Monthly Archive for January, 2009

Wine for the Bacon Explosion! (A super Bowl recipe?)

Click to see Thursday, January 29th, 2009
In case you are a vegetarian, or have been away from your crackberry for the last few weeks, the food world has been a bit surprised with the collective hunger pangs caused by a recipe buzzing around the Internet.  Even the NY Times covered it in its venerable 
Dining and Wine Section, which reports that 16,000 web sites (now 16,001!) have linked to the recipe at the BBQ Addicts website.  We're watching history here, folks – no other recipe has been disseminated to so many in such a short period of time.

Called "the Bacon Explosion" by its creators, the popular recipe may have generated more clicks in the past week than the Super Bowl and the Oscars, combined.  OK, perhaps not, but estimates exceed 14 million hits. 

BTW, if interested in preparing this hunk of pork for your favorite meat eater, I think the BBQ Addicts site provides the best step-by-step instructions (surprisingly, only 415 diggs as of this morning).

What Wine Goes With Bacon Explosion?
Which brings me to today's email from a member asking what wine I'd pair with this "dish".  Actually, it's pretty easy.  Most any red wine will work well if it features sweet, ripe-fruit flavors.  I'd opt for medium bodied wines, and avoid pairing this mouthful of flavor with your more precious bottles.

From there, the perfect pairing depends on whether you used sweet sausage or hot sausage in your roll and sweet or tangy BBQ sauce.  If your preferences lean towards hot sausage and tangy sauce, look for low alcohol wines (below 14.5% for sure) as the alcohol will fight the spicy heat in your particular version of the bacon explosion.  Plus, your tangy sauce is likely acidic, and you'll want a wine with higher acidity to stand up to it – I hate to sound like a broken record, but a pinot noiror Italian Reds from a warmer growing region are likely to be the perfect match.  Also, Zinfandels from cooler regions where lower alcohol reigns supreme.

If your tastes lean towards sweeter BBQ sauce and sausage, then opt for a ripe Syrah or other Rhone blends.  The smoker used to prepare the Bacon Explosion resonates with these wines, whose latent talents include amplifying the toasted oak flavors from their barrels – a great bridge to the smoked meat.  Or try a riper Zinfandel or Shiraz that offers jammy fruit and higher alcohol and a peppery spice that flatters this smoked shaft of porcine meat.

Oh, and a decent merlot could work well too.

Dtwm_color_web_optimizedCheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
Dave@SidewaysWineClub.com 

Quote of the Day:
"Excess, upon occasion, is exhilarating.  It prevents moderation from acquiring the deadening effect of a habit."

~ Somerset Maugham (1874 – 1965)


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Marvelous Malbec – Going the way of Merlot?

FS_Reserve_-_Malbec_2006_-_FrenteWednesday, January 28, 2009
This weekend's Wall Street Journal "Tastings" article featured the results of a Malbec tasting.  It could not have been more timely.  As it was being inked I was writing up a Malbec from Argentina for Monday's club shipment – the Finca Sophenia 2007 Reserver Malbec ($19).

This wine was selected for my club members for much the same reasons Dorothy Gaiter and John Brecher describe in their article – it provides an interesting change of pace at an affordable price.

Read their full article here -http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123274529050711187.html?mod=dist_smartbrief 

I think the most interesting aspect of their article is that, while the varietal is enjoying a rapid ascent in popularity, they found many samples to be quite unpleasant.  This is exactly what earned Merlot such vehement opposition from wine geek Miles Raymond in the movie Sideways – every grower and winemaker wanted in on the action and began planting Merlot vines in inappropriate places, and/or over-cropped the hell out of the vines, resulting in large quantities of uninteresting wines. 

Great winegrowers will tell you – over and over again, if you let them – that great wine begins in the vineyard, and that the producer can mess up great grapes, but can not fix bad grapes.  They view their role as a caretaker, and seek to make wine only from the best fruit possible.  In the case of Malbec, or at least the poor quality ones, it seems the wine is being overly manipulated to cover up bad fruit.  Acid may be added.  Oak barrels (or more likely staves, or chips or tea bags of oak shavings) are being relied upon to lend flavors to otherwise bland grapes.

This is a slippery slope.  But you can help!  By purchasing and sharing only Malbecs known to be of good quality, you make the most important vote you can make.  Hopefully, your message to the producers in Argentina will be loud and clear.

I can stand behind the Finca Sophenia.  For additional options, refer to the wines reviewed in the WSJ article here – http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123274529050711187.html?mod=dist_smartbrief 

Dtwm_color_web_optimizedCheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
Dave@SidewaysWineClub.com 

Today’s Quote:
"First come the innovators, who see opportunities that others don't.  Then come the imitators, who copy what the innovators have done.  And then come the idiots, whose avarice undoes the very innovations they are trying to use to get rich."

