine from a plastic spigot isn't glamorous. And no, I don't have a box of wine sitting in my refrigerator - call me a hypocrite if you must. But I'm neither offended by nor opposed to the idea as long as the wine is good. I'm not opposed to inexpensive wine, but life is too short to drink BAD wine, no matter what the price.
But I predict this will be the year the wine-buying public will embrace boxes for wines under $15/botle. We may not see the rush to value that was the $2 Chuck of 2002, but I think alternative packaging will be the fastest growing area in the wine business. I know I'll have those who challenge my contention - after all, boxed wines have been waiting their time in the spotlight since the 1980's. But I think now is the time to throw one's predictive hat into the ring for Boxed Wine acceptance. Here's why.
Why Boxed Wines Will Take Off
- Not all boxed wine is Franzia. Thank God. Decent wines are beginning to find themselves inside boxes these days. As a rough guide to quality, plan to spend more than $20 for 3 Liters in order to get wines you can enjoy for the life of the package. Check out Black Box Wines, if curious.
- Boxed wines are already commonplace in Europe (see photo above, taken in a Loire Valley grocery store). Just as they are in South America. And Australia. And Canada. And virtually every wine-loving country except ours. So much for the American pioneer spirit, eh? Whoulda thunk WE'D be the traditionalists when it came to new wine ideas?
- Some of the newer packages are damned sexy (photos)
- Wine in a box is easier to carry to a picnic, and to smuggle into rock concerts.
- Wine stored inside a Mylar bag remains undamaged by oxidation for 3+ weeks after first opening. (Click here to see the results of trials indicating a six week life for bag-in-a-box wines). After opening a glass bottle, even when well preserved, wine lasts no more than a day or so before noticeable oxidation sets in.
Though the bag-in-a-box is not a good option for wines intended for cellaring, 95%+ of wines are intended to be consumed within 12-18 months. And since 90%+ of American wines are from the West Coast, and many wine drinkers are East Coasters, a large part of our industry's carbon footprint comes from schlepping. It seems increasingly clear that transporting heavy glass is a luxury we can no longer afford with inexpensive wines. Imagine the added burden on imported wines.
A standard wine bottle holds 750 milliliters and weighs just over 3 pounds when full. Trucking three pounds of anything from the West Coast to NYC creates over 5 pounds of carbon-dioxide emissions. Because a 3-liter box of wine replaces four glass bottles with less than a half pound of cardboard and Mylar, it generates about 80% less CO2 during its cross-country trek (www.aboutboxedwine.com).
Now, since 97% of wine on the market today is intended for consumption within 12 - 18 months, our nation could eliminate the emissions-equivalent of 400,000 vehicles (about two million tons of CO2) by packaging such wines in a box instead of glass bottles.
Tetra Paks?
To help overcome consumer resistance to alternative packages, producers have adopted solutions that are less utilitarian than the Mylar bag inside a cardboard box, but which are more acceptable or attractive (see photo). Such packaging comes in a wide variety of sizes, offers an impressive canvas for graphic options and is far lighter than glass. But it still allows oxygen to contact the wine upon opening, and in that sense offers no benefits over its glass brethren.
The Glass Industry Strikes Back
I've run out of space and research time today, but I'm very interested in recent news headlines about lighter-weight glass bottles. This new package might give alternatives a run for their money while offering a solution for wines to be cellared as well. A topic for a different day.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
Quote of the Day:
"What a decent boxed wine lacks in daily variety and prestige, it offsets with affordability and eco-friendliness. Over the coming decade I think it will become the standard package for wines under $15."
~ Dave the Wine Merchant
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February 23, 2009 at 05:16 PM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Wine | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: alternative packaging, bag in a box, bag-in-a-box, box wines, boxed wine
Monday, February 16th, 2009
The movie Bottle Shock is finally out on DVD. Actually, it came out on February 3rd, after premiering in theaters last summer.
Since its August release, I'd been asked many times for my opinion. One friend was even kind enough to send me a logo T-shirt - they're quite nice, actually. But I hadn't found time to see the film until a promotional copy arrived in January.
I have to say, I was negatively pre-disposed to the movie, based on its reviews and inevitable comparisons to my own licensed entity - the movie "Sideways". But selecting your movies based on reviews may be as misleading as buying wine based on a Spectator rating. I found the movie entertaining, despite its (seemingly inevitable, Hollywood) characateur-ation of a well-known Napa family. Not to mention a few discomforting enophilic inaccuracies.
