Category Archives: Wine Info

Two Fun Wines in the Found Not Lost

As I was purchasing a client’s summer supply of wine I ran across rosé from Austria.  Definitely did a double take and instinctively grabbed the bottle off the shelf because first it was dry pink wine and second I had never tasted it.  The wine was from Loimer in their Lois line.  This line is economical and that is rare in the world of Austrian wine.  Loimer’s website reveals that this is 100% Zweigelt which is one of the standard Austrian red grapes.  When vinified into red wine it is lightly spicy, enjoyably herbal and filled with forest berries.

This is what I found in the rosé:

The wine is very lightly pink with a brassy note and the delicate color is a prelude to the delicate flavor.  Wild strawberry, white strawberry, and nuances of raspberry are blended with a touch of white pepper, tart red apple and a surprising citrus note that lies somewhere between lime and guava.  If you like tart this wine is for you as it offers razor-sharp acidity.  I suggest you drink it with a meal more so than alone to temper the tartness.  Cool experience as Zweigelt Rosé has never passed my door before.

Right after I picked up this wine a long time favorite caught my eye…there is a reason I shop at Galley Gourmet.  Forgotten, or slightly ignored, Italian white grapes have created a soft spot with me.  Finding a new one is a thrill for sure but finding a wine maker who is exceeding all expectation with a grape I already know is even better.  In this case please meet Marchetti because he makes the best Verdicchio that I have tried.  Marchetti leaves some of the harvest for an extra dose of hang time and in the process creates the Tenuta del Cavaliere Verdicchio dei Castelli di Jesi Classico Superiore.

Here is what I found in this remarkable Verdicchio:

Candied lime mixed with ripe pear, perfect peach, and the realm of apple options are present in the nose and taste.  The texture of the wine borders on unoaked chardonnay but is not cloying or creamy.  The wonderful melange of fresh fruit is comparable to fruit salad and the silky texture is cut by the tropical citrus note that drives the finish.  Really delicious wine and it was $21.99, what a steal!

 

I Hate Cork, Except for Fly Rods and Sandals

Romance, embodied in the removal of the beloved cork from  a favorite wine with that pleasantly soft pop is rampant.  So many wine drinkers sincerely  express feelings of anticipation and excitement in this ritual and are completely shocked by my expressed hatred of cork.

Indeed I understand, even empathize with the emotions that surround the opening of a hopefully great bottle of wine.  In the distant past I have even beat the drum to keep cork as the premier closure for wine bottles, but the more bottles I opened the more disillusioned I became.  You see in any given year I find 1 out of every 10 bottles with a cork flawed by cork taint.  The flaw is trichloroanisole or TCA, or the newly derived bromine based compound.  Often described by the wine geeks of the world as “corky” or “corked”.

Just this week a very excited sommelier at Epic Roadhouse in San Francisco brought over a wine she hoped would intrigue us.  Joining me were Master Sommeliers Tim Gaiser and Peter Granoff and she wished to treat us.  Well much to the dismay of all the treat of an older bottle of Château Musar Blanc from Lebanon was just another reason to hate cork.  Then the 1978 Boal Madeira for dessert was tainted as well.  Yes that is two wines out of four!

In 2009 I was hosting a CRUSH Michigan charity dinner at a collectors home where the two central courses were luxuriously  joined to 1986 Château Mouton, 1986 Château Lafite, 1996 Château Petrus, and 1995 Masseto.  A killer line up of other worldly wines except all but the Masseto had one corky bottle out of the 3 for dinner.  Thousands of dollars in wine ruined, and completely unlike what the winemaker lovingly placed in the bottle many years before.  Then similarly a magnum of Petrus 1985 was opened in 2011 for our honorary chefs as a treat, it was corked as well,$10,000 down the drain.  Sadly these are only two examples of the now tens of thousands of dollars of once great wine that I have thrown away because of the cork.

In short the tragic nature of great wines being ruined by the bottle closure is ridiculous.  What other industry will tolerate a 10% or more loss in product and still be in business?  The answer is only the wine industry and it is simply, because the wineries do not get these flawed bottles dropped off at their doorstep.  Sadly, a great majority of wine drinkers are just unhappy with the wine not realizing the flaw.  They may not return the bottle but they likely will not buy it again.

Another eye-opening reality is that on average a bottle of wine lives two hours after purchase.  If you are going to open the wine in two hours then what difference does it make how they sealed it!  This being reality let’s move to a better concept.  Think back to a time before glass bottles and we find amphorae sealed with beeswax, pine resin, and straw.  That was the standard closure of the day but we would not even consider that now.  Cork is the standard closure now but we have better options.

