Dear friends,
Amid the constant drumbeat of sleazy and outright criminal business practices, here’s a breath of fresh air:
Followers of the California wine scene know that more than 500 forest and brush fires punctuated the 2008 growing season. Grapes grown in a smoky atmosphere produce smoky-tasting wines to a greater or lesser degree. Few areas of California were free of brush fires in 2008, but Mendocino County and the Sonoma Coast were most strongly affected. The Anderson Valley, in western Mendocino, was especially hard hit. Pinot noir, which can translate into the bottle every nuance of soil, climate and viticulture, is and was the grape most vulnerable to smoke influence. Considerably more detail can be found at www.princeofpinot.com/article/906/ .
Reactions to the 2008 pinot noirs that show smoke character (I won’t say “flaw” or “taint,” since not everyone regards it as such) have been wildly varied, with some tasters finding the wines undrinkable eau de cigar ash, and others finding them fascinatingly complex. People differ in their detection thresholds for, and reactions to, smoky aromas and flavors in wine; the 2008 pinots are especially polarizing in this regard.
Navarro Vineyards, a family-owned winery based in the Anderson Valley, makes one of California’s great wines: their flagship pinot noir, the Deep End Blend. (The “deep end” is Anderson Valley argot for the most oceanward, therefore coolest, part of the valley.) Navarro sells most of the Deep End Blend to their mailing list as futures, the summer after the vintage, roughly six months before the wine is bottled and a year before it’s released. Typical futures price is around a third off full retail.
I’ve been buying Navarro Deep End Blend futures for some time, including the 2008. So, they’ve had their customers’ money (including mine) for the 2008 since last summer. Faced with the probability that some customers will be disappointed whereas others will like the wine just fine, Navarro has made its customers the following offer:
1. Here’s a FREE bottle of 2008 Deep End Blend. (I received mine yesterday.) Try it between now and August 15 and see how you like it.
2. If you like the 2008, we’ll ship you the amount you ordered, or more if you want more, at roughly 25% off the previously announced futures price.
3. If you don’t like the 2008, we’ll give you a full refund of what you paid for it; OR we’ll switch your 2008 futures order to vintage 2009; OR we’ll send you the same number of bottles of the (fabulous, incidentally) 2007 as a substitute for the 2008.
All I’ve got to say is that the Navarro people weren’t paying attention at MBA school when they got taught that “business ethics” is an oxymoron used only to describe long-obsolete commercial practices.
Best regards,
Russ
(Don't try this with those artificial corks that are darn near impossible to
extract from the bottle.)
Well, here it is - If you ever get caught without a corkscrew, as I did
once, you can do this.
How to open a bottle of wine with a shoe. Just watch.....you don't need to
understand French.
<http://www.wimp.com/wineshoe> http://www.wimp.com/wineshoe
_____
Greetings,
Is anyone going to the TT tasting? Any idea what he'll be pouring?
Cheers,
Jim
This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. You can order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers here or use the "Reprints" tool that appears next to any article. Visit www.nytreprints.com for samples and additional information.
June 21, 2010
A Thin Field of American Gew�rztraminers
By ERIC ASIMOV
I�VE been a big fan of California gew�rztraminers for a long time. Let me be more precise. I�ve felt that many California gew�rztraminers, particularly those from the Anderson Valley in Mendocino County, were exactly the sorts of dry, lively, aromatic wines that would make almost anybody fall in love with this unusual, idiosyncratic grape.
Or maybe not. I may be a pushover for a good gew�rztraminer, but its attractions are by no means universal. Its exotic aroma, often described as a combination of litchis, grapefruit and roses, can have a polarizing effect, like cilantro or licorice. Some people simply hate it. Others are mystified by it because it�s so different from the usual run of dry, crisp white wines.
But many California winemakers love it. It�s rarely any estate�s most important wine, but I�ve always been surprised by how many producers make a little gew�rztraminer on the side, especially because I almost never see people in restaurants actually drinking it. I drink it pretty infrequently myself. Nonetheless, I love dry gew�rztraminer with Cantonese food, even if this oft-cited recommendation has become a clich�, and I think gew�rztraminer is more versatile with food than its singular aroma would lead one to believe.
Feeling this way, I was eager and excited at the recent prospect of a wine panel tasting of 20 American gew�rztraminers. I was hoping to discover some new producers to recommend, and looked forward to discussing how rewarding these wines could be. Instead, to my surprise and to the panel�s, we were tremendously disappointed by the wines, finding a bare 9 to recommend, not our usual 10. For the tasting, Florence Fabricant and I were joined by two guests, David Gordon, the wine director at Tribeca Grill, and Rebecca Foster, a former sommelier who now works for Tempranillo, an importer and distributor mostly of Spanish wines.
We did not limit ourselves to California bottles, or to the Anderson Valley. Maybe the wines would have fared better if we had, but the sad fact is that Anderson Valley gew�rztraminers are difficult to find. Some of the best, like Navarro and Lazy Creek, are available only in restaurants or directly from the wineries. Others, like Londer or Husch, you may find in retail shops if you are lucky. We ended up with nine wines from New York State, six from California, three from Washington and two from Oregon.
So what went wrong? Better to ask, what didn�t? Some of the wines had off aromas or flavors, characteristics that you rarely encounter in modern wines. Others were reminiscent of the dry rieslings of Germany in the 1990s, when the term �dry� was taken too literally and almost every last bit of sugar was wrung out of the wines, leaving them brittle and acerbic.
Wines with appreciable levels of acidity, like riesling, chenin blanc and Champagne, need at least a little bit of residual sugar for balance. Gew�rztraminer, too, though it doesn�t have as much acidity as these other wines, needs a touch of sweetness � perhaps not even enough to notice � if only so it will seem pleasingly dry rather than coarse and strident.
�Dry doesn�t have to mean a total lack of residual sugar,� said David, who described some of the wines as painful to drink.
Of course, the gew�rztraminers of Alsace, the grape�s home territory, all too often have a surplus of sugar, so balance with this grape is not necessarily easy to achieve.