If you're reading these words right now, you qualify as a wine geek. And, like me, you consider your geekhood a badge of honor. As such, you are likely well familiar with this movie's plot. But jut in case you're a wine geek who's been living under a rock...
...The movie follows two merging story lines - the first is that of the Barrets, a dysfunctional father-son team who own Chateau Montelena - then a struggling winery. During the course of the movie (and no, this isn't giving away a mysterious ending), their Chardonnay rises to fame when it beats the best from France in the 1976 blind tasting now known as "The Judgment of Paris" (See George M. Taber's book by the same name).
The second story line follows Steven Spurrier (portrayed by Alan Rickman), a British ex-pat wine merchant whose Parisian shop is empty of customers. To increase revenues, Spurrier decides to visit Napa so he can select wines to be tasted against the best of France in a blind tasting he was organizing as a promotional even for his store/wine school. He'd invited some of the most respected palates in France to participate, though he had no idea it would become the most famous blind tasting in the world. In fact, Taber (writing for Time magazine) was the sole journalist who deemed the event worthy of coverage.
All told, Bottle Shock is an amusing movie that will appeal to many wine lovers, despite a few scenes that will invoke slaps to the head. And the wine country scenery makes it well worth watching (and Taylor/Dushku don't hurt, either). Now, on to the contest.
How To Win Your Free DVD
Enter before the end of the week. We'll randomly draw three entries from those getting the correct answers and contact you for mailing instructions.
Sorry Entry Deadline Was Feb. 20, 2009!
Good Luck!
Cheers!
Quote of the Day: ~ Alan Rickman as Steven Spurrier in the 2008 film "Bottle Shock"
I Need Your Vote! VOTE DAILY! . Help me continue this free blog by taking 5 seconds to vote here!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
"I'm not really an asshole. It's just that I'm British...and you're not"
February 16, 2009 at 08:18 AM in Film, Food and Drink, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: bottle shock, contest, free dvd wine
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
It's a good word, paraskavedekatriaphobia. It refers to someone with a fear of Friday the 13th.
Even as a kid I had fun with the superstitions surrounding Friday the 13th. That's when I began to notice most of the unfortunate occurrences attributed to superstitions were normal events that simply stood out when one's mindset was predisposed for disaster.
This "pre-disposed mindset" was the subject of an amusing short story I recall from my youth. It featured a young Midwestern boy (much like myself, at the time) named Homer Price. In this particular short story, a snake oil salesman by the name of Professor Atmos P. H. Ear (a wonderful play on words) blew into town, and then just as quickly, left town, as is the wont of such salesmen. This particular charlatan was selling shakers filled with a lifetime supply of an odorless, weightless, tasteless and invisible flavor enhancer called "Ever-So-Much-More-So".
When sprinkled on a common doughnut, the fried ring was suddenly the BEST doughnut ever tasted. When added to a common cup of diner coffee, the bitter brew suddenly transformed into a transcendent morning eye-opener and mood-enhancer. Of course, the salesman was simply able to bring his customers to focus on what they were tasting, and in so doing, they re-appreciated the flavors they'd bome to take for granted. And in so doing, he also sold a lot of cans filled with air.
This story appealed to me because it's an amusing and well-told tale. But also because it helped me see the human foible - that everything tastes better when we pay attention to our food. You know where i'm going with this, I suspect. Sometimes we discover anew an old favorite, just by focusing on it at the expense of everything else. A partner, for example. Or our kids.
Or a good glass of wine.
One of the exercises I lead at the beginning of my wine classes might be called "Ever-so-much-more-so". It focuses our attention on each wine's unique aromas and flavors and it's always an eye-opening experience, if you'll allow me to mix my sensory metaphors to make a point.
Our noses and tongues were once critical to our survival - indicating which food sources were safe and which were deadly. Now that we buy food at a store, and most of it is safe (peanut butter aside!), we have less to worry about. So food scents and flavors have faded into the background noise of our busy lives, and we're content with rather bland, salted, sweetened, and processed foods that fit nicely into our hectic lives.
So on this Friday the 13th, I invite you to slow down and smell the wine. Enjoy a meal, perhaps following the old meditative practice of preparing a meal in silence, with no TV, radio, phones or conversation, paying attention only to the aromas and flavors of your ingredients. If it sounds weird, that's because it is, but you'll be amazed at the amplification that occurs in your senses.
Or maybe I'm just superstitious.
"Ever-So-Much-More-So" Wines
This is a surprising wine that offers true Pinot pleasure at a fraction of the cost for most pinot noir hailing from Monterey county. This prestigious pedigree normally justifies a price two or three times this amount, and while this wine would have difficulty standing up to its big brothers in a blind taste test, it offers a lot of value for not a lot of coin.
