The Deal On Decanting

I love decanting wine. Red, white, sparkling, fortified. I decant everything. I love the look of a decanter. I love the feel of a decanter. Actually, I collect decanters. To me, they are art meets function. But why decant a wine too begin with?

Well, there are two main practical reasons why we decant a wine. First, it’s a way of removing the sediment often present in older wines and some high quality younger red wines. And second, it’s way of aerating, or exposing the wine to oxygen, which brings out the full flavor and aroma of the wine, essentially aging it in a very short period of time. To those two, I would add a third, less functional reason to decant: wine just looks it’s best in a beautiful decanter!

Now, there’s a lot of discussion, none of which has really been proven one way or other, about which wines should be decanted, with some people arguing that certain types of wine can be harmed by the decanting process. From my experience, the only danger is with some older, more delicate wines, whose flavors can break down quickly when exposed to air. In those cases, if you’re going to decant, it’s best to do so right before drinking the wine, and sometimes best to skip decanting all together. Otherwise, I say decant anything and everything!

How do you decant a wine? Well, if you’re trying to reduce sediment, generally the answer is, carefully. You’ll want to pour slowly and watch for the sediment as you pour, to avoid transferring it to the decanter. This can be difficult if the wine has been stored on its side for an extended period of time – a wine cradle can help in this situation to keep you from stirring up sediment while you decant. With younger wines, and wines free of sediment, where the main purpose is aeration, there’s less need to pour carefully, although a nice slow pour will keep the wine from completely blending, which some would say adds to its character. Plus it’s always fun to put on a show and keep your friends in suspense…

So, what kind of decanter should you use? Well, decanter technology hasn’t changed much in the last 300 years, and pretty much any one will do the job you need, so for the most part it comes down to looks! If you’re really looking for a true piece of functional art, Riedel is the way to go. Riedel has a full line of truly gorgeous decanters that are a conversation piece even when they’re not bringing your wine to life. If you’re looking to decant on a budget, you can find affordable decanters online and at most department stores. Whatever your choice, you can’t go wrong with having a decanter (or a collection…) in your home.

Sip Tip! If I’m going to someone’s house who is a real wine lover, I don’t bring a bottle of wine. I bring them a decanter. They will think of you with every bottle they open that is brought to life through decanting, and gives them an experience to savor long after you leave!

How To Make Any Wine Taste Better – For Free!

 

Simple: serve the wine at the right temperature!

Many people serve their white wines too cold and their red wines too warm.  It may not seem like a big deal, but trust me, it makes a huge difference!

When it comes to the way temperature affects the taste of white wine, think of Coca-Cola served at room temperature versus Coca-Cola served cold. When it is cooler the soda becomes less sticky and sweet.  It is more refreshing.  It’s a similar case with white wine, except that with white wine, it doesn’t get infinitely more refreshing the colder it gets.  We all know white isn’t at its best warm, but serving it too cold will numb your sense of truly smelling the wine and the wine will just taste like acid.  Sort of like biting into a lemon.  For a white wine at any price you are losing the complexity of the wine’s bouquet and mouthfeel.  SO if you don’t have a fancy Sub Zero wine storage unit, follow the Michael Green 15 minute rule.  Take your white wine OUT of the fridge 15 minutes before serving.  The wine will taste better.  See for yourself.

Now, for you many red wine lovers out there, what temperature do you serve your red wines?  From my experience the general audience response is “room…room temperature”

Well if you blessed to live in Manhattan as I am, on the Upper West Side, in a pre-war apartment (so much more character than those cookie cutter buildings that dot the Upper East Side…but I digress) where the heat is on 12 months of the year (okay, pre-war does have its inconveniences!)  room temperature can push 80 degrees.  Serve a red wine at that temperature and the wine will taste coarse and alcoholic…(Not unlike some people I know)

SO, again, if you don’t have a fancy Sub Zero wine storage unit, follow the Michael Green 15 minute rule.  Put your red wines INTO the fridge 15 minutes before serving.  The wine will taste better.  Again see for yourself.

To prove the point, while working for a wine storage unit company (the name of which you might have guessed by now), I brought 50 wine professionals together and served them red wines — blind.  People voted and argued which one they liked better.  Then I revealed their identity.  It was the same wine.  The only thing that separated them was 5 degrees of temperature.  Most people preferred the cooler version of the red wine.

So — temperature talk: The recap!

White wines:  Do not serve them too cold.  There is a reason that poorly made wines often say, on the back label, “serve WELL chilled”.  That way you taste acid and their nastiness is masked. Unless you’re drinking something truly awful (in which case you should probably find something else to drink!), you want to be able to taste the nuances of the wine.

Red wines:  Chill them down in the fridge a bit before serving.  Shoot for cellar temperature – about 58-63 degrees.

Follow these rules and I assure you, wherever you live: Pre-War, Beaux Arts, or on a cattle ranch in Wyoming, your wine will always taste its best, and that, my friends, is the great equalizer!

 

All Wines Need Not Be Great – Some Wines Just Need to Be Good

“All wines need not be great.  Some wines just need to be good.”

Read this mantra and sip.  Then read again and sip.

It may be unexpected, coming from a guy who’s made his career – his life, really – out of the experience of wine, but it is one of the adages I live my life by.  And here’s why: I think too many people think that for a wine to be worth tasting, worth drinking, it has to be a mind-blowing experience in its own right.

I understand that 12% of Americans drink 90% of the wine in this country, meaning most people reserve wine for special occasions, and on those occasions, they’re looking for a wine to match.  And trust me, as someone who tastes through hundreds of wines each month, when a wine that’s truly awesome presents itself, it’s certainly a moment to savor and remember.

But honestly, do we really need our every experience with wine to be mind-blowing?  Don’t we sometimes just need to relax, get comfortable, and sip something that doesn’t necessarily put our sensations into high gear?

The joy of wine is in its diversity, in the fact that you can find a wine to pair with any experience.  Just as you try to avoid pairing your meal with a wine that will overpower the taste of the food you’re eating, perhaps we need to give more weight to how wines pair with our moods, our needs in a particular moment.

We all have guilty pleasures, whether its awful reality tv, cheap Chinese food or whatever else allows us to rest our overworked brains and bodies.  We need that!  If more among us were open to thinking of wine in the same way, perhaps more of us would be drinking wine a bit more regularly, feeling a little less anxiety when choosing a wine, and experiencing the little pleasures an “everyday” wine has to offer.

Sometimes you want high art, sometimes you want a Guy Fieri marathon, and sometimes a good wine is good enough.

Are Wine Ratings Overrated?


I try to see humor in most every aspect of life and with a critic’s nose to the glass and pen in hand – comedy can follow. Even I – an experienced taster who often samples upwards of 200 wines each week will begin a tasting note that is structured, clear and purposeful. Example: This Muscadet is light bodied, fresh clean, crisp and dry with a slight aromatic quality. By the end of many tasting sessions, only a star or a check and words such as “buy”, or “pass”, “sucks”, or “good” mark my often illegible notes. Ah, the myth and reality of the seasoned wine professional! Not satisfied with descriptions that evoke fruit, flowers and various edibles, some wine critics have summoned descriptive powers that certainly add color to their copy but often do little to enlighten the casual wine drinker or enthusiast. One of my favorite wine notes – penned by a friend and colleague of mine – Terry Theise — is so celebrated – that it was reprinted several years ago in the New Yorker. Let me set the scene, this man is talking about German wine Riesling:

“These are astonishing, vivid, undeflected, radiantly, seethingly alive on the palate, not just larger than life, but larger than reality. Drinking them I have been moved to every emotion under the sun: wonder, sadness in the face of such utter beauty, frustration when the wine was so celestially multi-faceted I couldn’t assimilate all the flavors, shattering excitement at the sheer electricity, helpless yielding at the total seductiveness, tears of gladness, sorrow and almost rage at one wine special wine that was so fiercely beautiful I felt I couldn’t rise up high enough to meet it.” Incidentally, this quote was followed by an editorial insertion “Quick, Terry: take an Alka-Seltzer!”

It is hard enough to put sensory experience into words; it is quite another thing to understand them and most importantly for other folks to understand them.

Take for instance the word dry. Often one person’s perception of dry is another person’s idea of off-dry or fruity — or gosh forbid, sweet! Form a sentence about a wine and you have probably alienated most folks around you. Ah the language of wine. So subjective, so bloated and so inadequate. Wine speak has gotten comical to the point of absurd. With an insider’s tongue that often befuddles, bemuses and often alienates the very drinkers we are often trying to embrace.

