Friday, May 26, 2006

Chilean Sauvignon Blanc (WSJ, 5/26/06)

There are interesting Sauvignon Blancs coming from all over the world these days, but these from Chile have a character of their own. They aren't as sleek and exciting as those from New Zealand, which seem to crackle in the mouth, and don't have the great underlying minerals of those from South Africa. They're lighter, simpler -- and we mean that in a positive way: They taste relaxed, very much like good grapes left alone to make a delightful summer wine, with few pretensions. There's an ease about them that is charming and seductive -- good, honest, dry wines that taste like they were effortless to make and are surely effortless to drink. Many of them retain Sauvignon Blanc's classic varietal green-grass or green-pepper characteristics. We like that -- we find that genuine and true -- but we know that some people don't, and many winemakers all over the world these days seemed determined to strip that out.

The Dow Jones Chilean Sauvignon Blanc Index

In a tasting of Sauvignon Blanc from Chile, these were our favorites. Most of these are good sipping wines on a hot day and go well with light food, especially seafood. Buy and drink them as young as possible.

VINEYARD/VINTAGE PRICE RATING TASTERS' COMMENTS
Morandé 'Terrarum Reserve'
2005 (Casablanca Valley)
$8.99 Very Good Best of tasting. Nicely herbal, exceptionally clean and quite distinctive. Lightweight and seductive, with true fruit tastes.
Concha y Toro 'Casillero del Diablo'
2005 (Central Valley)
$7.49 Very Good Best value. Some flowers on the nose. Lovely, clean and classy. A hint of varietal grassiness, but a great deal of restraint. Real finesse.
Miguel Torres 'Santa Digna'
2005 (Curicó Valley)
$9.99 Very Good Sprightly, nose-tickling smells of lime and fruit, with tastes that dance on the tongue. Ripe lime tastes with some minerals and a long, dry, mineral finish. Effortless and genuine.
Anakena
2005 (Rapel Valley)
$7.99 Good/Very Good Stealth wine: It seems simple and light, but then leaves your mouth with all sorts of marvelous, juicy, lime tastes, so you simply must take another sip.
La Playa
2005 (Colchagua Valley)
$6.59 Good/Very Good Crisp, lively, fun and light as air. Tastes like sunshine.
Santa Rita 'Reserva'
2005 (Casablanca Valley)
$9.99 Good/Very Good Face-slapping, green pepper nose. Unabashed about being a grassy, varietal Sauvignon Blanc. Very lively and fun. Have this with salad.

Sunday, May 21, 2006

Results of Albarino/Vinho Verde Wine Tasting

May 6, 2006

Participants: Kronengolds, Siffs, K. Williams, Navarro-McKays, Navarro/Gibau, McKays

1st place: Mapreco Vinho Verde 2004
Score: 6.27 (6th wine tasted)
Favorite of: Kate

2nd place: Gazela Vinho Verde
Score: 5.77 (3rd wine tasted)
Favorite of: Alex

3rd place: Aveleda Vinho Verde
Score: 5.75 (4th wine tasted)
Favorite of: Joan, Alex (tie), Dotty

4th place: Condes de Albarei 2005 (Albarino)
Score: 5.70 (1st wine tasted)
Favorite of: Kirsten, Matt (tie)

5th place: Auratus 2004 (Albarinho)
Score: 4.77 (5th wine tasted)
Favorite of: Andrew, Matt (tie)

6th Place: Albarino Castineira non-vintage (Albarino), Spain, purchased at Trader Joe's
Score: 4.75 (2nd wine tasted)

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Tapas Pairings with White Wine

Food & Wine: corn-custard-stuffed chile peppers, Serrano ham and saffron shrimp

Long list here

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Highly-Rated Pinot Noirs (average scores)