Torbreck, 2008 Cuvee Juveniles, ($24.50)
I happily discovered the Torbreck wines over a year ago. An Australian producer that pulls fruit from all over the Barossa Valley, this particular wine is a blend of the classic Rhone varietals, with Grenache in the lead. The fruit comes from old vines, and I mean really old - some having celebrated their centenarian birthdays years ago - which lends a depth and intensity to this young, un-oaked wine. And no, the 2008 vintage is not a typo, but keep in mind the Southern Hemisphere harvests during our spring, so this wine is almost a year from its harvest so don't worry about bottle shock - it's been in bottle for many months now. Drinking very nicely right now!
Cima Collina, 2006 Pinot Noir, Tondre Grapefield Vineyard ($48)- This wine is at the other extreme from the affordable Tarrica, offering a truly transcendent wine made even more so with even the most feeble of attempts to shut out the world and focus on its aromas and flavors, which evolve and develop for as long as you can resist finishing the bottle. Not a wine for everyday drinking - at least, not for most of us - but a wine that makes a any celebration ever-so-much-more-so.
Any or all of these three wines will suffice as proof of the ever-so-much-more-so phenomenon, with flavors and aroomas that evolve over the course of an enjoyable evening. But if you decide to test the theory this Friday, I mean, just in case, don't do so while sitting under a ladder, or looking in a mirror, or with a black cat in the room, or with an umbrella open indoors, or the number 13 anywhere in view, or...
Cheers!
Quote of the Day: ~ Francis Bacon, Sr. (1561-1626)
I Need Your Vote! VOTE DAILY! . Help me continue this free blog by taking 5 seconds to vote here!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
"The root of al superstition is that people observe when a thing hits, but not when it misses."
February 11, 2009 at 10:52 AM in Current Affairs, Food and Drink, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: friday the 13th, homer price, sideways, superstition, wine
Monday, February 9th, 2009 - "Fighting vainly the old ennui" - as I write this I hear Jamie Cullum's voice singing that phrase from the Cole Porter song "I Get a Kick Out of You". And after two weeks of being bombarded by thousands of of pink-and-red heart-themed ads for everything from tires to premium membership at Marketing Profs, I find myself battling a Valentine's Day ennui. Which is not good for an online wine retailer. I should be jumping into the fray, unleashing my own barrage of cupid-born messages.
I'm still a big fan of celebrating love in all its various and sundry forms, as long as the celebration is sincere. But really, how many red-heart-infused ads can we see before the words "I love you" fail to conjure the sense of excitement that is their birthright?
So today's posting contains no heart images. No flying babies with bows and arrows. No doilies. No pink or red typeface. Just the news that West Coast customers who order by noon on Wednesday will still receive wine in time for weekend festivities, whatever you have planned.
Click here to see my most recently recommended wines.
Or click here for my recommended sweet wines.
And what better way to express your love for someone than through a languorous evening of great food, wine and conversation? In that spirit, I've copied here a recipe from my February shipment to club members. It compliments a wide range of red wines, and warms the coldest of hearts on a winter night.
Salt-Roasted Porterhouse
This recipe was inspired by Govind Armstrong at “Table 8” in Los Angeles. If you’re like me, you'll worry that smothering a steak in salt will yield tough, dry meat similar to beef jerky (or shoe leather, but then I repeat myself). Fortunately, nothing could be further from the truth. By forming a hard barrier, the salt seals the meat's juices inside. You then crack open the salt crust and discard it before carving - sort of a low-cost version of clay pot cooking that rewards the home chef with a moist and tender steak.
The spice rub takes a leaf from the playbook of our pulled pork recipe that was so popular last summer, producing another meal you’ll long remember. Add a great bottle of pinot and a loved one and this just may form a perfect winter memory.
Ingredients
2 Bay leaves, crushed
1 Tbsp whole peppercorns
2 tsp Whole coriander seeds
2 tsp fennel seeds
2 tsp mustard seeds
2 tsp dried rosemary (or t Tbsp chopped fresh)
½ tsp dried crushed red pepper
1 ½ Cups (plus 1 tsp) coarse kosher salt
2 large Porterhouse or T-Bone steaks
Procedure
Mix the first seven ingredients well. Transfer 2 Tbsp of the mixture to a spice grinder and grind well – to a fine powder, then mix in 1 tsp of the salt, keeping this ground mixture separate from the whole spice mixture. Rub the finely ground spice mixture all over the steaks, wrap in plastic and chill for at least 3 hours or up to 8 hours.