~ Warren Buffett (1930 – ?)


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Feed Your Passion!

Oxygen Mask Wednesday, January 14th, 2009
"You are so lucky!  What a GREAT job you have!  Don't you just love it?" 

This is, invariably, what I hear after telling people what I do for a living.

The truth is, I am passionate about wine.  But there are times when ANY job becomes, well, work.  Sure it's fun to sample wines, but imagine standing eye-to-eye with an enthusiastic winemaker (or their hungry representative), tasting their wine, and then telling him/her you won't be buying any.  Now imagine doing that again.  And again.  In fact, you have to say that FAR more times than the much more enjoyable "I take it!", which happens all too infrequently.  Add to this the paperwork and compliance and logistics and administrative tasks, throw in a pinch of partnership disputes, and pretty soon you have a high-stress, low-salary job on your hands.

So to keep my love alive, I feed my passion so I can share it with you.  Sort of the wine equivalent of putting on my oxygen mask before assisting others (I can't be of much help if I'm unconscious, now can I?) 

I am not much for New Year's resolutions, but I do find these to be an effective way to keep my wine love burning.

  1. First, Feed Your Curiosity.  My wife and share wine almost every evening.  We enjoy a wide variety of wines, from all over the world and at all different price points (well, after eliminating wines under $12, which we rarely find interesting).  This exposure to the world's vinous bounty fuels an unending curiosity, and recharges one's batteries.
  2. Make Wine Part of Your Ritual.  When we sit down to eat, our family tradition is to raise our glass and toast each other, being sure to make eye contact.  This sort of intimacy makes many Americans uncomfortable, but is common in Europe, where it is considered rude NOT to look in the eye of your toast recipient.  Don't look at your glass, look at the other person, even if they look at their glass.  Your eye contact says "Of all the places I could be right now, I am happy to be here, sharing this meal with you".
  3. "Because it's Wednesday"(or Monday, or Sunday or…)  My point here is that too many special bottles are being held in reserve for the perfect occasion, only to end up dying in wait.  Auction houses are full of wine collections that outlived their collectors.  Spontaneously opening a great bottle "just because" is rarely regretted, unless the decision was made under the influence.  Which brings me to…
  4. Avoid Intoxication – The wine business attracts heavy drinkers.  And it can make heavy drinkers out of moderate drinkers.  This may sound counter-intuitive, but to maintain my passion I've found it essential to avoid intoxication.  You see, I love wine, but I don't like being drunk, or the slowness of head it brings the next day.

How do you feed your wine passion?  I hope you'll leave your own ideas in our comments section – it is newly redesigned to make commenting easier.



 

Dtwm_color_web_optimizedCheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
Dave@SidewaysWineClub.com 

Today’s Quote:
"Life is pretty simply.  You do some stuff.  Most fails.  Some works.  If it works big, others quickly copy it.  Then you do something else.  The trick is the doing something else.

~ Dolly Parton, Country singer and actress (1946 – ?)


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Three Gangloffs = Rare Opportunity

Yves Gangloff courtesy of GangofPour (click to see more)Tuesday, January 6, 2009
What better start to the new year than with some truly impressive wines?  These lovelies are not budget-friendly, but relative to the same amount spent dining out, this is a great value on a wine that is a memory waiting to happen.

The Winemakers: Yves and Mathilde Gangloff 
I don't know whether Yves' long, curly tresses inspired Jim Clendenen's (owner/Winemaker at California's Au Bon Climat) aging rock star look, or whether it was the other way round. Wherever the truth is found, they both define the look of the hip, flowing-haired winemaker.

Yves youthful appearance hides his many years of experience. In 1980 he began (as so many great producers do) working in the vineyards of esteemed Côte-Rôtie producer Delas, where he gained intimate familiarity with the vineyards and micro-climates of the area. As money and opportunity allowed, he pieced together his own patchwork quilt of vineyards.

A native of Alsace, which is no stranger to great white wines, Gangloff was unexpectedly thrust into the producer's role in 1987, when his négociant suddenly backed out just before harvest. What a serendipity this was for the wine world.

The Gangloffs are the very definition of boutique producers (or micro-domaine, as the French call it), with little more than 5 acres of vineyards planted to grapes (1.7 in Condrieu and 2.4 in Cote Rotie). Their wines are well worth the hunt!

The Three Wines

Wine #1 – 2006 Condrieu (Viognier). $79.75Gangloff Condrieu
Happily, this beautifully aromatic white wine grape has become increasingly popular over the last 15 years or so. Sadly, good examples are still relatively scarce, as new plantings have lagged demand. It can vary in style, from lightly perfumy to highly alcoholic, but is always identifiable through its nose of peach-and-apricot floating on top of waves of honeysuckle.