A wine review might contain the words “jam packed tannin staining fruit with surreal amounts of extract.” Huh? It gets worse. Several years ago, the Wall Street Journal ran a front-page article whose title was something to the effect, “If your wine smells like a dirty hamster cage, it might not be a bad thing.” The article again puts forth the idea that the language of wine has gotten way out of hand, and if we continue in the direction we are going, we will soon be describing aged Syrah as smelling of Sumo Wrestlers thighs. So if the words are getting out of hand, why not try the numerical approach, another popular trend in wine reviews and ratings. Following bloated language is a score that usually rates the wine from 1 – 100 points.

What, for example, does a 96-point wine really mean? Imagine if we rated art numerically. “I give the Venus de Milo 75 points, with points deducted for each missing arm.” Or the next time you are ready to order some fish at “restaurant tres cher”, the waiter recommends his 99 point salmon in a buerre blanc sauce. The tuna is listed as an 87.

Putting comedy aside where does that leave the average consumer or even the wine enthusiast? Wine has inspired us to develop systems to create it and so it seems reasonable to attempt to develop a system of expression to understand it. These systems can vary and frankly, whether you find it as simple as I liked it or I didn’t like it (and you can answer why) or if it more complex as to have you more fully verbalize, your response must be honest clear – at the very least to yourself. Or you can do what I sometimes do. Sip, savor, smile and never say a word.

Photo of wine glass courtesy Flickr Creative Commons. Photo credit: Mr T in DC.

What to Drink with Easter Dinner

What to drink with Easter dinner?  It’s a common question, an excellent question, and a question I can’t answer here. Why? Because I don’t know what you’re eating! Depending where you are or what your taste or family tradition, you could be feasting on ham, on lamb, or just gorging yourself on Peeps!  Still, I want to help…

So, I’m opening up my wine brain trust to my friends and followers.  Email me and let me know what your serving and your desired price point…

Tremendous value: under $10
Luxury: $11-25
Ultra Premium: over $25

… and I’ll send you my pairing suggestion to make your Easter banquet complete.  Whether it’s ham, turkey, seitan, or some other protein, please remember to include the preparation and the full name of the dish.

And just to get it out of the way, Peeps pair lovely with Moscato d’Asti!

Tradition and Taste – New Kosher Wines

Kosher wines have a tradition dating back thousands of years, but in this country, that tradition has long resulted in wines based on utility rather than taste.  Having grown up with brands like Manischewitz and other likeminded producers, who created their wines from sweet, Concord grapes and other labrusca varietals grown primarily in the cold climates of upstate New York, we’ve rarely associated the wines we drink during Jewish holidays with anything we would consume year-round.  But this situation has been changing in recent years, with new processes to ensure both Kashrut and taste, a revival in the Israeli wine industry, and in fact producers around the world producing excellent wines from high quality grapes.

To understand the evolution of kosher wines, we need to know a bit about their history and what exactly makes a wine kosher.  The use of wine in Judaism dates back to Biblical times (in fact the Midrash teaches that a wine grape was the forbidden fruit given to Adam by Eve) and almost all Jewish holidays mandate the consumption of wine in one form or other.

And like everything to be consumed during Jewish holidays, and particularly Passover, a strict set of laws governs the wine to be consumed during these times, from the earth to the table.  For one thing, a Sabbath-observant Jew must be involved in the winemaking process from harvest to bottling, and Rabbinical supervision is employed to ensure that this is the case.  Also, the fining agents used must be kosher, and certain fining agents preclude the use of the wine with other foods (for instance, the use of gelatin, an animal product, disallows the consumption of wines made with this additive alongside dairy products.)

None of these regulations, though, necessarily must negatively affect the taste of the final product.  Traditionally, the biggest challenge to creating a fine tasting kosher wine has been the additional requirements placed upon Mevushal wines.  One of the restrictions of most kosher wines is that wines, even if produced as to meet Halacha requirements, become non-kosher if handled by a non-Jewish person.  This has long presented problems in even kosher restaurants, where the waitstaff was not necessarily Jewish and thus could not handle or pour kosher wines for the establishment’s customers.  One way of solving this has been the use of Mevushal wines.  These wines are boiled before bottling, and according to Jewish law, this allows them to be handled by Jews and gentiles alike, without affecting the wine’ Kashrut status.  Certainly, this is a great convenience, but the downside is that boiling a wine tends to greatly degrade the quality of the wine.

And so, the kosher wine industry has long had two major issues that have stood in the way of producing fine kosher wine: the use of inferior grapes, and the degradation of the product caused by the boiling process in order to classify the wine as Mevushal.

But as I alluded to earlier, both of these impediments have, in recent years, begun to lift, through innovation, rather than by diluting the great traditions associated with kosher wine production.  Kosher wines are now created from high quality vinfera grapes all over the world, and a new process of flash pasteurization, whereby the wine is very rapidly brought to a soft boil and just as rapidly cooled back to proper temperature, means that even Mevushal wines are worthy not only for use during Passover and other Jewish holidays, but for enjoyment year-round.

So, as Passover approaches, I’m offering some suggestions for wines that will not only serve their traditional purpose, but might become a part of your collection for the entire year…

Ben Ami Cabernet Sauvignon, 2010 (Israel) – Kosher for Passover, Mevushal

On the affordable side, you really can’t do better than this Cabernet Sauvignon produced form grapes grown in the ancient Judean hills.   It’s an easy-drinking wine with floral notes and vanilla flavors.

Beckett’s Flate Five Stones Sauvignon Blanc Semillon, 2011 (Australia) – Kosher for Passover, Mevushal

Another affordable Mevushal wine, this wine presents not only a great example of the growing international reach of kosher wine production, but also a product of exciting flavor and character, with scents of apples, freshly cut grass, and tropical fruit – a great summer wine.

Capcanes Peraj Petita Montsant, 2011 (Spain) – Kosher for Passover, non-Mevushal

Spain is a country with a rich Jewish history and a great winemaking tradition, and this wine is a fine tribute to both.  A rustic, earthy wine with chewy tannins, this is one of the finest kosher red wines produced in Spain.

Yarden Pinot Noir, 2009 (Israel) Kosher for Passover, non-Mevushal

Grown in the high altitudes of Israel’s Golan Heights, this may be the regions finest product made with this delicate grape.  The wine comes with a nose of raspberry and rhubarb, with floral accents and layers of cranberry, violet, and tobacco unfold on the palate.

Baron Herzog Cabernet Special Edition Warnecke Vineyard, 2007 (California) – Kosher for Passover, Mevushal

A world away from the aforementioned sweet, labrusca wines commonly associated with kosher, this is a huge, rich Cabernet, and one of the most satisfying kosher wines available.  It’s wine that improves greatly with age – allow it to cellar for 5-7 years – and rewards with powerful, well integrated tannins, and tastes of vanilla, espresso, currant, and blackberry.

 

Celebrating Great Wine by Great Women

It’s always exciting to have an opportunity to celebrate innovators in the world of wine, and even more so when they’re also opening doors for others.  I was recently brought on by a major media company to host just such a celebration.  The event, ‘Great Wine, Great Women,’ was a toast to seven women winemakers who have helped break down the gender barrier that has for too long existed in the world of winemaking, and are turning out some amazing products.  From the legendary to the up-and-coming, these women winemakers present a force to be reckoned with.  And our wine tasting proved that their products do, too!

The presentation, to a group of female executives, linked key attributes of these pioneering women winemakers, which have contributed to their success, and which can serve as a model for anyone reaching for success and breaking new ground in their field.  I am always thrilled to be involved in events like these, so please get in touch if you have a group in mind that could benefit from this kind of experience.