We found other problems as well. Some of the wines lacked sufficient concentration, and tasted diluted. Others were oddly simple, lacking even the slightest degree of depth. Often, we sensed a disconnect between the aromas, which might resemble the classic scent of gew�rztraminer, and the flavors, which seemed muted.
�If you�re going to make gew�rztraminer, you know you�re not going to make money on it,� Rebecca mused. �So why bother if you�re not going to do it right?�
All of our complaints should not obscure the fact that we did find some good wines, though from some unexpected areas. Oregon is not known for gew�rztraminer, nor is it known for the Umpqua Valley, a region south of the Willamette Valley with a climate apparently cool enough for good gew�rztraminer. I wish we had found more wines like our No. 1 bottle, the 2007 Brandborg, rich, floral and pink-hued with just enough residual sugar to give the wine flesh. Incidentally, at $15, the Brandborg was also our best value.
Our No. 2 bottle came from the Finger Lakes of New York, which makes sense when you think about it, since, like Alsace, the Finger Lakes region is also a good place for riesling. The 2007 from Dr. Konstantin Frank, one of my favorite New York riesling producers, was restrained and pretty, with the classic gew�rztraminer flavors.
And what about California? Of the six bottles from California, only one came from the Anderson Valley. Sadly, that bottle, a 2008 from Handley Cellars, did not make our cut. It was one bottle where the attractive aromas seemed dissociated from the reticent flavors. We had a 2008 from Stony Hill, another of my favorite gew�rztraminer producers, but unfortunately that bottle was corked. Sigh. Our top bottle from California, No. 3 in our tasting, was the 2007 Thomas Fogarty from Monterey County, which had an almost Alsatian richness and purity, with a fine, balancing acidity.
No region came off particularly well in our tasting, not even the Finger Lakes, which had four of our top nine bottles. Both the 2007 from Red Newt Cellars at $38 and the 2007 from Hermann J. Wiemer at $22 did not offer much value for the price.
Tastings like this one are quick snapshots. Ours unfortunately came out a bit blurred. I still have confidence in Anderson Valley gew�rztraminers, and I will look out for the small California gew�rztraminer producers that I have enjoyed in the past, like Stony Hill and Coraz�n from Cathy Corison, the noted Napa cabernet producer, who gets her gew�rztraminer grapes from the Anderson Valley. I will also keep my eyes open for Bedrock Wine Company, which uses the same old vines in the Compagni Portis Vineyard in Sonoma County that used to go into the excellent Bucklin gew�rztraminer.
Otherwise I will pick my bottles carefully.
Tasting Report: Floral Aromas With a Bit of Sweetness
BEST VALUE Brandborg $15 ?? ? Oregon Umpqua Valley 2007
Full, rich, fresh and balanced with spicy floral aromas and a touch of sweetness.
Dr. Konstantin Frank $16 ?? ? New York Finger Lakes 2007
Balanced, restrained and pretty with straightforward floral and grapefruit aromas and flavors.
Thomas Fogarty $15 ?? ? California Monterey County 2007
Clear, true grapefruit and floral aromas; touch of sweetness.
Hook & Ladder $16 ?? California Russian River Valley 2008
Balanced and energetic with aromas of flowers, honey and lemon.
Anthony Road $16 ?? New York Finger Lakes 2008
Floral and slightly sweet but balanced and pleasing.
Chateau Ste. Michelle $10 ?? Washington Columbia Valley 2008
Lively, fresh yet simple with aromas of flowers and grapefruit.
Red Newt Cellars $38 ? ? New York Finger Lakes Sawmill Creek Vineyards 2007
Dry and restrained with aromas of flowers.
Hermann J. Wiemer $22 ? ? New York Finger Lakes 2007
Simple and straightforward with a touch of sweetness.
Halleck Vineyard $36 ? ? California Russian River Valley Pine Creek Ranch 2006
Aromas of citrus and flowers, but acidity is out of balance.
--
------------------------------
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
* james(a)brewingnews.com James.Ellingson(a)StThomas.edu *
FYI/FYB
June 15, 2010
In Albuquerque, French-Style Wines That Sparkle
By SARAH KERSHAW
ALBUQUERQUE
IT would be really easy to whiz past the demure sign and stately entrance of the Gruet Winery on the Pan American Freeway here, not far from Target and almost subsumed by an R.V. dealership on one side and Tuff Shed on the other.
Inside, though, a sister and brother who moved here from the Champagne region of France 27 years ago and took the risk of planting grapes in this high desert climate are producing what have become phenomenally successful domestic sparkling wines. While the recession has pummeled wine producers in Champagne, Napa and elsewhere, Gruet has held its own, and even made headway in some markets, with only some minor wholesale losses.
Credit for this goes to budget-minded pricing: most of Gruet.s sparkling wines sell for well under $20. Customers wanting Champagne or sparkling wine have been moved to taste less-expensive products, wine buyers and restaurateurs say, giving these French expatriates in New Mexico a timely edge. Their sparkling wines are especially popular in New York and California, and have, in the last 10 years, appeared on the wine lists of high-end restaurants, including Craft, Del Frisco.s and Bar Americain in Manhattan.
The siblings, Nathalie and Laurent Gruet, were pioneers when the family planted an experimental vineyard in 1983, in Lordsburg, N.M., and then settled a year later on land near Truth or Consequences, a small town about 150 miles south of here known among local tourists and retirees for its natural hot springs and mild climate. As it turned out, the climate was an advantage for winemaking, with cool evening temperatures that slow the ripening to produce a pleasantly sharp acidity.
Some critics say that despite its high quality-to-price ratio, Gruet pales beside unquestionably superior sparkling wines made in France and even in California. But many wine buyers and reviewers see Gruet as a source of affordable domestic gems that hold up to . or can even outdo . more expensive domestic products.
.You can get decent things from the Finger Lakes, and Virginia is doing some nice sparking wines, but there are very few that are classics, and I think Gruet is a classic now,. said Tracy Wilson, general manager of the cafes at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan, where the Gruet blanc de noirs is served at Terrace 5 for $12 a glass, or $44 a bottle. .Its profile is beautiful, it drinks like a French wine, but it.s got this twist on it, so it.s not as minerally. It.s crisp. It.s just a pleasant drink..