On any given retail shelf one can now find bag in the box, tetra pak, stelvin (twist off), glass stoppers , plastic cork, composite cork, and traditional cork.  I assure you that twist off and the glass stopper method far exceed cork, and composite cork, in guaranteeing that what the wine maker worked so hard to create is exactly what you are getting.

Tasting Like a Pro, Descriptions

As a follow up to the article Taste Like a Pro, I am offering another method for tasting.  In order to taste well, and describe even better, you have to develop language that explains wine.  Most importantly the language has to communicate wine to others in a concise way that is common to both parties.  I have found that using everyday food experiences is the best solution.

The first step to getting your wine vocabulary functional is to actually notice nuances in wine and that is where most wine drinkers stumble.  What I would like to have each of you do is to start using a check off list for aroma and taste.  I have included an example of a simple check off list for white and red wine.  While you smell the wine ask yourself if the items on the list mimic the actual wine.  When you hit one that correlates use that as a descriptor.  For instance a glass of white wine is front of me and so I ask does it smell like lime, yes or no.  Does it smell like lemon, apple, peach, and so on.

My hope is that you will find what thousands of my students have discovered, your perception just needs to access your memory.  Go ahead depend on your 10,000 distinct aroma memories.  They will not let you down.

White Wines Cheat Sheet

Citrus – Lemon / lime / zest
Malic Tree Fruit – Apples / Pears
Stone Fruit – Peach / Apricot
Melon – Honey Dew / Cantaloupe
Tropical – Pineapple / Mango / Papaya
Cooked / Prepared Fruit
Oak Barrels – Cinnamon / Clove / Vanilla / Butterscotch / Dill / Pepper
Earth – Mineral Rocks / Earth / Damp Soil
Flowers – White / Red / Purple
Herbs – Green Fresh Herbs / Dried Herbs

Red Wines Cheat Sheet

Red Fruits – Cranberry / Raspberry / Strawberry
Blue Fruit – Blueberry
Black Fruit – Blackberry / Plum / Black Currants
Cooked / Prepared Fruit – Jam / Compote
Dried Fruit – Dried Cherry / Dried Strawberry / Dried Cranberry / Raisins
Oak – Cinnamon / Clove / Vanilla / Butterscotch / Dill / Pepper
Earth – Mineral Rocks / Earth / Damp Soil
Flowers – White / Red / Purple
Herbs – Green Fresh Herbs / Dried Herbs

Greek Wine, I Love It and You Will Too

Before my trip to Greece in 2010 I liked Greek wines.  After seeing the country and experiencing the wines at an intense level, I love Greek wines.  My opinion,  some of the most exciting wines in the world are Greek.  Truthfully there are some bad wines, but that is true for all wine regions.  I want to profile two wines that delighted me.

First is from the eternal standout Hatzidakis.  This producer is on the magical island of Santorini and is always in the running for the island’s best wine.  Offering white, red and dessert, Harry Hatzidakis has something for all tastes.  My most recent experience with the winery was the aidani / assyrtiko blend.  Aidani is a relatively rare white varietal even by indigenous Greek standards, and assyrtiko is perhaps the most noble of all Greek white grapes.  Certainly some of my most stunning wine experiences of the last 5 years have involved assyrtiko with bottle age.  Aidani adds a fleshy more fruit forward note to the leaner more direct flavor of assyrtiko.

2009 Hatzidakis Aidani / Assyrtiko, Santorini - Nose of fresh peach and apricot laced with meyer lemon.  The ever-present smoky minerality is just awesome.  The wine is deceptively friendly at first taste but the finish reveals a wine of depth and complexity.  The foil of tart citrus is beautifully set against the generous pear and stone fruit.  Drink this wine young and hold the assyrtiko for later.

Another wine from the same importer, Trireme Imports, has crossed my tasting table today.  Oddly enough it is a Merlot from Trifilia a regional winemaking area in the Peloponnese.  Just proves that merlot really is planted everywhere, just like cabernet sauvignon and chardonnay.  Konstantinos makes this wine through rigorous selection and hand harvesting from their Bordeaux grape planted vineyard, Ftelia.  Younger vintages of Anny’s Animus will be more cabernet sauvignon according to the importer website.

2004 Konstantinos Anny’s Animus Merlot, Vin de Pays Trifilia - Deep garnet to purple appearance with a sumptuous nose of red and black plum.  The fruit is lifted by a note of spearmint and there is a classy swarth of vanilla and baking spice from the oak aging.  Very inviting nose.  Taste brings black cherries, cedar, hints of dried herbs and blackberry conserve.  Really tasty wine and yes I am happy to drink merlot made like this.