Before we have a look at these seven extraordinary women, some facts about women in the wine industry…

  • 57% of the wine in the US is purchased by women, but until recently, women made up only the smallest portion of managerial positions in the wine business.  This has gradually begun to change, beginning in the 1960s, and more quickly in the past two decades.
  • In fact, it was not until 1982 that a female California winemaker, Milla Handley of Mendocino, had her own name on a wine label,
  • In that state, which provides a good barometer for trends in the industry, 10% of wineries have a woman as their made or lead winemaker, a small but rapidly growing figure.  In fact, in Sonoma and Napa, between 20 -30% of wineries fit that category, which many estimate is double to triple the number in 1990.
  • And it’s not that these women are making inroads only at smaller wineries.  In California, approximately the same percentages of male and female winemakers work at wineries that produce less than 1000 cases, and more than 500,000 cases annually.
  • It has long been held that women drink the majority of wine, but production and marketing was the domain of men, with women relegated to lesser positions in the field.  But even long time holdouts on gender front in winemaking have begun to realize that a growing group of bold women have been making innovative and important strides in the field.
  • While it may be some time before gender parity exists in the winemaking business, the unwavering commitment of these women winemakers to their craft is shaking up the paradigm.  In fact, since the mid 1990s, women have made up nearly half the students at the viticulture and oenology department at the University of California Davis, a statistic which points to continued growth for women in the winemaking field.

And now, without further ado, a look at seven women winemakers, past and present, who have offered the world great wine, as well as inspiration to anyone reaching for success…

Winemaker: Barbe-Nicole Ponsardin

Madame Clicquot Ponsardin was a true innovator, not only establishing Veuve Clicquot as one of the world’s premier Champagne houses, but also developing a new bottling process that would revolutionize the product. Born in Reims, France, in 1777 to an aristocratic family, her life underwent it’s first upheaval early when France’s own revolution broke out, forcing her family to break from the Aristocracy to save their lives and their fortune – a move which at a young age taught Ponsadin the importance of adaptability.  At 21, she married a wealthy textile merchant named Francois Clicquot, who ran a side business in wine distribution.  But once again six years later, when she was just 27, trauma struck when her husband died suddenly of typhoid.  Instead of settling into the unhappy life of a young widow, Clicquot upended all convention by convincing her father in law to allow her to run her late husband’s business, and fearlessly focused the company on wine production at a time when international relations were not conducive to wine trading success.  Her commitment paid off.  By 1815, Veuve Clicquot (which translates to ‘widow Clicquot’) was in tremendous demand, and as the trading situation improved, so did the company’s fortunes grow.  As if all this wasn’t enough, Madame Clicquot now turned her attention to an issue that had plagued Champagne producers since the beginning.  Up to this time, the second fermentation of the wine would leave sediment from the yeast in the Champagne to the point where the final product was cloudy in the bottle.  In her cellars, Clicquot cleverly developed a process whereby the fermenting wines were upturned and the yeast allowed to settle at the cork.  Once the sediment had fully collected, the wine near the cork and the temporary cork itself were frozen and removed, resulting in a product that was as clear as the Champagne we enjoy today.  And her product remains, some 200 years later, one of the most beloved and desired Champagnes in the world.

Wine: Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin – Champagne, France

Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin is dry and rich with notes of fruit, toffee, and yeast. It manipulates the palate with a slowly growing spiciness.  It’s a classic at any celebration, but also pairs just fine with breakfast!

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Winemaker: Kris Curran

Kris Curran of California’s D’Alfonso-Curran wines, grew up in that state’s San Ynez Valley.  After briefly trying out a career as a veterinarian, she quickly realized her passion for wine, assisting at Cambria Estate Vineyards and Winery, and then Koehler Winery, where she prepared her first release.  After helping turn Sea Smoke into a major success, she turned to her own work and launched D’Alfonso-Curran with her husband, Bruno Alfonso.  Working in California, where a dramatic shift has occurred – with 15-20% of winemakers now being women, where that number was near 0% 20 years ago,  Curran has strong feelings not only about the image of women both as winemakers, but also as wine consumers.  Commenting on release by wine giant Beringer of a line of low-calorie, low alcohol wines called “White Lie”, targeting women with messages like “it’s my natural color” and “I’ll be home by 7”, Curran stated, “I find it demeaning.  It’s implying that woman don’t have as sophisticated a palate.”  And so, Curran unwaveringly continues to produce bold wines that defy expectations of the women who make them, and who enjoy them.

Wine: Curran Grenache Blanc – Santa Barbara, California

Santa Barbara County’s San Ynez Valley, with mountains to the north and north, provides a unique geographic location for growing certain varietals of grape, including the Grenache Blanc.  The marine fog with passes through the valley each night creates peak conditions for this grape, and the Curran Grenache Blanc is a fantastic example of geography influences taste.  Rich in fruits, including peach and apricot, and with hints of citrus, this crisp, low acid wine, makes it a great pairing option for seafood, grilled vegetables, and a wide variety of cheeses.

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Winemaker: Veronique Drouhin

Veronique Drouhin grew up in a family with a long and storied winemaking tradition.  Joseph Drouhin started Maison Joseph Drouhin in the Burgundy region of France in 1880, and the company is now in its fourth generation of family ownership, with Veronique in charge as head winemaker, nimbly crafting wines across two continents, as they have recently begun producing wine at a new vineyard in Oregon.  Drouhin’s credentials, aside from her lineage, are impressive to say the least.  She received her National Diploma of Enology from the University of Dijon, and an advanced degree for her work on pinot noir.  It was Veronique who vinified the brand’s first Oregon vintage of Pinot Noir, and named it after her daughter, Laurene, with whom she was pregnant at the time.  Now, with three children, and a booming business, she cites her frequent travels between the growing Oregon winery and her growing family in Burgundy, as her greatest challenge as a female winemaker.  Despite the challenges, she continues to flourish, creating wines for the legendary Maison Joseph Drouhin.

Wine: Drouhin Chambolle Musigny 1er, 2010 – Burgundy, France

While much of Drouhin’s work is in Oregon, she has not neglected the family tradition of crafting wines in Burgundy, and the Drouhin Chambolle-Musigny 1er Cru from their French vineyard is an intense yet charming red that display’s her commitment to her work.  Full of dark fruits and spices, the wine comes on sweet, but finishes firm with a mineral-driven acidity.

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Winemaker: Noemi Marone Cinzano

Countess Noemi Marone Cinzano comes from another winemaking family, but it was not until later in life that she decided to try her hand at the family business – the results have been wonderful.  Her bold entry into winemaking came with her 1992 purchase of the Tuscan Argiano estate, which has been producing wine since at least the 1500s.  Here, she honed her craft and excelled, earning rave reviews.  Earlier this year, she shocked the wine world when she announced she was leaving Italy altogether to focus on a new venture, producing Malbecs in the unforgiving climate of Patagonia, thus becoming yet another fearless female winemaker to conquer two continents.

Wine: Argiano Non Confunditor – Tuscany, Italy

The Argiano Non Confunditor is red of distinct character, influenced by the vineyards enviable microclimate of cool summer nights, moderate rainfall, and warm winds. A powerful blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, and Sangioevese, this wine is alive with black currant and cedar flavors that will develop depth over time.

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Winemaker: Maria Jose Lopez Heredia

For Maria Jose Lopez Heredia, who, with her sister and father, run the 136 year old Lopez de Heredia Vineyard in Rioja, Spain, leading tour groups on their estate is just as important as tasting the wine itself.  As she puts it, ‘it’s impossible for people to understand the soul of a wine if they don’t know how the grapes are grown.’  While Heredia is widely considered to be one of the most conservative and traditional of Spanish winemakers, Maris Jose Lopez Heredia’s style is anything but – a charming, witty spokesperson for her family’s brand, she has brought new life to Heredia name while carrying on the family tradition of superb winemaking.  Her passion and commitment to her craft, and the joy she takes in sharing her stories with visitors and with the media, surely dispel any notion that a woman could not be in charge of this very traditionalist and acclaimed winery. As she says ‘for us, making wine is a way of life, not a way to make a living.’

Wine: Lopez de Heredia Tondonia Reserva, 2001 – Rioja, Spain

Lopez de Heredia’s wines are known for their wonderful long term aging, and the Tondonia Reserva 2001 is coming along nicely.  Fermented, like all their wines, in 140 year old oak barrels in an even more ancient cellar, this is a rich and very dry wine with firm tannins and a good balance.  This wine is a blend, heavily in favor of Tempranillo, with Garnacho, and Graciano and Mazuelo as well.  The year this grape was harvested came very close to disaster, with an April frost endangering the plantings, but in the end, the quality of the wine that resulted was actually above the winery already high standards.