It makes sense that Gruet drinks like a French wine, because the family behind it has deep roots in France. Gruet et Fils was established in Champagne in 1952 by the family patriarch, Gilbert Gruet, in B�thon. Mr. Gruet, who died in 1999, was an architect who agreed to help build a winery in Champagne in exchange for lessons in making the region.s sparkling wine.
He founded the first wine cooperative in B�thon in 1967, persuading the villagers to rip out the sugar beets in the fields and plant grapes instead, family members said.
In the early 1980s, like other winemakers in the region, Mr. Gruet decided that with a change in the French government and impending tax increases, it was time to start a winery in another country. With two of his four children, Nathalie and Laurent, he toured California, Texas, New York and finally, on the suggestion of some European winemakers he knew there, New Mexico.
.We were pretty charmed by the rugged beauty of New Mexico, and to see these lush vineyards in the middle of the desert was very intriguing to my father,. said Ms. Gruet, 47. The land was also less expensive than other options they considered, she said.
New Mexico had a centuries-long history as a leading producer of American wine. But in the early 20th century, flooding and groundwater in the state.s wine country, near the banks of the Rio Grande, became a crippling obstacle, turning fertile land into swamps. By 1920, there were no wineries left. It was not until the early .80s that a government-sponsored study meant to attract European vignerons, some of whom were beginning to set their sights on California and other states, reported improved growing conditions.
But the early years were not easy for the Gruets. At the first vineyard in Lordsburg, the brother and sister, together with Ms. Gruet.s husband and their 5-month-old baby boy, lived in a trailer on a small plot of land. They soon discovered the area was too hot for chardonnay and pinot noir grapes, sold the land and planted a new vineyard 100 miles east, in an area called Engle, about 10 miles outside Truth or Consequences.
.We didn.t speak a word of English and we were in the middle of nowhere,. Ms. Gruet said. .That was pretty strange. But when you.re in your 20s, you take a challenge better. You have a bit more adventure in your soul..
They wanted to try the Champagne method of making sparkling wines in New Mexico, so they had samples of the sandy and earthy soil sent to France for testing, to make sure the vines could grow the deep roots they needed to thrive. Encouraged by the results, they imported their first press and other machinery from France and rented a small production space in Albuquerque, as their father financed an operation that grew in small increments over 20 years.
.We started very small, we didn.t know if it was going to work,. Ms. Gruet said. .I think my father was living his dream through his children. He had a pioneer spirit, a spirit to start something totally oddball in the middle of nowhere..
They went from producing 2,000 cases of wine in 1989, to 100,000 cases a year now, doing everything but the growing in a 45,000-square-foot plant in Albuquerque. The French and New Mexican wineries now produce about the same amount of wine, the Gruets said. (Their other two siblings, twin sisters, stayed in Champagne and now run the operation there.)
The New Mexican branch of the family said that they have found the climate here even better for grapes than in Champagne; the days can be very hot, but the nights, as much as 30 degrees cooler, slow the maturation process in what would otherwise be a short growing season. The arid air that wards off rot also helps with the wine.s consistency, Laurent Gruet said, adding that they use no pesticides on the vines.
Before they hired a distributor, Mr. Gruet and his brother-in-law carted cases of wine across the state to restaurants, liquor stores and tasting events, aggressively marketing it any chance they got.
.We started with one state, then two states, then we were adding states and it took over 20 years of labor,. said Mr. Gruet, 45. .We would tell the distributors, .We.re from New Mexico, open the bottle and taste it.. Sometimes it would be a long time between when they received it and getting them to taste it..
Within a few years, mentions in newspapers and wine magazines helped the Gruets capture the attention of wine buyers and distributors far beyond New Mexico. Their wines are now sold in 49 states . 60 percent of it at about 5,000 restaurants and the other 40 percent at retail stores, Mr. Gruet said. The winery produces seven sparkling wines, four that retail for an average of $15 a bottle, as well as three more-expensive vintage sparklers, which range in price from $17 to $46. They also produce a small amount of still chardonnay and pinot noir.
Robert Lemberger, the wine buyer for the Artichoke Cafe in Albuquerque, one of the first restaurants to serve Gruet, was working at a bistro in Florida 10 years ago when he first heard of Gruet, which was on the wine list there.
Gruet is produced .in such high-quality fashion that the flavors just layer in their wines,. he said. .Their grand reserve is beautiful, with the taste of caramel and apples, citrus and a little bit of vanilla, as good as a reserve should be, and the blanc de noirs is wonderfully complex..
The region around Truth or Consequences also produces chilies and other crops, but all of them are grown closer to the Rio Grande than the Gruet grapes are. Water for irrigation has to be pumped about 15 miles to the vineyard, which proved to be too cumbersome and expensive for the other wineries in the area. Gruet is the only one left, according to Olivia DeCamp, executive director of the New Mexico Wine Growers Association. Ms. Gruet said that the winery was doing well enough to sustain the extra cost and that the family decided it was not worth uprooting a vineyard that was consistently producing quality grapes.
As to whether the Gruets would consider striking out again, adding another Champagne house or American winery, Ms. Gruet laughed and sounded a bit weary.
.That.s for the next generation,. she said.
--
------------------------------
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
FYI/FYE
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Subject: Wine is good for you. Or is it?
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THE 30 SECOND WINE ADVISOR, Friday, June 11, 2010
________________________________________________________________________
TODAY'S??SPONSOR
DISCOVER THE HEART AND SOUL OF RIOJA
Vibrant Rioja is giving you the chance to win the experience of a
lifetime - a trip to Rioja, Spain - and all you have to do is join the
Vibrant Rioja Community.
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WINE IS GOOD FOR YOU. OR IS IT?
After 15 years or more of reading about "The French Paradox," I think
most wine enthusiasts have become happily blas?? about the hypothesis
that wine in general - and red wine in particular - can be heart-
healthy even among people like the French who, we're inclined to
believe, regularly consume a diet of rich sauces made with butter and
cream.
Study after study cascades down on us, trumpeting the health benefits of
wine's antioxidants, free radicals and resveratrol, oh my!