France's Rhone Valley (and specifically Condrieu) is often thought to be the best spot in the world for Viognier.  In Condrieu, the maximum yield is a low 30 hl/ha, assuring the rich character for which their wines are known, and the high prices they command as a result. Gangloff vinifies his Condrieu using the method common to the area:

  1. Oak fermentation.  Typically, about one-third of the barrels are new, the remaining 2/3 consisting of 1-3-year-old barrels.
  2. Sur lie Aging.  After fermentation the wines are left to age on the spent yeast cells for one year.
  3. Bâtonnage.   A labor-intensive stirring of the lees while in the barrel.  This further softens the wine prior to bottling.

The wine is made in a lush, bold style, with fig and papaya fruit flavors. To that I would add one of the more interesting descriptors I've heard for Viognier – graham cracker – in addition to the classic peach/apricot and floral notes that are markers of this varietal – though here they are heavier, richer, more honied.

Every great cellar needs a case of this wine.  Sadly, you'll have to build it slowly, as I have to limit this wine to just one bottle per customer.

La Barbarine Wine #2: Gangloff 2005 Cote Rotie, La Barbarine, $75

2005 was an outstanding year for lovers of Rhone wines, as it was in many winemaking regions. I don't know if the dry conditions meet the classic definition of a drought, but summer rainfall in the Northern Rhone has been well below average since 2002, a condition that can benefit well-established vines in certain soils.

The summer was long and hot, the only relief coming in the form of the Mistral wind, which cooled at night and provided sufficient diurnal variation to preserve the day's concentrated ripeness with the night's adequate acidity. You will notice a powerful structure, but it is so well balanced as to be most pleasant.

The grapes were completely destemmed prior to fermentation in stainless steel tank. Natural yeasts and very little SO2 were used for fermentation before the wine was matured for 23 months in oak barriques – Yves and Mathilde employed some new barrels amidst others that were 2 – 4 years old (sorry, I don't know the breakdown in percentage) , as is his custom. Likewise, the wine was bottled unfiltered and unfined in September 2007.

Making the most of a beautiful vintage, Gangloff has crafted a memorable wine. This is his Syrah from his younger vines, ranging in age from 5 -15 years, and with yields of 40 ha/hl. The granite slopes of his vineyard produce a classic Cote Rotie – an earthy minerality, and a roasted coffee bean aroma, smokey “roasted slope” (the translation of Cote Rotie) and sweet cassis aromas. This wine's tannins and refreshing acidity give it weight which also adds to its gravitas as well as its long finish. Will age nicely for years to come.

This wine reflects the Gangloff's vineayrd plantings – 92% Syrah, 8 % Viognier – a traditional blend for Cote Rotie. The addition of Viognier is perceptible only in that it amplifies the aromas of the wine, helping the more reluctant Syrah aromas to leap from your glass.

Only 467 cases produced.  Only one bottle per customer.  Sorry.

Wine #3: Gangloff 2005 Cote Rotie, La Serienne Noire, $97Serienne Noire - Click to Buy
I often disagree with the Wine Spectator, and this is no exception. The only reason I can think of for a score of only 92 points for this wine is that they are suffering over at the Spectator offices, with rating points being in shorter supply than an optimistic economist.

This is a beautiful wine that will turn any ocassion into a great memory. Look for black cherries and red berries that surf down rolling waves of mineral, dark chocolate and black olive. Despite the old world origins of this wine, it is quite fruit forward, sporting surprisingly fine-grained tannins for a wine of this youthfulness. A very dark and powerful wine. A telltale sense of its own terroir lurks within, making it unique among its Cote Rotie peers.

For this wine, the Gangloff's traditionally use 100% Syrah, choosing to employ more new oak to soften the tannic grip and add some of the sweetness lent by the floral Viognier in La Barbarine.

The grapes were completely destemmed prior to fermentation in stainless steel tank. Natural yeasts and very little SO2 were used for fermentation before the wine was matured for 23 months in oak barriques – for their premier crus, Yves and Mathilde employ 30% – 50% new barrels, with the remainder 2 – 4 years old. Likewise, the wine was bottled unfiltered and unfined as is their custom.

Only 290 cases made. Very limited availability.  Sorry, only one bottle per customer.


 

Dtwm_color_web_optimized Cheers!
Dave the Wine Merchant
Dave@SidewaysWineClub.com or
Dave@TastesOfTheValleys.com

Today’s Quotes:
"I'll never be able to afford it so I better buy it now!" 

~ Unknown


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