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Winemaker: Diana Snowden Seysses

Diana Snowden Seysses’ experiences show that even coming from a winemaking family is not necessarily enough to overcome the prejudices faced by women trying to make their way in the wine business.  The son of winemaker Scott Snowden, she cut her teeth at the the Robert Mondavi winery in California where, she says, ‘women were not allowed in the winery,’ and she could not advance beyond picking grapes for tasting.  But she was not to be deterred, and continued to gain experience at vineyards around the world until taking the position of winemaker at her family’s Snowden vineyards.  Another woman in charge of plantings on both sides of the pond, Snowden divides her time between her family’s California winery and the winery she runs with her husband, Jeremy Seysses, in Burgundy, France, where she also raises her young son, Aubert.  She is currently working on a major replanting project at her hilly Napa Valley vineyard, which is only accessible by 4X4, to continue to improve viticulture on the land.

Wine: Snowden Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve, 2009 – Napa Valley, California

Snowdon Seysses has a strong winemaking philosophy of exercising restraint, to let nature do what it will with the geography and climate of her vineyards, in order the let the site speak for itself through the wine.  And in the case of the Napa Valley Snowden Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve, it is a voice that is full of volume.  This is an intensely powerful wine with flavors of dark fruit, tobacco, and licorice, a blend of primarily Cabernet Sauvignon, with smaller shares of Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot.  The year, 2009, provided challenges in form of flooding October rains during harvest, but the work was well worth it.

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Winemaker: Anne Le Naour

Anne Le Naour is a prolific young  woman in the wine business, who oversees production at five different properties in Bordeaux as technical director for Credit Agricole in the region.  We’ve heard stories stories of several innovative women working with family wineries, but Le Naour’s case may be even more rare, as she oversees a vast portfolio of vineyards owned by a financial institution, another traditionally male-dominated field.  Le Naour says these challenges often mean she needs to do more to prove herself than others in her highly competitive field, but loves her job, which she calls ‘the crossroads of science and culture.’  She trained in agronomy as an engineer, specializing in oenology, and then spent seven years at the renowned Bernard Magrez Connection, before rising to her current position in 2009.

Wine: Rayne Vigneau, Sauternes, 2003 – Bordeaux, France

The 2003 Rayne Vigneau, Sauternes, comes from a vineyard under Le Naour’s direction, on land that has been growing grapes for with since at least the 17th century.  This wine begins with aromas of apples and dried pineapples, It’s an exciting and lively wine, with intense sweetness and texture, and an extraordinarily long finish, composed of lemon and richness.

Wine and Food at the Movies

I think we can all agree that, as a nation, we’ve gone a bit overboard with taking pictures of what we eat and drink.  I mean, I love that people are so moved by their plates as to record what’s in front of them for posterity, but when I’m stuck at home eating leftovers, do I really have to open up my Facebook and be subjected to taunting Instagrams to remind of what I’m not eating right now?  And watching diners pull out their iPhones at a nice restaurant to document every bite tends to, well, leave a bad taste in my mouth…

But I also think there’s a good reason for our obsession with putting food and drink behind the lens.  The best wine and food imagery, particulary when set to the right story in film, can be downright inspiring.  So, while I’m quite sure fuzzy, poorly lit pictures of peoples’ epicurean feasts will not cease to appear on social media anytime soon, perhaps we can at least learn a little something from the pros…

As someone in the business of enjoying wine, I often get asked if Sideways is my favorite wine film.  The 2004 picture, based on a book by Rex Pickett, created quite a shockwave, not only among the ‘wine elite’ but in the purchasing habits of the entire nation – to answer the obvious question, yes I still drink Merlot!  It’s a fantastic film, and does a remarkable job of balancing wine-geek humor with a compelling story that has great appeal for any viewer.

But honors for my favorite film related to wine and food have to go to 1987’s Babette’s Feast.  This Danish film not only won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film but, like Sideways, affected the wine and foodscapes of the nation and indeed the world.  Almost immediately after its release, and throughout its life as something of a cult classic, chefs and home cooks, inspired by Babbette’s banquet, began trying to replicate one of the greatest meals ever created on film.  Be on the lookout: more than 25 years after its release, theaters and restaurants still offer Babette’s Feast dinner-and-a-movie events from time to time – it’s well worth the experience!

There are plenty of great food and wine movies to go around.  To narrow things down a bit, let’s focus on wine, which seems to take a starring role less often than food, but to no less inspiring effect.  So get your wine and popcorn properly paired, and get ready for some of my all-time favorites:

Fiction:

Bottle Shock

The Earth Is Mine

Casblanca

French Kiss

Dr. No

Documentaries:

Mondovino

Corked (a mockumentary, but full of truth none the less!)

From Ground to Glass

Somm (this fantastic doc about four men working to pass the exam to earn the title of Master Sommelier is still playing at festivals and should show up on movie screens later this year)

Shakespeare Wine Quotes

It’s unlikely that any one person has had so much effect on the way we speak as William Shakespeare.  Even those who might read The Bard’s iambic tongue and say ‘it’s Greek to me!’ are using one of his own invented phrases.  Even if your ‘salad days’ had you running like ‘the Dickens’ from his work, you see, you can never hide from his words.

Alas, poor reader, you may be wondering what any of this has to do with wine.  Well, Shakespeare had quite an affinity for the stuff, and his work is filled with wine references, some of which I’ve collected for you here.  So, you see, ‘there’s method in my madness!’…

A man cannot make him laugh – but
that’s no marvel; he drinks no wine
- Henry IV Part 2

Give me a bowl of wine:
I have not that alacrity of spirit,
nor cheer of mind, that I was wont to have
- The Tragedy of King Richard the Third

O thou invisible
spirit of wine, if thou hast no name to be known by,
let us call thee devil!
Othello, the Moor of Venice

Give me a bowl of wine.
In this I bury all unkindness
- Julius Caesar

Come, come, good wine is a good familiar creature
if it be well used; exclaim no more against it
Othello, the Moor of Venice

I am falser than vows made in wine
- As You Like It

The wine of life is drawn, and the mere lees
Is left this vault to brag of
- Macbeth

Good wine needs no bush
As You Like It

Come, thou monarch of the vine,
Plumpy Bacchus with pink eye
– Antony and Cleopatra

The wine-cup is the little silver well,
Where truth, if truth there be, doth dwell

Give me some wine, fill full.
I drink to the whole table
- Macbeth

The Health Benefits of Wine

Across international headlines, we’ve certainly heard a lot lately about my favorite health food: wine.  Without a doubt, wine adds dimension and texture to everyday life. But wine as a fount of longevity?   Hey, sign me up!

From French Women Don’t Get Fat to the famed 60 Minutes reports on wine and health, the anecdotal evidence along with the latest findings on resveratrol (the wonder compound scientists have isolated as the miracle worker in wine), continue to suggest wine lovers live longer with fewer health problems.  Preventative medicine or junk science, any way you slice it, the resveratrol buzz from the scientific community supports what I’ve been preaching all along:  in moderation, wine is pure pleasure for every day and every occasion.

And there’s good news for lovers of this grape elixir, even if they’ve resolved to count calories in the New Year.  Rest assured that my daily dose of wine won’t weigh heavily on my conscience — For all of its glorious flavors and hues, most wines come in just under the 100 calorie mark. When the alternative is sipping water or cola with my supper, why skimp on satisfaction?

Now, as the resveratrol buzz bubbles on, people are asking what I think of fad supplements touting the power of wine in tablet form. I’m no doctor, but I do know this:  I’ll take my medicine by the glassful any day over popping a handful of pills.

When it comes to health, I make all of my toasts with wine. Wine has its place in a healthy life – with any meal, uncorked alone or in the company of friends. Cheers to enjoying the benefits of a lifestyle punctuated by wine.  As the French say, a votre sante!

Revisiting the Classic Wine and Food Don’ts

Some Cabernet with Your Eggs?

Are Americans becoming libation liberals when it comes to wine pairings? Are we finally taking a more relaxed approach to wine and food? Many of us have thrown out the rulebook and have loosened our grip on the classic rules of wine and food. No longer are we stuck with the typical pairing of red wine with meat and white wine with fish. We have a more casual relationship with wine and food as we bring to the table a newfound understanding of the personal pleasure associated with the wine and food experience. Lest we forget, the ultimate goal is pleasure. One thing is certain. When you pair wine and food together they change. Hopefully the whole is more satisfying the sum of its parts. How can you go wrong if you drink the wine that you like with the food that you like? The rest is nuance. This gloriously simple and laissez faire approach to pairings serves us well and gives you the opportunity to sit back and play with your food…and wine.