Research really leaves no doubt at this point that wine consumption and
cardiovascular health map to a "J-shaped curve," bottoming out with the
best blood-chemistry numbers, on average, for those who consume wine
moderately, a 5-ounce drink or two per day. Teetotalers actually don't
score quite so well, forming the short shank of the "J" on the left.
Those who overdo see their bad cholesterol and health in general
plummet as their line on the right-hand side of the "J" soars skyward.
So watch it!
But while the connection seems clear, causation remains opaque: We know
moderate wine drinkers seem healthy, on average, but none of the major
studies have resolved the question, "Why?"
Now, from the land of the French Paradox comes a second look: A study
published last month raises an disconcerting possibility: The benefits
may not come from the wine at all.
Dr. Boris Hansel, an endocrinologist who specializes in cardiovascular
prevention at Hopital de la Pitie-Salpetri??re in Paris, is lead author
of a report on the study in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
According to an article in USA Today, he said the study does "not at
all establish" a causal relationship between cardiovascular risk and
moderate drinking.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2010-05-22-drinking-heart_N.htm
The study, which examined the health status and drinking habits of
149,773 French adults, "links moderate drinking to a lower risk for
cardiovascular disease but challenges the notion that moderate drinking
gets the credit," reported USA Today.
"Instead, the researchers say, people who drink moderately tend to have
a higher social status, exercise more, suffer less depression and enjoy
superior health overall compared to heavy drinkers and lifetime
abstainers."
Added Britain's Daily Mail: "Although the research shows moderate
drinkers are slimmer, less stressed and have a more positive outlook,
alcohol, alas, has nothing to do with it. Their rude good health is
more likely to be thanks to the fact that moderate drinkers also tend
to have a healthier diet, exercise more and have a better work-life
balance than both teetotalers and heavy drinkers."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1279589/Drinkers-half-bottle-wine…
The French researchers subjected almost 150,000 men and women volunteers
to a series of tests, the Daily Mail explained. They were also asked
about their education, job, how much they exercised and how much they
drank. On this basis, the volunteers were categorized as teetotalers,
low-level drinkers, moderate drinkers and heavy drinkers.
Mirroring many other studies, the results found members of the low and
moderate groups enjoying better overall health than those who never
drank or who drank large amounts. Men who drank moderately tended to
suffer less stress and depression, were slimmer and had a lower risk of
heart problems. Female moderate drinkers were also healthier, had
smaller waists and lower blood pressure. For both sexes, moderate
drinkers showed higher amounts of "good" cholesterol (HDL).
Doctor Hansel, the lead test author, said most previous studies failed
to account for the reality that those who drink sensibly tend to care
for their health in other ways. Said the Daily Mail, "this group often
had a more educated approach to their health. They may exercise more,
eat fruit and vegetables more frequently or take up yoga to cut stress
levels."
Hansel added: "These findings suggest that it is not appropriate to
promote alcohol consumption as a basis for cardiovascular protection."
However, he did concede that 'pleasure' was the best justification for
moderate drinking.
I'll drink to that! I've never promoted alcohol as a "medicine,"
preventive or otherwise, and can't comfortably recommend that a person
who doesn't like wine take up drinking for its purported health
benefits alone.
But if you enjoy wine, isn't it nice to know that drinking it moderately
can't hurt and might help?
To your health!
________________________________________________________________________
TODAY'S SPONSOR
DISCOVER THE HEART AND SOUL OF ONE OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST WINE REGIONS
- RIOJA
How would you like to discover the land of a thousand wines? How about
uncovering the heart and soul of one of the world's greatest wine
regions? Vibrant Rioja is giving you the chance to win the experience
of a lifetime - a trip to Rioja, Spain - and all you have to do is join
the Vibrant Rioja Community. Oh! and you'll receive our newsletters,
which will keep you informed of our tastings, events, delicious
recipes, tasting notes and much, much more! Just click here to get
started:
http://www.vibrantrioja.com/register.html?id=338
In the meantime, visit Vibrant Rioja!
http://www.vibrantrioja.com/index.html
________________________________________________________________________
TODAY'S TASTING REPORT
HIRSCH 2007 NIEDER??STERREICH GR??NER VELTLINER "#1" ($14.99)
Transparent straw color with glints of white. Appealing, benchmark
Gr??ner Veltliner aromas, "lentil" and "split pea" forward, a dry touch
of lemon zest back. Mouth-watering acidity on the palate, dry and
fresh, tart white fruit, a textured mouthfeel with a moderate, food-
friendly 12% alcohol. There's a hint of the "rainwater" minerality of
GV, a subtle note just below the surface. An excellent, affordable
example of this trademark Austrian wine, with a sturdy metal screw cap
to retain freshness. U.S. importer: Michael Skurnik Wines, Syosset,
N.Y.; a Terry Theise Estate Selection. (May 9, 2010)
FOOD MATCH: Its light, subtle and crisp freshness makes it a natural
with subtly flavored chicken or fish dishes ... chicken with in a
tarragon cream sauce, for instance, or our choice, a pasta with
sardines (!) modified from a New York Times recipe.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/31/dining/31mini.html
VALUE: The "cute animal" label may suggest a budget-level wine, but in
fact the middle teens is more than fair for a "benchmark" GV of this
quality.
WEB LINK: The Hirsch winery Website is available in German and English.
Here's a page featuring its Trinkvergn??gen series (labeled "#1" in the
U.S.
http://www.weingut-hirsch.at/show_content.php?hid=1&language=en
FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:
Find vendors and compare prices for Hirsch Gr??ner Veltliner "#1" on
Wine-Searcher.com.
http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Hirsch%2b#1/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP
I got mine from Chambers Street Wines in NYC. Click here to review and
order the 2007 "#1."
http://www.chambersstwines.com/Search.asp?search=go&kw=Niederosterreich
To review all Hirsch wines available at Chambers Street, click here.
http://www.chambersstwines.com/Search.asp?search=go&kw=hirsch
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------------------------------
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
>From the NYT.
Well, Mr. Asimov, It's about time!