 

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Taste Like a Pro: Follow these steps

Wine was never meant to be, well, mysterious. Wine is after all just a beverage to be enjoyed, and appreciation is really quite simple, just look, smell and taste.

Getting maximum information from a glass of wine is about using simple but very effective tasting techniques and having the wine at the right temperature. Temperature is critical to the flavor profile of any wine. The cooler the wine the more pronounced the tart flavors. Conversely the warmer the wine is the more you taste the alcohol. White wines that have not been aged in oak barrels should be served around 45ºF to accentuate the fresh fruit, while oak aged whites should be served around 50º F to show their richness. Red wines should be served around 65º F. Any cooler and the wine will seem bitter, but much warmer and it will seem overly alcoholic. In other words “room temperature” and “refrigerator temperature” are not right for either.

Once your wine of the day is at the correct temperature follow this method.

Look: Expectations of a wine’s flavor and intensity are found in the appearance. Lightly colored wines are generally more crisp and refreshing. Darkly colored wines are generally richer and more thickly textured. White wines with green twinges will be refreshingly tart. Whites with a gold overtones are from very ripe grapes, or have been aged in oak barrels, and will  have fruits that are less tart. A translucent ruby colored red will be dominated by red fruits and a lighter texture, while Opaque, inky reds will generally taste of jam and be richly textured. Legs, or tears, on a well polished glass indicate the relative thickness, or viscosity. Slow moving, closely spaced tears show the wine to have higher alcoholic content. Who says you can’t judge a book by its cover?

Smell: You have a wonderful aroma memory bank, 10,000 items for the average person. Without aroma taste is nearly helpless as aroma holds the nuances, so invest triple the amount of time with it. Swirl the wine around the glass and then slowly bring it to and from your nose while taking very slight sniffs. This “trombone” method will expose aromas that exist inside and outside of the glass. Wine is made from fruit so look for those flavors first. You will need to reference your aroma library by using a progressive check off list of fruits that move from tart to rich.

When smelling a white start with tart citrus like lemon and lime, move to tree fruits like apple and pear, then look for stone fruits like peach and nectarine, then look for melon, then look for tropical fruit like pineapple and mango and finally look for cooked, stewed or dried fruits like dried apricot. Red wines have a different list of fruits but use the same idea of progression. Begin the search with red currant or cranberry, move to forest berries like raspberry, then to richer berries like blackberry and blueberry, then look for black fruits like black currant and black plum, lastly search for dried fruits, jammed fruits and cooked fruits.

Once you have found lots of fruit, at least three, you want to look for the things that are not fruit. Inspect the wine for things that remind you of flowers, cooking spices, herbs that are fresh or dried, notes of honey and most certainly creative things like tanned leather. An earthy note can indicate origin of the wine so invest some energy in the search for organic or inorganic aromas. Organic aromas fall into categories like tilled soil, mushroom and wet forest floor. Inorganic smells are related to wet stones, wet slate or chalkiness. Finally check for aromas indicating barrel aging. See if you can find notes of vanilla, butterscotch, caramel, cinnamon, clove, dill or even crème brulée.

Taste: Taste combines the perception of 4 basic tastes (sweetness, saltiness, bitterness, and tartness) and the aromas already found to create flavor. Swish the wine around your mouth a bit, think about all the aromas you just found and ask yourself if you taste all of them. After thinking about the way the wine mimics aroma judge the structure.

First judge the dryness. Dryness is the presence, or lack, of sugar in the wine and should not be confused with ripeness. Sugar is detected primarily on the tip of your tongue, therefore a lack of sensation at that spot means the wine is dry.

Assess acidity, or tartness, on the sides of your tongue next to your molars. Acidity makes your mouth water. The more your mouth waters the higher the acidity in the wine. Traditionally New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc is high in acid while New World reds are moderate to low.

Tannin is tasted as bitterness and perceived as a drying sensation that makes your gums fuzzy. High levels of tannin are exceptionally drying to your mouth and may temporarily numb your taste buds. High tannin wines are Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon and Italian Nebbiolo.

Alcohol is the last structural component to judge and is assessed by the warming effect on the back of the throat. High levels of alcohol warm your throat significantly. Alcohol also dries out your mouth and may be perceived as “cotton mouth”. Calibrate yourself by looking at the published alcohol percentage on the bottle. In the world of wine 14% and up is considered high alcohol, 12.5% is moderate and 10.5% and under is low.