2001 Byron Vineyards, Santa Maria Valley score = 92, price $22

2002 Baileyana Winery, Edna Valley Firepeak Vineyard score = 90 price = 17 $

2003 Sebastiani Vineyards, Sonoma Coast Sonoma County Selection 89 15 $

2002 Sebastiani Vineyards, Sonoma Coast Sonoma County Selection 88 14 $

2002 Erath Vineyards Winery, Oregon 88 15 $

2002 Rodney Strong, Russian River Valley 88 16 $

2001 Fess Parker, Santa Barbara County 88 17 $

2002 Lincourt, Santa Barbara County 88 17 $

2003 Kenwood, Russian River Valley 87 15 $

2003 MacMurray Ranch, Sonoma Coast 87 15 $

Monday, April 24, 2006

Portugese Wines -- Reds + Vinho Verde (NY Times, 8/16/00)

TASTINGS; Portuguese Wines Uncorked

By ERIC ASIMOV (NYT) 499 words
Published: August 16, 2000

PORTUGAL is renowned for port and Madeira, and for fizzy roses like Lancers and Mateus. It is also known for supplying many of the world's wine corks. But this country also has a thriving table wine industry, which is so little known it is a paradise for bargain hunters.

Portugal has long been a wine-loving nation, but only in the last 15 years, since joining the European Union, has it begun to join the rest of the winemaking world in modernizing its agricultural and vinification techniques. Still, Portugal seems to retain a stubborn sense of wanting to do things its own way, which for wine lovers has its benefits.

Unlike so many wine producers hoping for international success, Portugal has not gravitated to grapes like merlot, cabernet sauvignon and chardonnay, although you can find small amounts of these wines. Its red wines are made from grapes like periquita, trincadeira and even some port grapes like tinta roriz. (No, there will not be a quiz at the end.)

The best Portuguese reds combine a rich fruitiness with flavors like coffee and chocolate. They are typically aged in oak barrels, with mixed results. The better wines become well knit, with the oak augmenting the natural flavors as the deft use of salt aids in cooking. In poorer versions, fruit and oak battle in the mouth.

While most of the excitement is in Portuguese red wines, it is summer, so I can't ignore vinho verdes, or green wines, which earn their name because of their youth, not their color.

Vinho verdes can be white or red, but it is the whites that are imported here and that are so delightful in hot weather. These wines are cheap, low in alcohol and nothing fancy -- simply a blend of grapes shot with carbon dioxide for a mild fizziness.

Vinho verdes are not even vintage dated, since they're intended to be drunk immediately. But on a sweaty day, a good vinho verde is remarkably refreshing, like a great lemonade spritzer.

REDS

QUINTA DO CARMO, ALENTEJO 1995: $20
Aromas of sweet fruit laced with chocolate and licorice; sturdy and mouth filling.

QUINTA DO CRASTO, DOURO 1998: $14
Like biting into a handful of raspberries; mellow and fruity with a tingle of acid.

JOSE MARIA DA FONSECA, PERIQUITA, TERRAS DO SADO 1996: $9
Ripe and fruity with aromas of cola and licorice.

SOGRAPE, VINHA DO MONTE, ALENTEJO 1997: $9
Grapey with simple fruit flavors harmoniously cushioned by oak.

VINHO VERDES

CASAL GARCIA: $7
Light, fizzy, peachy and cheerful.

AVELEDA: $7
Fizzy and lemony, instantly satisfying.

Listed in order of preference. Prices are those paid in various Manhattan wine shops.

Albarino (NY Times, 4/28/04)

WINES OF THE TIMES; The Iberian Nights: A Light, Breezy Tale


By ERIC ASIMOV (NYT) 1330 words
Published: April 28, 2004

Correction Appended

BETWEEN the blooms of mid-April and the usual summer sweatbox, a narrow window opens for outdoor dining in New York. Whether in restaurant, yard or park, this is the opportunity to soak in the seaside breezes, to bathe in the whitewashed light, to fantasize about an indolent life where decisions come no harder than whether to turn over or sit up.

These moments call for the sort of crisp, lively white wines that give a bracing lift to shellfish and light seafood dishes or at least pave the way for the reds to follow. No shortage of these types of wines, luckily. Sancerre is a natural, its chilled bottle sweating in the sunlight, and so is its pungent sauvignon blanc cousin from New Zealand. There is tocai Friuliano and roussanne and muscadet, of course, and any number of wines from all over Italy. Not least among this group is the Iberian wine known as albariño in the tiny Rías Baixas region of Galicia in northwestern Spain and as alvarinho across the border to the south in northwestern Portugal.