That been said, historically there have been certain pairings — Wine and chocolate, wine and eggs, wine and artichokes, and wine and salad that must be avoided at all cost. These twosomes are a recipe for disaster. Akin to taking nails to a chalkboard, they can make a sommelier shriek in horror and run for a light beer. I say take ‘em on! Wine can work with anything. Let’s toss these out theories quicker than a dull corkscrew…

Pairings: Wine with Salad
The common theory: Salad can be problematic with wine, especially if the dressing has a large amount of vinegar. It will make the perception of a wine’s acidity diminish creating a flabby, course and alcoholic taste in the mouth.

Reality: While vinegar can alter the taste of a wine in a negative way, wine can indeed work with salad. Simply go easy on the vinegar and consider working in an additional protein such as nuts, meat or cheese.

Taste test: Try a wine with good acidity to stand up to the acids in the salad and if there are sweet elements in the salad such as beets on fruits consider a wine with a touch of residual sugar. Chill up a bottle of Beaujolais or German Riesling and you will be amazed!

Pairings: Wine with Eggs
The common theory: There is no theory. Maybe it’s our association with eggs as the breakfast ingredient, but a more logical explanation could be the fattiness of the eggs. Pair a wine with high alcohol and you may be on the road to a wine that tastes overly alcoholic and coarse.

Reality: Wine can work with eggs though the pleasure factor may be increased if you work in additional ingredients like cheese or meat. In fact, there are classic French egg dishes often call for a wine in the recipe – think of the classic Oeufs en Meurette which calls for eggs to be poached with Beaujolais.

Taste test: Open up a crisp white or red wine, preferably one with an alcohol level under at the top 12%, make the hollandandise and make someone happy!

Pairings: Wine with Artichokes:
The common theory: Cynarin. A chemical in artichokes that makes anything you taste after tasting an artichoke taste sweeter. That’s the culprit.

Reality: If you want your wine to taste sweeter, don’t do a thing! If you want to preserve a wine’s dryness, serve a wine with very high acid. Simple as that.

Taste test: Try a Chinon or a Savennieres from the Loire Valley, or a Dolcetto or Barbera from Italy’s Piedmont region.

Pairings: Wine with Chocolate:
The common theory: Chocolate is a strong ingredient that will overpower the nuances of many wines, rendering many sweet wines drier than an Alto Adage Pinot Grigio.

Reality: Chocolate can work with wine. Work in an acid ingredient like a berry coulis to tone done the sweetness factor and serve a straightforward not overly complex dessert wine that is high in alcohol to give the pairing added power. The complexity of an expensive dessert wine will get lost with most chocolate desserts.

Taste test: Try a PX Sherry, a non-vintage port or a Malmsey Madeira and get your just desserts.

Photo of food pairing courtesy Flickr Creative Commons. Photo credit: Joan Nova

Brilliant Pairing:
What’s the best wine for popcorn?

You might see me wax poetic about classic pairings like foie gras and Sauternes or oysters and Muscadet. (I’m not a snob, honest!) But today’s pairing is more comforting and somewhat out of the box. Let’s start with your favorite Netflix film. If you want something with a food and wine theme, think about Sideways, Bottle Shock, the Godfather or one of my all-time favorites — Babette’s Feast.

First, cook up some popcorn. Melt the butter and drizzle it on the glorious popped kernels of corn. Salt as needed. Now, what to pair with it? Okay, skip the soft drinks, please! Beer? Save it for schnitzel night. Water? This is popcorn, not the Mohave desert. What about something more celebratory?

Try this: Grab your favorite sparkler – Champagne (if your wallet allows), Prosecco (perfect with Godfather – either Part One or Two!) or Cava – the Sparkling wine from Spain. The crisp and refreshing flavor profile of the sparkler is a glorious contrast to the crisp of the popcorn mingled with the salt and greasy butter.

If you want something a bit sweeter, make a Bellini or a Kir Royale. Or just top it off with a few splashes of St. Germaine.

Or would you prefer to just pop and pour? Try a Moscato d’Asti — one of my favorite dessert wines on the planet — and costs less than seeing an IMAX film in 3D! Turn off your cell phone, pop the cork, and enjoy the film!

Finger Lakes: A New York State of Wine

Erin McMurrough has traded a high profile job in the business of theatre to pursue her passion – working with wines from the Finger Lakes. It was lovely connecting with her and I asked her to write a guest post on her career transition and her love of the Finger Lakes. —MG

Finger Lakes: A New York State of Wine
By Erin McMurrough

Love at first sight. I experienced it seven years ago on a day trip to the Finger Lakes region of New York and I knew that somehow, someway, this place was going to play a role in my future. My brother was living outside of Rochester at the time and he arranged a day of wine tasting for my family. I anticipated an afternoon of tipsy fun, but the experience ended up changing my life.

As we drove around Seneca Lake, my eyes drank in the physical beauty of the land. The area is breathtaking with rolling hills, gorges, waterfalls and winding roads that magically reveal something incredible around each bend. And then we tried the wine. I vividly remember tasting a semi-dry Riesling from Red Newt Cellars and my taste buds bathed in lovely acid heaven. I was completely smitten with the land, the Rieslings and the friendly community.

The years passed on and I continued with my career in theatre production, but I was often daydreaming about the Finger Lakes—I followed the area through Google Alerts, and my heart warmed every time a Finger Lakes wine won an award. As I neared my 35th birthday, I took stock of where I wanted to be and made a blind leap into the wine industry. I passed the introductory class at the Court of Master Sommeliers program and I visited numerous US wine regions. I started working for a French importer/distributor in Manhattan to expand my wine knowledge. It became my personal mission to taste as many wines as I could (hey, homework can be fun!).

 

When harvest season rolled around, I heard the siren song of the Finger Lakes and I accepted an intern position at Lakewood Vineyards on Seneca Lake. I woke up at 6AM to pick grapes in the vineyard, I climbed slippery metal ladders to add yeast to fermenting tanks of wine, and I worked hectic days in the tasting room where every customer arrives with a different palate. Working at a Finger Lakes winery is difficult but rewarding, and I gained an even greater appreciation for the region and the wine. What started out as love at first sight has blossomed into true, meaningful relationship, and I am delighted to toast our future together with a delicious Finger Lakes sparkling wine.

*****
Erin — Best of luck with your work love! Follow your passion. —MG

 

Photo of Seneca Lake courtesy Flickr Creative Commons. Photo credit: Valerie Knoblauch of visitfingerlakes.com.

What I’ve Been Drinking Lately

Well, lots… Happily, part of the occupational hazard of my work is that I taste up to 200 wines per week.  Now, I said taste, now swallow, but what have I been enjoying recently?  Well, I drink with the seasons.  This time of year, as I am constantly reminded when I walk outside without gloves, it’s COLD!  As the temperature drops, the alcohol content rises.  Higher alcohol wines are more full-bodied on the palate and generally will exhibit richer and more fleshy flavor profiles.  So, seek out wines from warmer climates as those wines will generally have more alcohol.

Lately, I’ve been tucking into many Zinfandels, specifically from the Dry Creek appellation in Sonoma.  Sporting lush, jammy fruit and wonderful balance, it is no surprise that, save for a break during a little thing called Prohibition, they have been a leader in Zinfandel production for over a hundred years.  For one of my favorites, be sure to check out the Dry Creek Vineyard, who have been producing outstanding wines in the region for decades.

If you prefer an earthier style of wine, head to the Old World.  Amarone, though its price tag can be hefty, boast alcohol levels of over 15%, and offers up layers of raison and port-like flavors.  Other Old World style wines that will be heavy on flavor include Chateauneuf-du-PapeCote Rotie, and many other fabulous wines from the Rhone Valley.

Oh, and Port, I’ve been drinking plenty of Port!

Love is In the Air – And In the Glass!

The crunch of leaves beneath your feet…the smell of burning firewood in the air… winter has truly begun to unfold its white carpet.  And as the temperature drops, and the snowflakes fall, our sense of romance begins to kindle from within.

With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, here are my picks to fan the flames of romance.  So pull a cork, sit back with a glass, and use these wines to woo your sweetheart.

From the traditional to the non, these selections are sure to send Cupid’s arrow a-flying:

“In the Pink” 

Whether your taste buds are seeking a still or bubbly version, Rosé has seen a virtual renaissance over the past few years.  With sales increasingly dramatically, it’s official:  Rosé is hot.  Despite delivering a range of flavors from the subtle to the powerful, many are discovering that this style is food-friendly and a great compliment to a romantic meal.  And not only that, but everyone looks sexy drinking it!