Preheat your oven to 475. Mix the remaining “whole” spice mixture with 1 ½ Cups kosher salt in a medium bowl. Add a scant ¼ Cup water and stir to moisten the spices. Unwrap the steaks and place them in a large roasting pan, then pack the salt-spice mix over the top and sides of each steak, leaving the bottom (pan-side) unsalted.
Roast for about 25 minutes or until the internal temperature registers 130 degrees. Remove from oven and place on a cutting board, cover loosely with a tent of foil and let sit for 8-10 minutes.
When ready to serve, crack open the salt crust and discard. Turn the steaks over (to the more tender, un-salted side) and slice into ½ inch thick slices.
Enjoy with loved ones old or new.
Cheers!
Quote of the Day: ~ Hawkeye Pierce, in the TV show M*A*S*H
I Need Your Vote! VOTE DAILY! . Help me continue this free blog by taking 5 seconds to vote here!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
"Without love, what are we worth? Eighty-nine cents! Eighty-nine cents worth of chemicals walking around lonely."
February 09, 2009 at 01:16 PM in Current Affairs, Dave's Journal, Food and Drink, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: anti-valentine's day, valentine, valentine's day
Thursday, February 5th, 2009
I received an email this morning with news from Winemaker Dan Tudor that four of their pinots were granted scores of 90 or above in the most recent Wine Spectator reviews by James Laube. Dan was among the first wineries we featured in the all-Pinot version of our Sideways Wine Club sampling program back in 2005. Back then, I thought the Tudor's were producing some very fine pinots, and I'm glad to see other palates recognize the same thing. (Click Here to see all our Tudor Pinots)
In his article, Laube mentions that the Tudor's have improved their wines. I spoke to Winemaker Dan Tudor, who took umbrage at that - "Our wines have always been this good. It's just that 2006 was a bit of a difficult vintage, and I think we coaxed more from our grapes than many other producers did, so perhaps it just seems as if we improved more than the rest"
Ah, so that's it. Dan commented on the wide variation in scores some of his wines were given, with other notable palates scoring the same wine very differently than did Laube. Which brought us to the question about whether scores are a reliable indicator of a wine you're going to enjoy or not! "Not really" he said "unless you enjoy the same sort of wines a reviewer does on any particular day. It's more useful to read a description and understand whether a given wine is made in a style you enjoy, regardless of its score"
Dan also shared one of his company's secrets for assuring every bottle tastes as they intended it when bottled - their use of the the Diam Corks from Oeneo. These are composite corks that many consumers perceive as being cheaper and inferior to a whole, natural cork. According to Dan, nothing could be further from the truth. The Diam corks begin as natural cork bark, are ground and sieved to a uniform consistency (and any impurities eliminated), then purified of over 150 contaminants (including the offending TCA that leads to cork taint and ruined wine, such as the treasured bottle of 1994 Rubicon we had to dump last month!) In addition to removing TCA, the process reduces other harmful compounds behind such offensive cork-based aromas as rubber, petroleum, mushroom and sulfur. Note, the mushroom mentioned here is not the natural mushroom ("Forest floor") aromas found in many good pinots - one of the reasons pinot and mushrooms have a natural affinity at the table!
This purification process is accomplished using "Supercritical CO2" - the scientific description for the change in gaseous properties under specific pressure/temperature conditions. In this case, CO2 is at its Supercritical phase at temperatures above 88 degrees and pressure in excess of 71 Bars. (Note, I found no mention on the Oeneo website about whether the CO2 is released into the atmosphere during the purification process - does anyone know? Please leave a comment)
After purification, the cork "dust" is molded into the shape of a cork using a food-grade binder (I believe this to be urethane, but can't find confirmation). Two levels of permeability are available to the winemaker, a basic version for standard wines and a more permeable version for very delicate wines. But the best news for winemakers is that the company guarantees against cork taint, and I know of no other wine closure that offers such assurance.
Dan, "Amusing Musings" extends our congratulations on your good ratings, and thanks you for the time on the phone today.
Cheers!