''They're Iberia's answer to muscadet,'' said Florence Fabricant, my colleague on the Dining section's wine panel, which tasted 24 albariños, as I will arbitrarily call the collection.

I knew exactly what she meant in her comparison. But while good muscadet has a deliciously yeasty quality, it is neutral-smelling. Albariño, by contrast, can be explosively aromatic, full of easily detectable floral, mineral and citrus scents. It can be both creamy in texture and highly acidic, which gives it the vibrant freshness to match, say, ceviche, or grilled octopus. Yet that acidity can also make albariño seem a little harsh as an aperitif. As Amanda Hesser, my other colleague on the panel, put it, ''they're built for food.''

We were joined by a guest, Tarcisio Costa, the wine director at Alfama, a Portuguese restaurant in Greenwich Village. Mr. Costa was disappointed that 19 of our bottles were Spanish, but we are bound by what we find in retail shops, and the Portuguese alvarinhos are much rarer. Nonetheless, our top wine was Portuguese, the 2002 Portal do Fidalgo, an exceptionally pure, light-bodied and delicious wine. At $10 a bottle, it was also our best value. To me, the Portal do Fidalgo was a consummate outdoor wine, which refreshes and whets the appetite.

One other Portuguese bottle made our list, the 2001 Quinta do Dorado at No. 9, and we liked it despite what it represented. Most albariños, in both Spain and Portugal, are fermented and stored briefly in stainless steel tanks, which preserve the freshness and fruitiness of the grape. A small percentage of winemakers, though, have experimented with aging albariño in small barrels made of new oak, a procedure evident in a glass of Quinta do Dorado. There, the winemakers have done it skillfully. The oak treatment adds a sort of creamy cushion to the wine that is not disagreeable, yet it is a softer, less lively wine, perhaps more suited for indoors or for winter.

Paradoxically, the wine is labeled vinho verde, or green wine, referring not to color but to youth. Vinhos verdes are meant to be zesty and inconsequential, not like the Quinta do Dorado, which at $20 was the most expensive of our top 10.

Apart from this one oak-scented bottle, I divided the wines into two categories. Some, like the Portal do Fidalgo, were as light and fine as summer sundresses. Others were more robust, like our No. 2 bottle, the 2002 Laxas from Rías Baixas (pronounced REE-ez BUY-shez), and especially our No. 3, the 2002 Casal Caeiro. These were more substantial wines, filled with lush aromas, yet they retained their lively acidity and never tasted hot or alcoholic. Most of these wines were around 12 percent alcohol, quite a bit lighter than, say, California chardonnays, which these days are rarely less than 14 percent.

One of the more slender albariños, the 2002 Granbazan, did strike me as a good aperitif, perhaps because it did not seem quite so bone dry as some of the others, which helped to balance the acidity.

Most of the wines in our tasting, and 8 of our top 10, were 2002's. It makes sense to drink wines like these only in their youth, and I would not buy anything older than a 2002 this spring or summer. Yet this does not mean that a few more years of age will harm them. In fact, age can give some bottles a mellow, nutty flavor. But I would suggest buying a young bottle and aging it yourself if you have a cool storage place, rather than buying an older bottle in a shop that might not pay much attention to albariño storage.

Albariño producers are certainly not household names, but the best-known label to many Americans, Martin Códax, was not in our tasting. Códax apparently lost its American importer and has not reached an agreement with another one, so you are not likely to find anymore for now. Sharp-eyed wine lovers might point out that our No. 10 albariño, Burgans, is an entry-level label owned by Martin Códax, but it is a 2001, clearly a leftover, which still showed well. For Martin Códax, there's always next spring.

Tasting Report: With Albariños, Bouquet Is Really a Bouquet

BEST VALUE
Portal do Fidalgo Portugal 2002: $10 *** [Rating: three stars]
Succulent, vivacious and pure, lively and complex. The kind of wine you want to keep drinking, from a new consortium of growers.

Laxas Rías Baixas 2002: $15 *** [Rating: three stars]
Big, yet acidic enough to feel fresh and lively, with aromas of flowers and peaches and a creamy texture.