Now ask yourself an honest question or two. Is the structure of the wine in harmony with the flavor? Does one of the structural or flavor elements dominate? If elements are working together to form a sum greater than the parts then the wine is high quality. If not, try a different producer next time.

Lemon Creek Winery Delights

Southwest Michigan wines just get better every year!  There is a great deal of potential still untapped in this continually overlooked wine region.  The Lake Michigan Shore Appellation is an interesting combination of geology and maritime proximity, which meld to create growing conditions that are surprising like Bordeaux.  In short Lake Michigan Shore receives more sun hours than Bordeaux, has a similar average daily temperature during the growing season, and also fights humidity and moisture. 

There are of course differences.  Bordeaux does not face the potentially killing cold that threatens Lake Michigan Shore and so viticulture practices have to adjust.  Bordeaux also has a greater proportion of clay and deep gravel beds than the glacial moraine of Southwest Michigan. Our region has a higher proportion of sand, with clay and gravel mixed. This soil results in “lighter” wines overall.  Lighter being a very relative comment and is producer specific.

Cabernet Sauvignon will get to correct ripeness in this region as does Cabernet Franc.  Pinot Noir has potential but is tough to grow in the humidity.  Syrah has been extremely impressive of late showing a Northern Rhone personality of herbs and pepper.  Quite a few whites are doing well here with excellent Chardonnay, Riesling, Gewürztraminer, and neat hybrids like Traminette.

Lemon Creek Winery has been working its way to high quality wines since 1984 and is turning out some really delicious stuff.  I have been impressed with their wines for several years now and am looking forward to your reactions at this year’s Global Wine Pavilion.  Jeff Lemon, the owner, and I are going to feature the 2010 Gewürztraminer and the 2008 Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve.  The wines are really lovely, so do give them a try.

Just to get you excited here are my tasting notes:

2010 Lemon Creek Winery Gewürztraminer, Lake Michigan Shore – Nose effuses white lilac and rose petals mixed with tangerine zest.  There is a fruit basket full of apricots, tart peach and tangerines waiting for you on the palate.  Delightfully dry and clean, with tartness that cleanses the palate and asks for another sip.  This is really good Gewürztraminer!  Approx. $18/btl

2008 Lemon Creek Winery Caberent Sauvignon Reserve, Lake Michigan Shore - Give the wine an hour in a decanter to really let it shine (I tasted it over 2 days).  There is a very subtle and shy character to this wine and it reminds me of young Bordeaux.  The fruits are mix of red and black with blackberry and fresh black currant dominating the finish.  It is deft across the tongue, but the tart black fruits and tannin combine to leave a grip worthy of grilled red meat.  My favorite aspect is the undertone of fresh green herbs and roasted red peppers.  Approx. $24/btl

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Well Known Not the Same as Quality in Champagne

Elegant tiny bubbles make my heart race with delight in anticipation of that first marvelous sip.  Champagne has an extraordinary ability to charm the soul and turn any occasion into celebration.  Open a bottle of Champagne next Tuesday to see what I mean.

 All wines that bubble, however lovely, are not Champagne.  Not all grapes are graced with chalky soils and marginal climates.  No, the Champagne region is special and great wine is the result.  True Champagne has elegance and liveliness that is never quite duplicated elsewhere and so for me, it is the ultimate wine with bubbles.

If producer really did not matter then the story ended in the previous paragraph.  In real estate the key is “Location, Location, Location.”  A wine’s home turf is critical but for true greatness it is, “Producer, Producer, Producer.”

Most of us are familiar with the major houses like Bollinger, Moët et Chandon, Taittinger and Krug, but there is another side to Champagne.  Champagne has an alter ego, the individual grower.  The difference is easily compared to the chasm between large negociant firms of Burgundy and individual family wineries.  Negociant Champagne producers purchase grapes and juice in order to fill the demand for their market.  Domaine producers only use grapes from their own property.

 Those Champagne producers who buy grapes, juice or wine from outside their own property are designated as Negociant-Manipulant (NM) on their labels.  Champagne makers who use only estate fruit are designated Recoltant-Manipulant (RM).

 I just adore RM Champagnes because of their individualism.  Instead of blending from all over the region they have only the produce from their little piece of ground.  While this adds risk in a marginal climate like Champagne, it allows wine drinkers a chance to taste the uniqueness of a single location.  Like the great vineyard designated wines of Burgundy these RM’s speak of the earth from which they came.

 I would never tell you that the Negociants are not good wines.  Quite the contrary they are very good to excellent, but individual vineyards get swept away in the wake of house style.  The counter-culture of Champagne is RM wine.  Each year these unsung heros make individualism triumph over logic.