C,
J
June 7, 2010
Ros�s, With All Due Respect
By ERIC ASIMOV
FEW wines are both as beloved and belittled as ros�. Since its return to fashion in the last five years or so, the public has embraced it as a wine of summer. Yet bottles of ros� seem to come with neon-red warning signs admonishing consumers that they run the risk of pomposity if they dare to critically assess the wines.
Why is this? Part of the great appeal of ros� is that it.s not considered a serious wine. Everyone can let down their guard and feel free of any demands to demonstrate sophistication by issuing trenchant analyses of what.s in the glass. We can relax and enjoy, like swapping office wear for shorts and huaraches.
By all means, breathe easy and enjoy . all wines, not just ros�s. Yet this call to abandon critical faculties is an insult, both to ros� and to us, the consumers.
If we.ve learned nothing else over the four decades since the beginning of the American food revolution, we have learned to pay attention to small, seemingly insignificant things. The quality of ingredients, no matter how humble, is crucial to the perception and enjoyment of a meal.
The critical spotlight shines not only on ambitious high-end restaurants but also on street food, on burgers and noodles, tacos and dumplings. Even in the most modest surroundings, quality is never insignificant.
Why should ros� be different? Why should any wine get a free pass, no matter how cheap, or seemingly unserious? Consider the lesson of Beaujolais nouveau: It was embraced uncritically as a seasonal joy until the novelty wore off and the public realized that so much nouveau was confected and banal. Good nouveau is out there, but its poor reputation is a big obstacle to overcome.
Good ros� is out there, too, and few wines are as transporting. You really don.t need to see the seaside shimmering in the heat to enjoy a bottle, or smell the lavender, garlic, anise and saffron. It.s all there in the glass, along with the blues, pinks and yellows of a pastel sky, and the sounds of the motor scooters chugging over the cobblestones. Those are my images, at least. Good ros�s call forth from each of us their own.
Bad ros�s are out there, too . lifeless, unbalanced wines that you.re supposed to like anyway because, after all, they.re just ros�s. When I hear people say that, I think of somebody trying to dump a boatload of bad wine for a profit.
Here at the wine panel, we take ros� seriously, though we try not to be overbearing about it (or anything else). We.ve had great ros�s from all over the world, but this year we decided to go back to Provence, ros�.s fantasy heartland, for a tasting of 20 bottles. Florence Fabricant and I were joined by two guests, Bernard Sun, beverage director for Jean-Georges Management, and Emilie Garvey, wine director at SHO Shaun Hergatt, a restaurant in the financial district.
What are we looking for in good ros�s? First of all, they ought to be fresh and lively. With rare exceptions, they ought to be dry, free of noticeable residual sugar. Ideally, good Proven�al ros�s offer a chalky minerality that can be both tremendously refreshing and intriguingly textured, compelling repeated trips back to the glass because it simply feels so good to drink.
These wines, generally made of the region.s usual grapes like mourv�dre, grenache, cinsault, carignan and occasionally syrah, are more about texture and mineral flavors than ripe fruit, though light berry and citrus elements can add to their appeal.
Yet, we sell ros� short to think it must be young and carefree. Bandol ros�s from estates like Tempier and Pradeaux, neither of which was in our tasting, are deep and complex, and can improve for years. Ch�teau Simone.s 2008 ros�, from the tiny Proven�al appellation of Palette, was in our tasting, and it stood out for its richness, fruitiness and complexity, yet it was bone dry and balanced as well. It was the most serious wine in the tasting, and I think in the context of the lighter wines, we may have undervalued it at No. 6.
That is not meant to demean the other wines in the tasting, which simply are not as ambitious, or expensive, as the Simone. Our No. 1 wine, for example, the 2009 Corail from Ch�teau du Roquefort, is simply delicious . light and refreshing yet not at all stinting on texture or flavor. What.s more, it was just $14, a terrific value. In fact, it was our best value.
I SAY it.s not an ambitious wine, which is perhaps an unfair categorization, yet very much the crux of the issue. Ros� is demeaned partly because most producers choose to make wines that are fresh, refreshing and intended to be drunk young. But is that not a worthy goal? Ambition alone has killed as many good wines as indifference. While ros�s like the Simone, along with the Tempier and the Pradeaux, can be awfully good, my guess is that few people would trade the easygoing style of ros� for a slew of wines aged in oak and ultra-concentrated.
Not with such inviting wines around, like our No. 2, the 2009 Domaine du Jas d.Esclans, a deliciously savory bottle, or the 2009 Ch�teau de Peyrassol from Commanderie de Peyrassol, an earthy, slightly tannic wine and our No. 3 bottle.
Let.s not forget richer ros�s, like the 2009 Ch�teau Miraval, called Pink Floyd after the band that once held a recording session at the chateau, or the Ch�teau Marg�i, with its lingering floral, mineral and berry flavors, which achieve a pleasant complexity.
Lighter bottles like the Roquefort or the 2009 Domaine Sainte Lucie are perfect daytime wines, just right for a summer lunch under a sparkling sun.
We were all pleased with the quality of almost all the wines in the tasting. None were too oaky or too sweet. The less impressive wines were simply innocuous.
I say .all,. but perhaps Emilie was not quite as happy as the rest of us. She did say that she wished she had tasted more evidence of terroir, more of what she called limestone and chalk.
Standards, even for ros�. Now that.s what I.m talking about.
Tasting Report: Seriously Refreshing and Lively
BEST VALUE
Ch�teau du Roquefort $14 ... (Three Stars) C�tes de Provence Corail 2009
Well textured, juicy and refreshing with lingering flavors of flowers, minerals and earth. (V.O.S. Selections, New York)
Domaine du Jas d.Esclans $19 ... (Three Stars) C�tes de Provence 2009
Dry with an inviting texture and savory mineral and berry flavors. (Savio Soares Selections/Metropolis Wine Merchants, New York)
Commanderie de Peyrassol $23 .. � (Two and a Half Stars) Ch�teau de Peyrassol C�tes de Provence 2009
Earthy and expressive with tannic grip and briny fruit flavors. (Rosenthal Wine Merchants, New York)
Ch�teau Miraval C�tes de Provence $22 .. � (Two and a Half Stars) Pink Floyd 2009
Rich yet balanced style with lingering floral, mineral and berry flavors. (Philippe Chiv�e Selection/Integrity Wines, New York)
Domaine de la Fouquette $14 .. � (Two and a Half Stars) C�tes de Provence Ros�e d.Aurore 2009
Dry and savory with refreshing earth and mineral flavors. (Jeff Welburn Selections, Van Nuys, Calif.)