Casal Caeiro Rías Baixas 2002: $15 *** [Rating: three stars]
Dense and substantial, with lush aromas of pineapple and honey and crisp flavors that linger in the mouth.

Pablo Padin Rías Baixas: $14 *** [Rating: three stars]
Segrel 2002
Gorgeous fragrances of nuts, flowers and peaches. Both fruity and steely in the mouth, courtesy of fine acidity.

Terras Gauda Abadia de San Campio: $16 ** 1/2 [Rating: two and a half stars]
Rías Baixas 2002
Deep and substantial, almost like a viognier, with rich aromas of lemons, pears and flowers. Complex, persistent flavors.

Torre Fornelos: $14 ** 1/2 [Rating: two and a half stars]
Rías Baixas 2002
Juicy and inviting, with pure, clear flavors of peaches and apricots. Not complex but delicious.

Granbazan Rías Baixas 2002: $18 ** 1/2 [Rating: two and a half stars]
Flavors of flowers and minerals, with lively acidity. Nice as an aperitif.

Nora Rías Baixas 2002: $15 ** 1/2 [Rating: two and a half stars]
Pleasant and fresh with a slender texture, good acidity and lively citrus and mineral flavors.

Quinta do Dorado Vinho Verde: $20 ** [Rating: two stars]
Portugal 2001
Unusual in that oak aging is evident, yet it is restrained, adding a creamy texture and a slight sweetness.

Burgans Rías Baixas 2001: $12 ** [Rating: two stars]
Snappy and tangy with citrus and peach flavors. Drink well chilled.

WHAT THE STARS MEAN
(None) Pass it by
* Passable
** Good
*** Excellent
**** Extraordinary

Correction: May 12, 2004, Wednesday The Wines of The Times column on April 28, about Iberian albariños, referred incorrectly to one of the wines, a 2001 Quinta do Dorado, from Portugal. It is not representative of the small percentage of albariños aged in barrels of new oak, and that process is not evident in its taste; like most albariños, it is stored only in stainless steel before bottling.

Friday, April 07, 2006

WSJ: Pinot Grigio ratings

The Dow Jones Pinot Grigio Index

In a tasting of 2004 Pinot Grigio from Italy, these were our favorites. A few of these, such as the Conte Placido, are good sipping wines by the pool or bar, while others, such as the Lageder, would be good with chicken, pork, fish, grilled vegetables and spicy pastas. Four of these -- Lageder, Conte Placido, Kris and Tiefenbrunner -- are repeat favorites, and the Folonari was once among our favorites in a tasting of white jug wines. These are meant to be drunk young.

VINEYARD/VINTAGE PRICE RATING TASTERS' COMMENTS
Alois Lageder 'Tòr Löwengang; Benefizium Porer' (Alto Adige) $17.00* Very Good Best of tasting. A Pinot Grigio with stature. Classy, well-made and carefully thought-out, with good fruit, nice acidity and plenty of mineral underpinning.
Zenato (Delle Venezie) $11.85 Very Good Best value. Real guts, with earthiness, soul and even some weight. Bright, but with some underlying funkiness -- and we mean that in a positive way, because it gives it layers and depth.
Bortoluzzi (Borgo Tintor) (Venezia Giulia) $16.55 Good/Very Good So clean and fresh it's just about bracing. Simply lovely, and notably drier than many.
Conte Placido (Delle Venezie) $9.00* Good/Very Good What many Pinot Grigio lovers are looking for: fresh, clean and juicy, mouth-watering and pure. A pleasant, unpretentious glass of white.
Folonari (Delle Venezie) $8.85 Good/Very Good Unusual. It reminded us of Muscadet in its earthiness, with nice acidity and some mouthfeel. Impressive, considering that they made 3,260,710 bottles.
Kris (Franz Haas) (Delle Venezie) $11.95 Good/Very Good Not a simple quaffer. Interestingly austere, with good fruit wound fairly tightly and some real stuff. Best with food.
Tiefenbrunner (Delle Venezie) $14.99* Good/Very Good A vibrant-lemon lime nose just about reaches out and bites you. Fresh, lively and clean. Great with oysters.