Friday, August 15, 2008
Thursday, August 7, 2008
The Tasting We've All Been Waiting (And Waiting) For..... #2
The Theme: Wines of Summer (your interpretation)
The Rules: One bottle per person.
The Exception to The Rules: Six people please bring a theme-appropriate snack or hors d'oeuvre instead of a bottle. First six to claim food-duty in comments section get it.
The Other Exception to The Rules: Last tasting's Mystery Bottle winner brings the new Mystery Bottle. (And passes on the belt buckle to the new winner.)
We will taste and compare. Choose your bottle or food-item in advance and use comments below to post a prelude about what you chose and why. Please pre-chill any bottles that require chilling.
SATURDAY. AUGUST. 16. 7:30PM
GRAHAM HOUSE
RSVP TO SHANA OR SETH BY 8/12
The Rules: One bottle per person.
The Exception to The Rules: Six people please bring a theme-appropriate snack or hors d'oeuvre instead of a bottle. First six to claim food-duty in comments section get it.
The Other Exception to The Rules: Last tasting's Mystery Bottle winner brings the new Mystery Bottle. (And passes on the belt buckle to the new winner.)
We will taste and compare. Choose your bottle or food-item in advance and use comments below to post a prelude about what you chose and why. Please pre-chill any bottles that require chilling.
SATURDAY. AUGUST. 16. 7:30PM
GRAHAM HOUSE
RSVP TO SHANA OR SETH BY 8/12
Labels:
mystery bottle,
summer,
tastings,
wine
Saturday, April 5, 2008
AGE
Spanish law sets minimum periods of barrel and bottle ageing for its wines. Much of the character of these wines comes from oak ageing. Oak helps soften the tannins, and gives the wines some vanilla and toast flavors. The ageing periods vary from one region to another, but they all go by the same name. From shortest to longest, they are Crianza, Reserva, and Gran Reserva. Sure, Gran Reserva may sound semantically superlative, but only the best wines weather the longest ageing process. Many Spanish wines are released while young and full of fruit. Here are the minimum ageing periods in Ribera:
Crianza - at least one year in oak.
Reserva - three years, with at least one year in oak
Gran Reserva - five years, with at least two years in oak.
Crianza - at least one year in oak.
Reserva - three years, with at least one year in oak
Gran Reserva - five years, with at least two years in oak.
Friday, April 4, 2008
CHEESE!
A wine tasting without cheese is a deficient affair. For the good of our gala , I sat down last night with Nic Norton (Cheese Steward and General Manager at 94 Stewart Restaurant) and was guided through a maze of cultured dairy goodness. Through the lens of Nic's expert palate (and with the help of several glasses of wine) I was able to see my way through and I have selected our fare.
All told I tasted seven different cheeses chosen by Nic as good candidates for pairing with the styles of wine produced in Ribera del Duero and Navarra. In the end there were three that stood out:
L'Ulivo Antica Cascina (semi-firm, sheep)
La Tentazione del Frate (semi-firm, sheep)
Gorgonzola Dolce (blue vein, cow)
You can find more information about these cheeses, including Nic's descriptions in 94 Stewart's cheese menu. Thank you Nic for all your help. We now have Cheese!
All told I tasted seven different cheeses chosen by Nic as good candidates for pairing with the styles of wine produced in Ribera del Duero and Navarra. In the end there were three that stood out:
L'Ulivo Antica Cascina (semi-firm, sheep)
La Tentazione del Frate (semi-firm, sheep)
Gorgonzola Dolce (blue vein, cow)
You can find more information about these cheeses, including Nic's descriptions in 94 Stewart's cheese menu. Thank you Nic for all your help. We now have Cheese!
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
The Very First Tasting of Them All
The Regions: Ribera del Duero and Navarra, Spain
The Rules: One bottle per person. We will taste and compare.
Choose your bottle in advance and use comments below to post a prelude about what you chose and why.
The Rules: One bottle per person. We will taste and compare.
Choose your bottle in advance and use comments below to post a prelude about what you chose and why.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
And Then There Was Wine
After grueling months of winding our way through the wine wilderness, we are ready.
We have knelt by our domestic manger cow and recited a litany of French appellations, "Pauillac, Pouilly Fuisse, Pommard, Puligny Montrachet...," like such sweet music from our mouths.
We have started speaking in purple-stained tongues, swirling and aerating, declaring that it is like "blueberry pie;" like "rotting apple laying in the dirt at the country fair;" like "cherry tootsie roll pop;" like "dung from a cow."
We have raised our arms to the sky and made offerings of bottle after bottle, night after night, which we, with honor and devotion, consumed in earnest, even when we thought we could consume no more.
We are ready for The Very First Tasting of Them All.
We have knelt by our domestic manger cow and recited a litany of French appellations, "Pauillac, Pouilly Fuisse, Pommard, Puligny Montrachet...," like such sweet music from our mouths.
We have started speaking in purple-stained tongues, swirling and aerating, declaring that it is like "blueberry pie;" like "rotting apple laying in the dirt at the country fair;" like "cherry tootsie roll pop;" like "dung from a cow."
We have raised our arms to the sky and made offerings of bottle after bottle, night after night, which we, with honor and devotion, consumed in earnest, even when we thought we could consume no more.
We are ready for The Very First Tasting of Them All.
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