Ch�teau Simone Palette 2008 $55 .. � (Two and a Half Stars)
Serious, balanced and substantial, with complex herbal and fruit aromas and flavors. (Rosenthal Wine Merchants)
Ch�teau Marg�i $20 (Two and a Half Stars) Coteaux-du-Varois-en-Provence 2009
Rich yet balanced with lingering floral, mineral and berry flavors. (Bradley Alan Imports, New York)
Domaine Sainte Lucie $14 .. (Two Stars) C�tes de Provence 2009
Pale, pleasant, dry and refreshing. (Savio Soares Selections, Manhasset, N.Y.)
Domaine du Bagnol Cassis 2009 $23 .. (Two Stars)
Dry and textured with floral and berry aromas. (Rosenthal Wine Merchants)
Ch�teau Coussin C�tes de Provence $17 .. (Two Stars) La Croix du Prieur 2009
Crisp and tangy with berry and citrus flavors. (T. Edward Wines, New York)
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
Dosages? We don't need no stinking dosages....
latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-loire-20100603,0,3642273.storylatimes.com
French wines' natural sparkle
Petillant Originel sparkling wine, to which sugar and yeast may not be added, is a product of the Loire Valley's Montlouis appellation.
By Jacqueline Friedrich, Special to the Los Angeles Times
June 3, 2010
Advertisement
Reporting from Paris .
At L'Ebauchoir, an upscale bistro in Paris' 12th arrondissement, a quickly gentrifying neighborhood east of Bastille, a swarm of wine professionals . journalists, bar owners and sommeliers . is diligently tasting a range of Chenin Blancs from the Montlouis area of France's Loire Valley.
At the stroke of 7 p.m., two vignerons, Bertrand Jousset and Damien Delecheneau, interrupt the tasting with an ear-splitting call to attention.
They are standing at the front of the restaurant, beside an oak wine barrel attached to a small bottling machine, and are about to demonstrate a crucial step in the making of a new kind of Montlouis: a thoroughly dry, gently sparkling wine officially named P�tillant Originel but often called by its makers P�tillant Naturel, or more affectionately, Pet'Nat.
Montlouis is an appellation just east of the city of Tours, where white wines are made from Chenin Blanc in a multitude of styles . from bone dry to unctuously sweet; from still to two traditional types of sparkling wine, m�thode traditionelle, made like Champagne, and P�tillant, which, with half the bubbles of Champagne, is creamier and less vigorously fizzy.
And now comes P�tillant Originel, which won legal status from the Institut National des Appellations d'Origine in 2007, different from traditional P�tillant. Most significant, P�tillant Originel must be absolutely natural, a product of the grapes harvested and no more. It is illegal to add either sugar or yeast at any stage of the wine's production, although both are commonly used in Champagne.
Hyper-naturalists view these additions . not to mention the use of other additives such as enzymes and bentonite . as nothing more than chemistry, all of which undermines the purity of the wine.
While eschewing additives may be a matter of principle for all Pet'Nat producers, for Montlouis vintners like Delecheneau and Jousset, it is also a matter
of law, not to mention painstaking, meticulous work in vineyard and cellar, as
Jousset is about to demonstrate.
A rangy 35-year-old with the square-jawed good looks of a latter-day Marlboro Man, Jousset explains that the barrel is filled with new, unfinished wine. The wine stopped fermenting in January while it still had 14 grams of residual sugar and has been kept in a refrigerated room since then.
Behind him, a small assembly line of vintners suctions the wine from the barrel, through the spigots of the bottling machine and into bottles that are then capped like Coca-Cola. Jousset continues: Once warmer weather arrives, that residual sugar and any remaining natural yeasts will restart the fermentation and, in the process, produce the bubbles that make the wine sparkle.
"It dawned on me," recalled winemaker Delecheneau, 31, of Domaine de la Grange Tiphaine, "I don't add sugar or yeast to my still wines, so why do I add them to my P�tillant? This was in 2005. That's when a group of us started talking about P�tillant Originel, although we called it 'Pet'Nat' at the time."
Honest approach
Whatever you call them, the wines are made, for the most part, by resolutely organic, doggedly noninterventionist vintners, among them Christian Chaussard, who, Delecheneau observes, inspired him and a lot of other young winemakers.
Way back in the 1990s, when Chaussard was located in Vouvray . across the Loire River from Montlouis . he made a fizzy, not-quite-p�tillant simply by letting his Vouvray re-ferment spontaneously in springtime.
Those were the very early days of the hyper-naturalist, noninterventionist winemaking movement in France . when outliers like the Puzelat brothers (Clos du Tue-Boeuf) and Claude Courtois (Cailloux du Paradis) in Touraine and J.J. Brun in Beaujolais (Domaine des Terres Dor�es) began opting for organic or biodynamic farming and forswearing industrial yeasts, enzymes, sulfur, added sugar, added tannins . you name it . as well as just about any technique counseled by modern enologists.
Since that time, hyper-natural winemaking has become a movement, spreading the gospel of "natural wines" throughout France and well beyond.
And the Pet'Nat movement is spreading throughout France as well. Now relocated an hour north in the Coteaux du Loir appellation, Chaussard remains true to the cause, making a variety of quirky hyper-natural wines including Pet'Nats such as "You Are So Happy," a herbaceous blend of Chenin and Sauvignon Blanc, and "You Are So Bubbly," a foamy weave of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Grenache and Cinsault.
Other popular producers such as Pierre and Catherine Breton in Bourgueil, Thierry Puzelat in Touraine, and Dominique Derain in Burgundy are among the growing number of eco-serious vintners adding some Pet'Nat fizz to their line of still wines.