•  Sparkling versions to look for: Nicolas Feuillatte Brut Rose and Cristalino Rose Cava.  For a fantastic still version, seek out a “Rosado” from Rioja or Navarra, Spain.

“Romance with a Pedigree” 

Within Burgundy, one of the most famous wine regions in the world, lies the village of Chambolle-Musigny.  Surrounded by classic vineyards, this town is home to a very special Premier Cru—“Les Amourouses”.  Meaning “the lovers” in French, this vineyard produces a 100% Pinot Noir that is a hauntingly silky and complex wine. The locals will tell you that tasting this wine is like falling in love.  A sure-fire hit with a range of foods and a romantic heritage to back it up, this is the wine to choose when you want to go the extra mile.

•  Producers to look for include:  Joseph Drouhin and Louis Jadot

“Beyond Noveau”

After your Beaujolais Nouveau parties have wound down, and you’ve drunk your fill of that young and fruity wine, treat your loved one to something unique.  To some it may come as a surprise, to others it’s a well-known fact, but the Beaujolais region is composed of ten villages which produce world-class wines.  One of these is the quaint town of St. Amour.  Named after the Saint of Love, this village produces a range of wines made from the Gamay grape.  From light and lean to serious and age-worthy, it is the perfect wine to curl up by the fire with and unlock the romance of the French countryside.

•  Check out one of the most prolific producers in the region: Georges Duboeuf

But despite the dizzying array of choices available at your local wine shop, perhaps the best wine to select is the one you already have a connection with.  Whether it’s the sparkling wine you shared on your first date, or the hearty Zinfandel you sipped after a day on the slopes, your loved one’s face will light up with remembrance as this wine hits the glass.

A Window into La Fenêtre

I first met Josh and Alex down at the Suncoast Food and Wine Festival in Sarasota last year.  Both New York born and bred.  They went to Stuyvesant High School so they are smart!  Beyond our new friendship, they own a winery that I’m a big BIG fan of — La Fenêtre.  Enjoy this interview with Josh and Alex and after reading, maybe you’ll want to pick up a case!  Cheers!

MICHAEL GREEN: How did you two come together and join forces to start your winery?

JOSH: I started the winery in 2005 with a sommelier palate, a vision for the wines I wanted to make, and a supposed education in business… While the winery vision was clear and the wines were perfect, in 2010 I realized that my business acumen was not ‘up to snuff’. Alex, who had spent 10 years in corporate finance (and also happened to be my best friend since high school) graciously accepted my request to discuss the finances and see if he could help. What blossomed out of those talks was a business partnership that has been quite successful so far and should continue to be for a very long time!

ALEX: I hope Josh is right about our success – I don’t want to go back to corporate finance.

MG: What is your winemaking philosophy?

J: The philosophy is fairly simple. Most importantly, wine is meant to be accompanied by a meal. In that light, start with great, cool climate terroir and produce wines that respect that terroir. That means balanced alcohol, acidity, body, and richness. These wines are classically styled.

A: Josh is the winemaker, so my winemaking philosophy is to do what he tells me to do.  But only after questioning him relentlessly.

MG: Where did you come up with the name La Fenêtre?

J: The name La Fenêtre (the window) comes from the quote, ‘Art is the window to a man’s soul,’ by Claudia ‘Ladybird’ Johnson. It is our belief that winemaking is art, and an expression of the winemaker that crafted it. Essentially, the window to his or her soul. Of course, we are also reminded where all of our money is going… Out of the window!

MG: What are all of the wines that you make?

J: We make many different wines because of the respect we have for each vineyard’s terroir. It is nearly impossible for us to blend a great barrel, which has so much to show the world… the wines are as follows:

Chardonnay

·         Bien Nacido Vineyard

·         Los Alamos Vineyard

·         A Cote ‘Santa Barbara County’

Pinot Noir

·         Bien Nacido Vineyard

·         Presqu’ile Vineyard

·         Le Bon Climat Vineyard

·         ‘Santa Maria Valley’

·         A Cote ‘Central Coast’

Syrah

·         Alisos Vineyard

·         Bien Nacido Vineyard ‘Z Block’

Riesling

·         Kick On Vineyard (labeled ‘Santa Barbara County’)

MG: Okay, you love them all.  They are all your babies, but which wine is your favorite to make and drink?

J: I would say Pinot Noir. Making Pinot Noir is like cooking an egg. If you look away for even a second, you can miss the whole thing. It is what makes it so rewarding as well, though it can be quite crushing when it doesn’t turn out well!

A: The great thing about our wines is that they have so much personality so how I get along with them individually truly does depend on my own state of mind when I’m drinking them.  In particular, our single-vineyard Pinot Noirs have that ability to really excite, inspire and even surprise me.  In terms of favorite wines to make, it also has to be Pinot Noir.  There’s more interaction with red fruit during fermentation than with white fruit, so you get more of an insight into each stage of its development.  Of course Syrah is red fruit too, but it’s a tougher varietal – Syrah is like your son who you feel can take care of himself a little better than your daughter, Pinot Noir, who you think you have to watch out for more closely (even if she’s just as capable).  Of course, I don’t actually have children in real life…

MG: When you’re not enjoying your wine, what are you drinking?

J: I like to drink wines from my friends like Au Bon Climat, Qupé , and Deovlet. I also drink beer… mostly Mexican and Belgian.

A: I love the wines of Santa Barbara County, but it’s easy to become myopic when such great wines are so accessible to us.  I try to put our wines in context by drinking wines from other parts of the world; whether it’s France, New Zealand or Lebanon, there’s always more I can learn about wine.  I’m also a big beer guy.  I like many styles of beer but the style I overwhelmingly gravitate toward is IPA.  Something about those bitter, floral hops just makes my mouth water.  Before I got into wine, it was the layered flavors of IPA that were priming my palate for the depth and complexity of the fruits of the vine.

MG: What part of your job do you love the most?

J: I love harvest and blending. Harvest is the most intense time that I actually enjoy. It is the birth of a new vintage. Each time we pick is creating a new relationship between the wine and me. A new puzzle to be solved. Blending is the fruition of the creative process. All of the hard work is rewarded when the wine is blended and can then speak to the world

A: I love that I make something that brings people together.  There is genuine satisfaction in knowing that on any given night, somewhere around the country, people are spending time with friends and family and enjoying it a bit more and lingering a bit longer with one another because they’re sharing a bottle of La Fenêtre.

MG: Which part less so?

J: Bottling. Hands down the worst part of winemaking. It can be exciting, but the logistical mess that is bottling is literally a nightmare! Is the wine ready? Chemistry healthy/correct? Do we have the right number/size/style of corks, glass, labels, capsules? Do we have enough tanks for blending? Just a few of the million points that go into a successful bottling!

A: Accounts Receivable.  Mundane, but true.  Hassling people for the money they owe you is a pain.

MG: If you were to share your wine with one person dead or alive who would it be?

J: I don’t know if I could pick just one person… I want to show these wines to the world! Maybe Claudia ‘Ladybird’ Johnson. Based off of her quote, she understood the pursuit of personal expression, and I bet she would have some great stories to tell after enjoying a glass or two of wine!

A: Maybe this is kind of a cheat and corny, but it’s 2 people – my parents.  At its essence, a bottle of wine is a reason to spend time with people you love.  What could be better than sharing the wine that is the product of my own hard work and passion with the people who have given me love and support for literally longer than I can remember?

 

A New Year’s Resolution — Drink More Wine!


Get to the gym more?  Lose weight?  Volunteer more?  AND see your family more often?  These are all great New Year’s resolutions. I, however, prefer my resolutions to be of the vinous and spirited variety. In addition to getting healthier and helping your fellow man, why not commit to expanding your wine knowledge (and pleasure)? Whether you’re a collector with a stocked cellar, a cash-strapped beginner looking for a bottle under $10, or a pro who samples upwards of 200 wines a week (me!) , there are always ways to expand your wine knowledge and enjoyment.