Quote of the Day: ~ My wife, Leslie Durschinger, upon tasting a corked bottle of 1994 Rubicon
I Need Your Vote! VOTE DAILY! . Help me continue this free blog by taking 5 seconds to vote here!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
"Crap"
February 05, 2009 at 11:47 AM in Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: cork taint, diam, diamant, james laube, oeneo, pinot noir, tudor wiens, wine scores
Thursday, January 29th, 2009
In case you are a vegetarian, or have been away from your crackberry for the last few weeks, the food world has been a bit surprised with the collective hunger pangs caused by a recipe buzzing around the Internet. Even the NY Times covered it in its venerable Dining and Wine Section, which reports that 16,000 web sites (now 16,001!) have linked to the recipe at the BBQ Addicts website. We're watching history here, folks - no other recipe has been disseminated to so many in such a short period of time.
Called "the Bacon Explosion" by its creators, the popular recipe may have generated more clicks in the past week than the Super Bowl and the Oscars, combined. OK, perhaps not, but estimates exceed 14 million hits.
BTW, if interested in preparing this hunk of pork for your favorite meat eater, I think the BBQ Addicts site provides the best step-by-step instructions (surprisingly, only 415 diggs as of this morning).
What Wine Goes With Bacon Explosion?
Which brings me to today's email from a member asking what wine I'd pair with this "dish". Actually, it's pretty easy. Most any red wine will work well if it features sweet, ripe-fruit flavors. I'd opt for medium bodied wines, and avoid pairing this mouthful of flavor with your more precious bottles.
From there, the perfect pairing depends on whether you used sweet sausage or hot sausage in your roll and sweet or tangy BBQ sauce. If your preferences lean towards hot sausage and tangy sauce, look for low alcohol wines (below 14.5% for sure) as the alcohol will fight the spicy heat in your particular version of the bacon explosion. Plus, your tangy sauce is likely acidic, and you'll want a wine with higher acidity to stand up to it - I hate to sound like a broken record, but a pinot noiror Italian Reds from a warmer growing region are likely to be the perfect match. Also, Zinfandels from cooler regions where lower alcohol reigns supreme.
If your tastes lean towards sweeter BBQ sauce and sausage, then opt for a ripe Syrah or other Rhone blends. The smoker used to prepare the Bacon Explosion resonates with these wines, whose latent talents include amplifying the toasted oak flavors from their barrels - a great bridge to the smoked meat. Or try a riper Zinfandel or Shiraz that offers jammy fruit and higher alcohol and a peppery spice that flatters this smoked shaft of porcine meat.
Oh, and a decent merlot could work well too.
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
[email protected]
Quote of the Day:
"Excess, upon occasion, is exhilarating. It prevents moderation from acquiring the deadening effect of a habit."
~ Somerset Maugham (1874 - 1965)
I Need Your Vote! VOTE DAILY!
. Help me continue this free blog by taking 5 seconds to vote here!
January 29, 2009 at 11:10 AM in Food and Drink, Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: bacon explosion, explosing bacon, super bowl recipe, wine pairing
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
This weekend's Wall Street Journal "Tastings" article featured the results of a Malbec tasting. It could not have been more timely. As it was being inked I was writing up a Malbec from Argentina for Monday's club shipment - the Finca Sophenia 2007 Reserver Malbec ($19).
This wine was selected for my club members for much the same reasons Dorothy Gaiter and John Brecher describe in their article - it provides an interesting change of pace at an affordable price.
Read their full article here -http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123274529050711187.html?mod=dist_smartbrief
I think the most interesting aspect of their article is that, while the varietal is enjoying a rapid ascent in popularity, they found many samples to be quite unpleasant. This is exactly what earned Merlot such vehement opposition from wine geek Miles Raymond in the movie Sideways - every grower and winemaker wanted in on the action and began planting Merlot vines in inappropriate places, and/or over-cropped the hell out of the vines, resulting in large quantities of uninteresting wines.
Great winegrowers will tell you - over and over again, if you let them - that great wine begins in the vineyard, and that the producer can mess up great grapes, but can not fix bad grapes. They view their role as a caretaker, and seek to make wine only from the best fruit possible. In the case of Malbec, or at least the poor quality ones, it seems the wine is being overly manipulated to cover up bad fruit. Acid may be added. Oak barrels (or more likely staves, or chips or tea bags of oak shavings) are being relied upon to lend flavors to otherwise bland grapes.
This is a slippery slope. But you can help! By purchasing and sharing only Malbecs known to be of good quality, you make the most important vote you can make. Hopefully, your message to the producers in Argentina will be loud and clear.
I can stand behind the Finca Sophenia. For additional options, refer to the wines reviewed in the WSJ article here - http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123274529050711187.html?mod=dist_smartbrief
Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
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January 28, 2009 at 11:32 AM in Wine | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: argentina, dorothy gaiter and john brecher, finca sophenia, malbec, sideways, tasting article, wall street journal, wine