Most of these Pet'Nats from outside Montlouis are sweet . ranging from slightly off-dry to as sweet as Dr Pepper . and many hark back to old-fashioned styles of winemaking (appropriately called m�thode ancestrale and m�thode rurale) in the regions of Limoux and Gaillac.
An important subgroup is deep pink, in the style of Cerdon, a sparkling wine in the Savoie's Bugey appellation. Emile Heredia from the Domaine de Montrieux outside Vendome, for example, makes a Cerdon-like Pet'Nat called Boisson Rouge from old Gamay vines. Simon Hawkins of Domaine de Fontenay in the C�te Roannaise makes a sudsy Gamay with the sweet-tart flavors of cranberry relish.
Montlouis P�tillant Originel is totally dry, however. And it differs from Pet'Nats in another significant way: Most, if not all Pet'Nats, are vins de table or vins de France . in other words, not part of any official wine group, with all the anarchy and qualitative differences that implies, from the urbane to the outlandish. Montlouis P�tillant Originel is governed by law and aims to be reliably urbane.
Quality charter
Jousset and Delecheneau, along with Xavier Weisskopf (Domaine des Rocher des Violettes) and Domaine Alex-Mathur wanted to make a P�tillant that was not only ultra-pure but also a full-fledged wine . ripe, vinous, consistent in quality and fine enough to serve in Michelin-starred restaurants, but reasonably priced. (Most sell in France for $10 to $15.)
To this end, they drew up a quality charter with exigent requirements. In addition to abolishing the addition of yeast and sugar, the charter mandates low yields, greater ripeness of the grapes than is anticipated for most sparkling wines, as well as aging for a minimum of nine months before being disgorged.
"It's very difficult and very risky," Delecheneau says. "The danger is that the wine might stop fermenting."
Less consequential risks include off-flavors resembling beer or cider, which is why Jacky Blot of Domaine de la Taille aux Loups decided to add just a bit of yeast for the prise de mousse when making his very successful "Triple Zero," a Montlouis P�tillant.
According to Delecheneau, his P�tillant Originel is catching on nicely in the U.S. and the wines are beginning to surface in up-to-the-minute wine bars and shops in Paris like La Quincave and Cru et D�couvertes.
To understand the simple yet huge pleasures that are P�tillant Originel, try Xavier Weisskopf's 2006. Disgorged in 2008, it's rich and appetizing, lightly salty, with subtle, intriguing flavors of apple and stone. Downright gourmand. Add grace notes of ginger and you've got the 2007 version.
Weisskopf sells almost his entire production of P�tillant Originel to Denmark. "They're crazy for natural wines," he explains.
It is also available in Southern California at Wine Expo and Hi-Times Wine Cellars. Indeed, availability of any Pet'Nats is spotty . though that is supposed to improve by early summer .it's a new product made in startlingly small quantities.
Risks combined with the very newness of the wine explain why only four Montlouisiens currently produce it and why there is so little of it . roughly 20,000 to 25,000 bottles a year.
But as Delecheneau and Jousset point out, the wine has no track record. Other vintners may be waiting to see how it catches on; others may be experimenting until they get it right.
Thierry Bruneau, general manager and wine buyer for L'Ebauchoir, which specializes in hyper-natural wines, was impressed by what he tasted and intends to add a P�tillant Originel to his list soon, most likely Jousset's 2008 "Bubulle" or his favorite, Delecheneau's 2008 "Nouveau Nez."
"It was creamy, dry and mineral. I liked it a whole lot. They're a hard sell right now because people don't know them, but once they try them they really like them and order them again."
food(a)latimes.com
Copyright � 2010, The Los Angeles Times
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
To Paraphrase/quote Randall Grahm of Bonny Doon.
"Ros\xe9 is the wine for those who "get it" and for those who don't."
Cheers,
Jim
The Chronicle Recommends: dry ros�
Jon Bonn�
Sunday, May 30, 2010
>From left: 2009 Breggo Mendocino County Rose of Syrah, 20... From left: 2009 Moulin de Gassac Guilhem Vin de Pays de l... From left: 2009 Curran Santa Ynez Valley Grenache Rose, 2... 2009 Gaia Wines 14-18h Peloponnisos Agiorgitiko Rose (lef... More...
The pink conundrum continues. Ros� is as popular as ever, the case having finally been made for its summery charms.
And yet the quality gap keeps growing. It's almost axiomatic: The more people drink ros�, the more mediocre ros� appears.
Part of this is just an extension of wine-growing concerns; as grapes get riper across the board, ros� - especially if made in the saign�e method, in which pale juice is drained from red grapes - follows suit.
A lot of what we rejected in the course of tasting 80 dry pink wines fell short because of evident alcohol and ripe fruit flavors that had lost balancing acidity. Lower-acid red wines might make a (meager) case, but the entire point of ros� is freshness, so a dull pink wine is no happy creature.
To that point about freshness, we stuck to the 2009 vintage for our exploration. There are still 2008 wines on shelves, and they may well be vibrant, but so rare is the ros� that evolves with age (Rioja's Lopez de Heredia comes to mind) that we decided to focus on the freshest of the fresh. We had a relatively good sampling of global ros� options, though a few prime spots (the Loire Valley, in particular) weren't in the mix.
After parsing our results, it was worth noting that some of the best ros�s are being made from fruit designated for that purpose. That's not to slag the saign�e process - some lively examples were made that way - but when grapes are picked (usually earlier) with ros� in mind, it tends to preserve freshness. I'd go further: When fruit is set aside for ros�, that's often a sign that a winery takes the pink stuff seriously.
We saw more Pinot-based pinks getting bigger and darker, even as more Grenache and Rhone-style ros�s showed a lighter hand. Could it be a signal of Pinot's amplitude issues? And if ros� is one place where the herbal edge of Cabernet and Merlot can shine, we saw little indication of that this time. Indeed, at times our ros� ramble seemed like a barometer of the concerns about how far ripeness is being pushed.
But we also found plenty of examples where freshness reigns, and no shortage of pink to keep our glasses - even our tumblers - well filled as Memorial Day arrives.
This article has been corrected since it originally appeared in print.