Here are some commitments you can make this New Year to expand your wine horizons and bring new enjoyment to every day of 2013:

  • Open More Wine, and share it with your friends! Although I would never stop anyone from collecting and storing great wines for 20, 30, even 40 years, I’d rather drink it. If you’re having a good time with good friends, why wait? There’s never a better time than now. This year, make a point to always have some good, affordable (or indulgent) wines at the ready, and be generous in opening a bottle whenever the mood strikes you.
  • Understand that all wines don’t have to be great. Some wines just need be good to be perfect for that moment. Although first growth Bordeaux can be amazing and transcendent alongside a four star tasting menu, who says a good Chilean Cabernet isn’t more appropriate for movie night?  For me, whenever I’m invited to a Summer barbecue I bring along a bottle of lightly chilled Pinot Noir from Oregon or Washington state. I could bring something more fiscally impressive, but it just wouldn’t be as appropriate. This year, try to select wines that pair well with your experience, not your budget.
  • Drink local! There are great local wines in every state of the Union that reflect the soil, climate, and dare I say it, the terroir, of their region. This year, when at home try to connect to your roots (literally) by drinking your local wine as much as possible. Travelling? Make sure you sip your surroundings.
  • Explore Organic—the sustainable/organic movement is getting so popular it’s becoming almost impossible to avoid the rack of green wine on display in nearly every wine shop or liquor store. Try going all green this year. Trust me, the wines you’ll discover are diverse, delicious, and ethical. (Granola not included)
  • Visit more wineries. Whether it’s a day trip to the country or an educational mission, wineries are some of the most peaceful and fascinating places on earth. Why not make a point of visiting a local winery in every state or country you visit this year, starting with your own?

Fruit of the Vine

You may have smelled apple, banana and pear in your glass of Napa Valley Chardonnay, but have you ever tasted wines made from these fruits?  Don’t turn up your nose! Though the word wine comes from a Phoenician word referring to the fermentation of grapes, and over 99 percent of the world’s wines come from grapes, practically any fruit (or plant) can be made into wine.  This category of wines might be the overlooked stepchildren for the wine enthusiast, but fruit wines offer unique flavors and a unique spin on fermented juice.  And a look at history finds these wines firmly grounded in the wine world.

Wine historians agree that the first wines, made from figs, dates, and mead (honey) were probably produced in the Mesopotamian Valley about 50,000 years ago.  Often boasting a 30% alcoholic content, these wines were thick and uber-sweet and, and often to mask their frightful taste, winemakers added a wide variety of other ingredients including pepper, oregano, and other herbs to make these wines somewhat drinkable.  China, for centuries has had a long tradition with fruit wines — particularly plum wine — just think of the tasty libation that is often brought to the table along with your fortune cookie.  Fruit wines continued to maintain a fringe vogue throughout history.   Eleanor of Aquitaine sipped wine made from pears, Leonardo da Vinci savored fig and peach wine.

And today, the hobby of producing fruit wines in the United States — particularly in regions with cooler climates, remains very popular.  Why cooler climates?  When wine grapes cannot grow in cooler or colder climates — think Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, folks resort to fermenting whatever is growing in the nearest orchard.   And as wineries see the increased popularity of these nectars, they have responded with some fabulous products often adding this product line to their existing offering of classic grape wines.  Versions can run the gamut from sparkling, bone dry, semi-dry, sweet and fortified.  Depending on the alcohol and residual sugar, these wines can also partner well with a tsunami of foods.  I particularly like bringing out these wines during the holiday season.  Many versions to choose from though these wines remain quite prolific: Bargetto Olallieberry and Mead; St. Georges Spirits Framboise Royale and Chaddsford Spiced Apple Wine.

Wine – Unexpected.

Discovering a new wine can be thrilling.  And the means by which you discover a new vinous pleasure can be as exciting as the wine itself.

Maybe it was dining over at a friend’s house when your adventurous host served an unfamiliar selection.  Was that the first time you tried a Grüner Veltliner?  Perhaps it was when you asked for a recommendation from an impassioned wine merchant.  Is that when you bought your first Nebbiolo? Or maybe it was when you sought the advice of a sommelier when faced some unfamiliar selections on a wine list.  Was it a Tannat from Uruguay that was poured by the glass?

While wine can be as comfortable and familiar as a Chardonnay, some of wine’s most glorious and unexpected pleasures can be found when you step out of your varietal or regional comfort zone.

Part of the occupational “hazard” of my work is tasting dozens of wines each week, often alone – with pen in one hand and glass in the other.  But it is venturing out to wine shops, wine regions, and restaurants, where the endorsements of those around me, or the real world connections and context of the experience lead me to the most thrilling discoveries.

This happened recently when I stopped by Hearth – one of my favorite New York City wine bars.  The list of wines – by the glass and by the bottle – is smart and daring, but it is the enthusiastic staff that makes this wine bar truly special.   I always ask for their recommendations.

“What has excited you lately?” is what I likely said to the bright-eyed server behind the bar.   He pointed me to a white wine – a 2001 Pinot Auxerrois from Alsace, France.  (Full disclosure:  I was immediately skeptical.  I know this grape – not as inspired as the Rieslings and Gewurztraminers that come out of the region.  Adding to my skepticism was the vintage – 2001.  So I am drinking a secondary grape from Alsace with more than 11 years of age – this bottle has a lot working against it!)  But I let the server continue his patter.  “And the producer Rolly Gassmann is one of the great producers of the region.”  (He is.)  The server offered me a taste and I had already prepared to manage my expectations.  A long pause followed as I swallowed and savored the long and persistent finish.  The wine was a revelation.  At once both powerful and elegant with a wonderful palate feel and complex notes of lilac, rose and cinnamon.  I ordered a bottle and subsequently ordered a case for my home.

I can’t wait to introduce this wine to my friends.

Refreshing Surprise: A Perfect State of Bliss

While Freixenet Cordon Negro is one of the largest and most prolific wine brands in the world, It is their Elyssia Pinot Noir Brut that is setting my heart aflutter! “Elyssia” means heavenly or a state of perfect bliss and this rose Cava delivers on both fronts! This Pinot Noir Rosado has an intense aroma of raspberries and blackberries, and delivers crisp yet complex fruity flavors finishing with a lovely hint of sweetness. Pass over the Cabernet with your holiday ham and pick up a bottle of this sensational sparkler. It is delicious and the color is intoxicating.

Dynamic Duo: What’s the Best Wine with Chocolate?

The common theory: Chocolate is a strong ingredient that will overpower the nuances of many wines, rendering many sweet wines drier than an Alto Adage Pinot Grigio.

Reality: Chocolate can work with wine. Work in an acid ingredient like a berry coulis to tone down the sweetness factor and serve a straightforward not overly complex dessert wine that is high in alcohol to give the pairing added power. The complexity of an expensive dessert wine will get lost with most chocolate desserts.

Taste test: Try a PX Sherry, a non-vintage Port or a Malmsey Madeira and get your just desserts.

Be adventurous: If you serve a bitter chocolate (like the dense and decadent Scharffen Berger 82%) with a high cocoa content, pull out your favorite fruit forward Shiraz, Cabernet or Zinfandel. The pairing works very well and it allows you to bite into that truffle while finishing off your dinner wine.

Corks are Flying! How to Open a Bottle of Champagne

Carefully! There are 9 atmospheres of pressure in a bottle of Champagne. That is more pressure that the tire of a London double-decker bus or a baseball being shot from a pitchers arm at 90 miles an hour. I found this instructional video on You Tube on how to open a bottle of bubbly. I like the video except I omit one step – I don’t take the metal cage off of the bottle. When you keep the cage on, it creates more friction and makes the bottle opening much easier – and safer.

Fast fact: How many bubbles are in a bottle of Champagne? Zero? Guess again. 49 million!

Magical Moments with a 1949 Chateau Latour

Where were you in 1949? I wasn’t born yet. But a lot of wines in collectors’ cellars were. As a wine connoisseur, it’s always a thrill for an opportunity to savor a wine that’s older than you! I was blessed to be at the home of some new friends for a casual wine dinner in Greewich, Connecticut.

The food was lovely (Thanks to Jack Melnikoff and his wife), the conversation was inspiring, and one of the wines was historic. Thanks to Laird Bieger for bringing the guest of honor — a 1949 Chateau Latour!

Below are Laird’s tasting notes on the wine and the evening:

“Something old, something new , something borrowed… On second thought I will just take something old like the 1949 Latour I had last night with my two friends Jack Melnikoff and Michael Green. We tasted the 1949 with a 1988 Latour as I felt both were good but not great years and so they would make for a fun comparison. We opened the 1988 first in order to decant it. I tasted it multiple times over a couple of hours and even at the end the wine was tight and, in my opinion, really needs another 10-15 years of cellaring to hit its peak. But even looking past that, I thought the wine was solid but with no qualities that made me believe that even in 15 years that this would be a “showstopper”.

On the other hand, the 1949 (in 750ml format) was nothing short of magical. When I first brought up the idea of drinking it, I thought for sure my first sniffs would bring me aromas of barnyard and shoe leather. But quite the contrary, the wine still had a youthful bouquet that was more befitting of a 30 year old wine rather than a 63 year old one (if I had tasted it blind I would have guessed it to be a 1982 or 1961). In addition, while the wine certainly has lost a lot of its fruit over the years, it still had enough to give it a wonderful flavor. Most importantly its mouth-feel was absolutely spectacular with a chewy, unctuous character to it. I am officially putting it in my top all time Bordeaux’s joining the 1989 Lynch Bages, the 1982 Lafite and the 2000 Pavie. If one is thinking about doing a tasting consisting of the best wines of the 1940′s (and if you are I want to be invited!), I think this wine will hold its own even against the blockbusters of the decade like the 1945 Mouton and the 1947 Cheval Blanc.

I also want to thank Michael and Jack as there is nothing better than having two friends experience that magical moment with you!”

 

Introducing:
The Wine Hero!

Follow Michael Green’s exciting new web series that follows eight sexy New Yorkers as they make their way through the world of wining, dining, dating, and relating. It’s filled with Michael’s trademark comic hijinks, buffered with wine and spirits education and inside information. Stay tuned for episode one, coming soon.

Everything I didn’t need to know about wine…

Have you ever been to a wine tasting? I’m not talking about the set-ups at your local liquor store (although I’ve found a few surprises at those), I’m talking about the hoity-toity wine tastings. The ones where you’re expected to say things like “nose,” and “bite,” and “throaty.” And Mike Tyson is nowhere to be found.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned at the traditional wine tasting, it’s that everything I didn’t need to know about wine I learned at a wine tasting.

Because when it comes to enjoying wine, it’s as much about your palate as it is about the wine.

Scientists have done plenty of studies on the human palate. As a species, we each have five types of receptor cells on our tongue. And that’s pretty much where the similarities end. We may all taste sweet, salty, bitter, sour, and umami — but our perceptions are affected by how strongly our brain perceives the sensations. Are you a smoker? That affects your taste buds. Pour on the Tabasco sauce? That affects your taste buds. And they also change as you age.

So we already know that food changes how you perceive the taste of a wine. The same applies to your taste buds. A buttery Chardonnay to someone else may resemble a bar of Ivory soap to you.

But if you’re at a “wine tasting,” you better have that palate trained to think like everyone else! If everyone in the room says a sauvignon blanc is slightly acidic with notes of grapefruit and pomelo — your palate better not contradict that! Even if you’re tasting lime and Pine Sol. (Hey, you Thai-spicy for lunch.)

That’s why formal wine tastings are the last place you want to start your wine journey. It’d be like shopping at the Gap in an effort to try to stand out. There’d be too much pressure to say you also love crisp, white shirts with the button-down collar, and you wouldn’t feel the freedom to grab that tie-dye number on the sale rack!

Instead, go to a small wine shop that hosts more casual tastings or attend beginner events where you learn just enough of the basics to point you in the direction of varieties appealing to your palate so you can start exploring. A good wine shop is priceless. Become a regular and before long they’ll have an idea of your preferences and will be happy to turn you onto new things that they’re pretty sure you’ll like.

What’s my mantra? If a wine tastes good to you, it’s good! Sure, people who taste hundreds of varieties a year will have a keen sense of precisely what’s going on in a bottle from a professional perspective. But are you working in the wine industry? If you’re not, then enjoy the wine and forget about the jargon! Let it swirl on your tongue and enjoy the moment!

La Mancha Wine Seminar at the Culinary Institute of America

I love inspiring young culinary and beverage directors. It’s always such a joy to be invited to teach at the CIA, and recently I was asked by Professor Michael Weiss to lead a discussion and tasting on the wines of La Mancha. The students were smart and attentive. You’ll be hearing many of their names in the coming years.

 

 

A selection of wines from the region of La Mancha, Spain.

 

Presenting to students of the Culinary Institute of America, Hyde Park, New York.

 

CIA students listen attentively to tasting notes as I explain the La Mancha tasting suite.

 

And here is an excerpt from my La Mancha wine tasting notes:

La Mancha
Located in central Spain, the Denominación de Origen (D.O.) La Mancha is a vast Old World wine area with an exciting new tale, a story of quality red and white wines offering drinking pleasure and amazing value for the wine lover.

Area: 408,000 acres under vine
Number of wineries: 265
Climate: Continental (Long hot summers and cold winters).
Temperature range: 5ºF min. / 113ºF max.
Annual rainfall: 12 – 16 inches.
Hours of sunlight: 3000 hours per annum.
Main grape varieties:
Whites:
Airén, Macabeo, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay.
Reds:
Tempranillo o Cencibel, Garnacha, Cabernet Sauvignon, Moravia, Merlot, Syrah.

The D.O. La Mancha Labels

JOVEN / YOUNG
These are produced by controlling the fermentation temperature to better maintain the aromas of the wine; they should be consumed preferably within the vintage year to appreciate their full aromatic potential.
Serving temperature: 43-46°F (whites and rosés) and 50-54°F (reds)

TRADICIONAL / TRADITIONAL
Its natural life is similar to a Crianza wine, except that it has been stored either in large earthenware vessels (tinajas) or in stainless steel tanks.
Serving temperature: 45-48°F (whites and rosés) and 50-55°F (reds)

ENVEJECIDOS EN BARRICA / AGED IN OAK BARRELS
Wines from the most recent harvest with a minimum of 90 days aging in oak barrels.
Serving temperature: 50-59°F (reds)

CRIANZA
Wines with 2 years natural aging and minimum 6 months aging in oak barrels.
Serving temperature: 59-64°F (reds)

RESERVA
Wines with minimum 12 months aging in oak barrels and 24 months in bottle.
Serving temperature: 59-64°F (reds)

GRAN RESERVA
Wines with minimum 18 months aging in oak barrels and minimum 42 months in bottle.
Serving temperature: 59-64°F (reds)

ESPUMOSO / SPARKLING WINE
Wines with minimum 18 months aging in oak barrels and minimum 42 months in bottle.
Serving temperature: 59-64°F (reds)

Refreshing Surprise:
Stark Thirst Chardonnay

I’ve been blessed with so many mentors who have inspired me along the way. My dad always taught me to pay it forward. I reconnected with Kristen Krall a few months ago and had the pleasure to taste her new wine, “Stark Thirst.” It’s a Sonoma, California Chardonnay that doesn’t taste like you’re sipping an oak desk. A refreshing surprise indeed! And no cork trees were harmed in the bottling of this wine! The aluminum screw caps can be recycled. Retails for around $15.

As if its unoaked flavors of just-picked apple, zesty lemon, and minerals wasn’t enough, Stark Thirst (starkthirst.com) is a charitable wine. A purchase of Stark Thirst will help give clean drinking water for life to at least 200 people this year alone, and bring more awareness and action on the world’s water crisis.

For each bottle sold, 10% of the profit goes to WaterAid, a non-profit organization, which is a leading international organization that helps the world’s poorest communities gain access to safe water and sanitation. The wine is bottled in recycled glass bottles remade in the USA. These bottles are 33% lighter than average bottles for a smaller environmental footprint.

I’m thrilled that Kristen is following her work passion, and she graciously has let me print her story.

“I met Michael because two of my friends said he’d be a great person for me to know because I was working up the courage to leave my advertising career to start a new career in wine.  The serendipitous aspect of the meeting was that my two friends didn’t know each other but both were sure it would be a good thing.   Our first meeting was in September of 2010 at the Algonquin in mid-town Manhattan.    I can even vividly recall today what I was wearing (gray jeans and a navy French-y blouse) and where we were sitting in the Algonquin!  This may sound strange but after we met and talked I knew that if I ‘leapt fearlessly’ into my new career that everything would be alright. I felt so good after our meeting about my pending decision to launch into my new career that I resigned a day or two later. Today, I have launched ‘Stark Thirst’ a single-vineyard, Sonoma wine that has a mission to give back through a partnership with WaterAid.”

Her mission: “Enjoy Wine. Give back.”