2009 Breggo Mendocino County Ros� of Syrah ($20): A light touch for some serious fruit. It's not on the label, but the Syrah comes from top-notch Alder Springs Vineyard in Laytonville, then got just two hours on the skins. Flavors are savory and subtle: salted cherries, mace and vibrant citrus zest.
2009 Charles & Charles Volume II Talcott Vineyard Columbia Valley Syrah Ros� ($11): A repeat of this user-friendly effort from duo Charles Bieler (Three Thieves) and Charles Smith (K Vintners). Tangy and full of sweet tangerine, black cherry, cherry pit and dried herbs.
2009 Commanderie de Peyrassol Cotes de Provence Ros� ($16): Provence is ground zero for ros�, and this historic label dialed in an effort that has tarry Mourvedre underpinnings to its bright Grenache fruit. Think nectarines on hot asphalt, plus gorgeously bright red apple, watermelon, leather and apricot. (Importer: Rosenthal Wine Merchant)
2009 Curran Santa Ynez Valley Grenache Ros� ($20): Central Coast star Kris Curran (Sea Smoke) derived a subtle Grenache take for her own label. Perfumed and floral, like buttercups and wild strawberry, with a welcome slight sweetness.
2009 Domaine de la Janasse Cotes du Rhone Ros� ($14): A big-boned Rhone blend (Grenache, Syrah, Cinsault) from high-profile Chateauneuf maker Christophe Sabon. Jammy strawberry and black currant, with hawthorne aromas and a dusty mineral edge. A bit of tannic bite at the finish makes it one for the dinner table. (Importer: Eric Solomon/European Cellars)
2009 Domaine de la Petite Cassagne Costieres de Nimes Ros� ($12): Another winner from this organically farmed estate outside Nimes. A deeper, more food-aligned ros�, with roasted orange, dried thyme, sweet raspberry and a bit of fruit-skin bite at the end. (Importer: Robert Kacher Selections)
2009 Domaine Grand Veneur Reserve Cotes du Rhone Ros� ($15): Another classic southern Rhone mix from Chateauneuf producer Alain Jaume. Apricot, ripe strawberry and bright mineral accents, with a delicate juicy profile that avoids fruit overload. (Importer: Kysela Pere et Fils)
2009 Donkey and Goat Isabel's Cuvee Mendocino Grenache Ros� ($18): The slightly cloudy look of Jared and Tracey Brandt's excellent ros� hints at their natural winemaking. In this case, half the Grenache fruit (from 90-year-old vines) was left on skins for 36 hours, the other half quickly pressed. The result is earthy, briny and contemplative, like salted strawberry licorice with a peach overtone.
2009 Elyse California Ros� ($15): A barrel-fermented Rhone tribute (mostly Grenache) from the Sierra Foothills. Big, sweet flavors of strawberry, lime pith, dried thyme and a coriander-seed bite. Rounder and riper, and happy to be poured in a tumbler on the porch.
2009 Gaia Wines 14-18h Peloponnisos Agiorgitiko Ros� ($18): This rising-star Greek estate sources native Agiorgitiko grapes from hillsides in Nemea, then soaks them for 14 to 18 hours (hence the name). Cranberry, chervil and chalky mineral. Refreshingly sharp-edged, with a bit of tannin to commend it to a skewer of meat. (Importer: Athenee Importers and Distributors)
2009 Husch Anderson Valley Pinot Noir Vin Gris ($16): One of Anderson Valley's pioneers turns in a big boy of a Pinot ros� (14.5 percent alcohol) that got a full 28 hours on the skins. Sweeter notes come forward; butterscotch and roasted beets accent more delicate, soft raspberry flavors.
2009 Librandi Ciro Rosato ($9): This large Calabrian concern delivers with its ripe, mellow all-Gaglioppo ros�. Stony and a bit sweet, with cranberry, ripe strawberry, black cherry and peach pit. Think Dixie cups. (Importer: Winebow)
2009 Lucia Vineyards & Winery Lucy Santa Lucia Highlands Pinot Noir Ros� ($18): The Pisoni family turned its thoughts rosy last year, with this somewhat weighty saign�e of Santa Lucia Pinot. Full of roasted strawberry, with a sweet pie-filling aspect and a biting lemony edge to cut the sweetness.
2009 Moulin de Gassac Guilhem Vin de Pays de l'Heurault Ros� ($12): The Guibert family (Daumas Gassac) nails this delicious Syrah-Grenache mix from the Languedoc for their wallet-friendly second label. Bright peppercorn and peach nectar, with lots of bright acid momentum and just enough berryish depth to carry you through a meal. (Importer: Beaune Imports)
2009 Paramo Flor del Paramo Castilla y Leon Prieto Picudo Rosado ($15): Enologist Pedro Gonzalez Mittelbrun made it a priority to revive the Prieto Picudo grape indigenous to this area of central Spain, south of Leon. In ros� form, it's deeply colored and bursting with flavors of nectarine, plum, blood orange and a slight coppery bite. (Importer: Classical Wines)
2009 Ponzi Rosato Willamette Valley Pinot Noir Ros� ($17): Twenty-four hours on the skins brought a bit of extra color. It's juicy, with a grapefruit overtone to the sharp cranberry tang. Vivacious and clean.
2009 Uvaggio Lodi Rosato ($14): Winemaker Jim Moore has a knack for pink wines under his Uvaggio label; this time Primitivo (i.e., Zinfandel) got added to the usual high-acid kick of Barbera for a sharp, aromatic result. Think cherry SweeTarts, burnt orange and limeade, with stellar acidity. A summer-salad sort of ros�.
2009 Van Duzer Willamette Valley Pinot Noir Ros� ($16): This Oregon winery selected a single Pommard-clone block for its latest pink offering. Freshly shaved berry ice, tart citrus and a sultry earth presence for depth.
Panelists: Jon Bonn�, Chronicle wine editor; Sarah Fritsche, Chronicle cellar coordinator; Mike Millett, wine buyer, Rainbow Grocery.
Jon Bonn� is The Chronicle's wine editor. Find him at jbonne(a)sfchronicle.com and at twitter.com/jbonne.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/05/30/FD521DKT19.DTL
This article appeared on page K - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *