Spain at A. is great. Maybe I didn't get the email about Auriga - I just wanted to
meet this week, it didn't matter where.
Thanks for arranging.
Annette
----- Original Message -----
From: Jim L. Ellingson<mailto:jellings@me.umn.edu>
To: wine@thebarn.com<mailto:wine@thebarn.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:41 PM
Subject: [wine] Spanish at Auriga
Greetings,
One "feature" of Bob making the reservation is
that he may not have all of the info.
Since Bob didn't know about Annette's suggestion about
doing Aussie at Sapor, he went ahead and made the reservation
per at Auriga per Loris suggestion.
Let's Pencil in "Aussie at Sapor" for next week or
for the next time Annette is available.
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson"
<jellings@me.umn.edu<mailto:jellings@me.umn.edu>> -----
Date: Tue, 20 Dec 2005 16:22:31 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson"
<jellings@me.umn.edu<mailto:jellings@me.umn.edu>>
To: wine@thebarn.com<mailto:wine@thebarn.com>
Subject: Spanish Wines at Auriga-Come out and Play!
Greetings,
This week, Spanish wines at Auriga.
(Normally pronounced Are-eye-ga, but perhaps Oar-ree-Ga for our Spanish tasting.)
Sparkling(cava?)/white(alvarino)/ringer/dessert wines always welcome.
Auriga Rest.
1930 Hennepin Ave, Mpls, 55403
612-871 -0777
Who: (mostly guesses)
Wine Pro Lori
Wine Pro Emeritas Bob
Betsy
Annette S.
Ruth
Bill
Jim
Nicolai
I'll be away from my desk much of day on Weds and off on Thursday.
I will check my e-mail periodically.
Alternately, give Bob a call. 612-672-0607
Cheers,
Jim
Spanish Adventure
Southern California wine lovers are crazy for
bargain reds and whites from Spain.
By Corie BrownTimes Staff Writer
May 10, 2006
PULL up a stool at Lou's, a wine bar that opened six weeks ago, sandwiched between
a fluff-and-fold laundromat and a pawn shop near the corner of Melrose and Vine, and Lou
Amdur can tell you all about Spanish wines. Rich Garnachas from Priorato and bracing
Albariños from Rías Baixas? His customers ask for these wines by name. Is that surprising?
Not any more. The wine intelligentsia who frequent Lou's, bargain hunters at Trader
Joe's, diners who want to try something fun by the glass at restaurants such as Sona,
Spago, Providence and Jar. all are members of L.A.'s growing fan club for Spanish
wines. Labels that few had heard of a year ago now are on wine lists all around town. And
not just the better-known Riojas and Ribera del Dueros that have long had cachet; wines
from emerging regions are developing avid fans too. A year ago, the customers at Mission
Wines in South Pasadena discovered the Spanish wine section, says owner Chris Meeske. Now,
"I can't keep the wines in stock. They are selling like crazy." The wines
fill a need left vacant by California winemakers, he says. "People need interesting
wines they can drink every day. And there are no wines like that from California."
The values are extraordinary, says Rajat Parr, wine director for Michael Mina's
restaurant group. At Mina's new Stonehill Tavern at the St. Regis Resort Monarch
Beach, the Tres Picos Garnacha offered for $12 a glass costs just $10 a bottle at local
wine stores. How to justify that kind of markup? "People don't mind paying that
for a glass of wine this good," he says.
Orange County diners, Parr points out, are devoted to California wine. So he knew he was
taking a risk when he cut back on local favorites to stock 50 Spanish wines. But, he says,
"Spain has dialed it in. These wines are just right for the American palate. Lots of
intense fruit." The Albariños, Garnachas and Tempranillos will have to be hand-sold
at first, Parr says. Then he predicts he'll have trouble keeping them in stock.
Already, Spain has eclipsed Australian and Chilean wines on restaurant wine lists as the
inexpensive alternative to California wines, say sommeliers. "They taste totally
different than California wines, but they have that same intensity and structure,"
says Parr. And they cost half as much for the same quality. "No place in the world
makes better value wines today than Spain," he says.
A vine revival
A revolution has swept Spain's wine industry. It started in the 1980s when a few
independent winemakers started making ambitious wines. American wine lovers discovered
them, and soon their popularity grew. Now vintners in every corner of Spain are dusting
off old vineyards, overhauling wineries and cleaning up their acts in a bid to appeal to
American wine drinkers. Suddenly, a seemingly limitless assortment of $10 and under
bottles are for sale everywhere.
Spanish wine sales in the United States rose 14.6% between 2004 and 2005, rising from
3.8 million cases worth $183 million to 4.3 million cases worth $209 million. Spanish wine
sales in the U.S. started climbing in 1999 after a decade in which sales stagnated at
around $75 million a year.
It's all happening so fast that, unlike with every other wine region in the world,
there are few experts focused on Spain. Only one wine writer, John Radford from Britain,
has published a guide to Spanish wine that even attempts to be current and
all-encompassing.
"It will take another decade or two before Spain sorts through this
revolution," says Doug Frost, an American Master of Wine who wrote the brief
"The Far from Ordinary Spanish Wine Buying Guide," recently published by Wines
From Spain, the Spanish wine industry's marketing arm. Until then, Spain will be a
game where smart consumers keep up with the emerging regions and avoid getting snookered
by the rising prices for wine from the more established regions.
La Mancha and Calatayud were bulk wine regions that are now producing attractive,
friendly red wines from Tempranillo and Garnacha grapes, respectively. Campo de Borja, a
southern bit of the Navarra region below Rioja, is making intense and fruity Garnachas. In
the Rías Baixas zone in Galicia, the northwest corner of the country, crisp, fresh
Albariño is king. And in Rueda, fruity, structured white wines made from Verdejo grapes
rule.
Spain was ripe for this revolution. With more vines than any other country in the world
. 3 million acres compared with France's 2.3 million acres and the U.S.' 1
million acres . the country has a plentiful supply of grapes. But since the Spanish Civil
War, vintners had farmed the fruit with little care, using it almost exclusively for
nondescript jug wines. If it was growing on a difficult to harvest hillside, they often
let the grapes rot on the vines.
The abundance of vines dates back to Gen. Francisco Franco's failed agricultural
policies in the 1950s. Spain's infamous military dictator, who ruled from 1939 until
his death in 1975, subsidized the planting of "permanent" crops such as olive
trees and grape vines that could be managed by state-sponsored cooperatives.
Without a sense of ownership in what they produced, the cooperatives operated like
state-run wine factories. Neglected dry-farmed vineyards struggled to survive. In regions
such as Priorato and Bierzo, there were vineyards located in "gravity defying areas
that were simply too [difficult] to rip out and replant," says Eric Solomon, one of a
few American importers who discovered Spanish wine early.
It was Jorge Ordoñez, a Spanish expatriate living in Boston, who first tapped the
potential of those old Spanish vineyards. Growing up in the town of Málaga in southern
Spain, Ordoñez learned the wine business from his father, a gourmet food and wine
distributor. After marrying his college sweetheart and moving to the States, the junior
Ordoñez set up a Spanish wine import company and started teaching Spanish vintners how to
make wine the California way.
'Quality control'
"SPAIN was very poor," says Ordoñez. "It took us forever to recover from
the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s." The prize vineyards were there high altitude,
dry farmed, old-vine vineyards. "The problem was quality control," he says.
"There was no sophistication with wine."
As economic reforms led to an increase in privatization, independent vintners began to
reject the collective approach to making wine. Ordoñez pushed these small vintners to
modernize their wineries with stainless steel fermenters and to move toward more hygienic
operations. "I'm adamant about quality control," he says. "No
bacteria." If a winery complied with his recommendations and he could count on the
wine being stable, he'd import it to America.
"I hate funky wines because they are short-lived," says Ordoñez. "I hate
oxidized wines that have been improperly stored. They're cooked. I try to control as
much of the process at the wineries as I can."
It wasn't until 1990 that Ordoñez had wines that sold well in the U.S.: the
Garnachas and Tempranillos from Bodegas Borsao in Campo de Borja. As his portfolio of
wineries grew, Ordoñez took over marketing, packaging the wines with names such as
"Wrongo Dongo" and "Mano a Mano." The first year, he sold 1,200 cases
of Spanish wine. After eight years, he had enough business to hire his first employee. Now
he sells more than half a million cases a year of Spanish wine in the United States.
Ordoñez was the icebreaker, says Solomon, who, along with Beaune Imports and Classical
Wines of Spain, followed him. "Spain considered itself a third-world country. There
was a malaise, a sense of 'we're not worthy of sharing the stage with the rest
of the fine wine world,' " Solomon says.
Solomon was an importer singularly focused on French wine 12 years ago when he tasted
the Spanish wine that would change his life. It was Daphne Glorian's Clos Erasmus
from Priorato. He liked it so much he married the winemaker and started searching for
other wines as delicious as his wife's. In the last six years, the volume of Spanish
wine Solomon imports into the U.S. has grown fifteenfold, he says. "The economy in
Spain now is booming," says Solomon. "It's no longer the place to go when
you have no money. For growers to make a living, to do the quality work that still needs
to be done, the prices have to go up."
The success of the inexpensive Spanish wines flowing out of the country isn't lost
on longer-established Spanish wine entrepreneurs. Price inflation is sweeping through
celebrated regions such as Rioja and Ribera del Duero, where prices can exceed $100 for
the most sought-after bottles, as well as through newcomer Priorato. The promises of
instant riches is inspiring overzealous young vintners to chase critical accolades with
heavily extracted wines that taste like California wannabes.
"Some Spanish vintners are too eager to cash in on their newfound popularity,"
says Parr, "jacking up prices to astronomical levels."
Balancing that inflation is the wine from up-and-coming regions such as La Mancha and
Navarra. Still trying to get their foot in the door with American consumers, they have to
keep prices below $10 a bottle. An ocean of inexpensive Spanish wine has yet to reach
America, says Fran Kysela, an importer who last year in the U.S. sold 50,000 cases of $6
wines from Calatayud. "The market is quick to respond to these wines."
Steady transformation
OF course, not all of Spain's inexpensive wines are worth drinking: The
less-than-appealing ones can be funky, jammy or oxidized. "It's been a quiet
revolution," says Solomon. "But the sleeping giant is waking up. The floodgates
are now open. It's not just us little guys ferreting out small producers making
better wines," he says.
There now are a host of undemanding importers betting that these days anything with a
Spanish label will sell. And more significantly, the behemoth wine companies .
Constellation Brands and E. & J. Gallo Winery have arrived in Spain, says Solomon.
They are competing to be the first to create the Spanish equivalent of Australia's
Yellow Tail: a simple, bulk wine with easy to drink fruity flavors.
And there's a drawback to that thinking. "A certain homogeneity" has
emerged in the rush to make wine that appeals to the expanding American wine market, Parr
says. Bringing Spanish wineries up to acceptable health standards with modern technology
and oak barrel fermentation got rid of the oxidized and funky smells and flavors
associated with rustic wines. It also left the wines tasting a lot less, well, Spanish.
Most people don't know the wines, most have never heard of these regions, but they
can taste the quality, says Jar's wine director Bob Silverstein. He recently started
dedicating 10% of the restaurant's wine list to Spanish wines. "I had to make
room for them," he says. "The quality was there."
A primer on grapes and places
Emerging regions
Bierzo. Fruit from the signature Mencía vines from this region in northwest Tierra de
Castilla go into reds that are terrific food wines, with more finesse than power.
Campo de Borja. An emerging area south of Rioja, where the old-vine Garnacha vineyards
climb the slopes of Sierra del Moncayo.
Cariñena. South of Campo de Borja, Cariñena is the birthplace of a namesake grape
variety, though Garnacha is the dominant grape.
Calatayud. East of Cariñena, Calatayud's high-altitude, old-vine Garnacha is just
starting to show up in wines for export.
Empordá-Costa Brava. This coastal zone of Catalunya has newly planted Tempranillo,
Cabernet and Chardonnay vineyards. The signature wine is a rosado (rosé) made from
Garnacha and Cariñena grapes.
Jumilla. A hot, high-altitude region southwest of Valencia known for bulk wine, Jumilla
now is making modern wine with its old-vine Monastrell grapes.
La Mancha. South of Madrid, the flat, inland region is hot in the summer, freezing in
the winter, and dry all the time. White Airéns and Tempranillos predominate.
Navarra. Near the French border, west of Catalunya, the region is known for Garnacha,
much of which is made into rosados. Tempranillo production is rising.
Priorato. An area of Catalunya known for a wide elevation span (328 to 2,297 feet) and
slate and quartzite soils; artisanal winemakers have planted Cabernet Sauvignon, but
Garnacha and Cariñena still predominate.
Rías Baixas. This low-land, coastal region in Galicia, bordering Portugal, is known for
its fresh, light Albariños.
Rueda. A Castilian region known for its white wines . Sauvignon Blanc, Verdejo and
blends of the two . as well as Tempranillo.
Tierra de Castilla. The historic heartland of Castilian Spain includes the wine zones
Ribera del Duero, Rueda, Toro and Bierzo.
Toro. Located within Tierra de Castilla, the region is known for its intense
Tempranillos. Garnachas and Cabernets also are grown in the high-elevation vineyards.
Valencia. The region surrounding the Mediterranean town of Valencia encompasses the
Alicante, Valencia and Utiel-Requena zones, which grow a wide variety of grapes.
Grape varieties
Albariño. A white wine grape native to Galicia known for producing wines with fresh
peachy flavors, but it can also produce wines with the potential to gain complexity with
age.
Garnacha. A grape widely grown throughout Spain's northern regions, it adds spicy,
cherry flavors to traditional Rioja red wines. Known in France as Grenache.
Macabeo. Also known as Viura, this white wine grape used in Spain's sparkling cavas
is the main white wine of Rioja and Navarra.
Mencía. A red wine grape that grows on hillside slopes and terraces in Bierzo, it's
often blended with Garnacha to make an early-drinking wine.
Tempranillo. The predominant red wine grape throughout Spain, it makes long-lasting,
fragrant, fruity wines. It's the backbone of traditional Riojas.
Verdejo. A white grape considered one of Spain's best; it makes aromatic wines with
character.
. Corie Brown
Sources: "The New Spain: A Complete Guide to Contemporary Spanish Wine" by
John Radford, 2004; "The Wines of Spain" by Julian Jeffs, 1999
THE Times tasting panel met recently for a blind tasting of Spanish wines widely
available at Los Angeles area retailers for $13 and less. Joining me on the panel were
Food editor Leslie Brenner, Food columnist Russ Parsons and Randy Kemner, owner of the
Wine Country in Signal Hill. The good news is there were plenty of simple but pleasing
wines in this value category, as well as some surprisingly delightful wines that cost as
little as $4.
Our favorite white wine among the Albariños, Verdejos and regional blends was the 2003
Protocolo, which retails for about $6. The best of the reds, which included Garnachas,
Tempranillos and blends, was the 2003 Las Rocas de San Alejandro, an old-vines Garnacha
that sells for about $10.
Wines are listed in order of the panel's preference. . Corie Brown
Whites
2003 Protocolo.
A blend from Dominio de Eguren in Tierra de Castilla, imported by Jorge Ordoñez. A
well-balanced, earthy wine with intriguing aromas of lemon and olive oil, a bit of
complexity and a melony finish. At Liquid Wine & Spirits in Chatsworth, (818)
709-5019, and Mission Wines in South Pasadena, (626) 403-9463, about $6.
2004 Con Class.
A white wine blend from Rueda, imported by Eric Solomon's European Cellars.
Sauvignon Blanc-like, with bracing acid, peach nectar and herbal flavors and aromas of
fresh hay. Simple and pleasant. At Mel & Rose Wine and Spirits in West Hollywood,
(323) 655-5557, and Wine Country in Signal Hill, (562) 597-8303, about $9.
2004 Rocaberdi.
A blend (80% Macabeo, 20% Xarel-lo) from Catalonia, via Beaune Imports. A touch of oak
dampens the tart grapefruit and peach aromas in this fun and likable blend. Nicely
structured with crisp, bracing acids. At Wine Country, about $8.
2004 Naia.
Imported by Jorge Ordoñez, this bracing Verdejo from Rueda offers citrus aromas and
flavors of freshly cut grass and sweet lime. At Mel & Rose Wine and Spirits and
Mission Wines, about $11.
2004 Floresta.
A blend (55% Macabeo, 45% Chardonnay) from Empordá-Costa Brava, imported by Beaune
Imports. Peach and apricot aromas, with pleasant creamy apricot and tangerine flavors. At
Liquid Wine and Spirits and the Wine Country, about $10.
2004 Burgáns Albariño.
From Rías Baixas, imported by Eric Solomon. Floral aromas, with a touch of turpentine,
this wine has an off-putting vanilla- extract taste and an unpleasant finish. At Mel &
Rose Wine and Spirits and Wine Country, about $10.
2004 Vionta Albariño.
With off-putting milk-chocolate aromas, this wine was badly oxidized. At Wine Hotel in
L.A., (323) 937-9463, about $13.
Reds
2003 Las Rocas de San Alejandro Viñas Viejas Garnacha.
From old vines in Calatayud, imported by Eric Solomon. This wine, with its eucalyptus
and herbal aromas and notes of tobacco and leather, has some character and complexity. At
Mission Wines, about $10.
2004 Tres Picos Borsao Garnacha.
From Campo de Borja, imported by Jorge Ordoñez. Sweet, smoky nose with flavors of black
cherry and spices, this wine would pair well with charcuterie. At the Duke of Bourbon in
Canoga Park, (818) 341-1234; Liquid Wine & Spirits; and Wine House in West L.A., (310)
479-3731, about $12.
2004 Mano a Mano.
From La Mancha, imported by Jorge Ordoñez. This juicy Tempranillo has ripe berry and
cassis aromas, black cherry flavors and a pleasant finish with some length. At Joan's
on Third in Los Angeles, (323) 655-2285, and Mission Wines, about $9.
2004 Abrazo del Toro.
A blend (80% Garnacha, 20% Tempranillo) from Cariñena. A young, drinkable wine with
charming cherry aromas. At Trader Joe's stores, about $4.
2004 Wrongo Dongo.
A blend from Jumilla, imported by Jorge Ordoñez. This one-note green peppery wine has
off-aromas. At Mission Wines and Duke of Bourbon, about $7.
2004 La Nunciatura Tempranillo.
From La Tierra de Castilla. Odd chocolate and grape aromas mar the simple,
undistinguished flavors that follow. At Trader Joe's, about $4.
2004 Coto de Hayas Garnacha Centenaria.
From Campo de Borja. Sweet grapey aromas with an off-putting chemical note, a heavy dose
of oak on the palate. Available at Mel & Rose Wine and Spirits and Wine House, about
$11.
2004 Tikalo Albaliza.
A pleasant yet undistinguished blend (65% Tempranillo, 35% Garnacha) from Tierra de
Castilla, imported by Eric Solomon. Purple grape aromas with a funky leather flavor. At
Wine House and Mel & Rose Wine and Spirits, about $6.
2001 Estola Reserva.
The panel disagreed on this blend from Bodegas Ayuso in La Mancha , with curious
licorice and menthol aromas. One panelist found it to be like an acceptable fruity jug
wine; another called it "watery and bad at the same time." At Trader Joe's,
about $5.
2003 Veroleón.
A blend (70% Garnacha, 30% Merlot) from Navarra. The bottle we opened was so badly
oxidized it was undrinkable. At Trader Joe's, about $5.
Some older info/shopping list from the Post:
Coronilla (Utiel-Requena) Reserva 2000 ($24, Tasman Imports/Wine Partners):
The Bobal grape is even more obscure than the Utiel-Requena region, but this wine
suggests that both should be taken seriously. Made entirely from 60-year-old Bobal vines,
it shows dark color and impressive density, with dark berry fruit and interesting accents
of roasted meat, smoke and spices. Ready to drink but still capable of further
development.
Viña Honda (Jumilla) 2001 "Allier-Finesse" 2001 ($17, Grapes of Spain/Elite):
A blend of 85 percent Monastrell (known as mourvedre in France) and 15 percent
Tempranillo, this is mature enough to show excellent softness and integration of flavors
but also young enough to feature fresh black cherry fruit. Full-bodied and deeply
flavored, it is nevertheless soft and smooth in texture.
Casa Castillo "Valtosca" (Jumilla) Syrah 2002 ($22, Jorge Ordoñez/Henry Wine
Group):
Traditionalists may frown at a wine made from a French grape on Spanish soil, but their
disapproval will likely wilt after a single sip of this. The dark, dense blackberry fruit
is intense but drinkable, and so concentrated that it has already soaked up a serious dose
of spicy oak, resulting in a bold but balanced profile.
Alceo (Jumilla) 2001 ($17, Grapes of Spain/Elite):
A heady blend of 50 percent Monastrell, 25 percent Tempranillo and 25 percent syrah,
this displays intense aromas and flavors of ultra-ripe plums, dried black cherries,
roasted nuts, black licorice and wood smoke. Full-bodied and deeply flavored, this is
ill-suited to cocktail-style sipping, yet grilled meats should tame it sufficiently for
near-term enjoyment.
Castaño "Solanera" (Yecla) Viñas Viejas 2002 ($15, European Cellars/Henry):
Dense, deliciously ripe fruit from old vines is the prime attraction here, and the
winemaker has wisely let it stay in the forefront by eschewing fining [a clarification
technique that can lessen flavor impact as it removes suspended particles from wine],
filtration or excessive oak aging. Powerful but pure.
Rozaleme (Utiel-Requena) Bobal/Tempranillo 2003 ($16, De Maison/Bacchus): Complete and
convincing, this features complex fruit flavors recalling dark berries and red cherries.
Admirably balanced between ripe richness and bright freshness, it shows well-proportioned
accents of oak and culminates in a long, symmetrical finish.
Casa de las Especias (Yecla) "Forte del Valle" 2004 ($17, De Maison/Bacchus):
Impressive and tasty if still a bit raw and undeveloped, this powerhouse would benefit
from a protracted timeout. However, if paired with robust meat dishes, its intense
blackberry flavors will win many admirers.
Dominio del Arenal (Utiel-Requena) Crianza 1998 ($10, Country Vintner/Country Vintner):
I've tasted this wine several times over the past couple of years, and whereas it
sometimes seemed to be overly oaky, it has now matured into a well-balanced beauty
offering outstanding value. A blend of 50 percent Tempranillo and 50 percent syrah, it
shows alluring scents of ripe berries, wood smoke, vanilla and roasted meat.
Casa Castillo (Jumilla) Monastrell 2002 ($12, Jorge Ordoñez/Henry):
With substance, elegance and symmetry, this is an exemplary rendition of Monastrell and
an achievement at this price level. Given a little time to aerate and unwind after
opening, it shows medium-bodied fruit that is expressive and generous without seeming
chunky or obvious. Strong but soft, this is a steal.
Alceño (Jumilla) Tinto 2003 ($12, Grapes of Spain/Elite):
Fruity and fun but hardly frivolous, this shows dark, concentrated blackberry fruit that
is delightfully expressive, thanks to a light touch of oak. The fresh fruit can take a
light chilling for use with grilled meats throughout the summer.
Coronilla (Utiel-Requena) Crianza 2002 ($13, Tasman Imports/Wine Partners):
Another winner crafted from the Bobal grape, this features vivid flavors of dark berries
and cherries, and reserved accents of smoke and spices.
Wrongo Dongo (Jumilla) 2003 ($9, Jorge Ordoñez/Henry):
Generous to a fault, this is a bit chunky for a Spanish wine, yet it remains far less
obvious than most California zinfandels. Ripe and juicy, it will work well with almost any
sort of barbecued meat.
ALSO RECOMMENDED: Finca Luzon (Jumilla) 2003 ($10, Jorge Ordoñez/Henry);
Castillo del Baron (Yecla) Monastrell 2003 ($9, Europvin/Bacchus);
Travitana (Alicante) Old Vines Monastrell 2003 ($11, Tasman Imports/Wine Partners);
Los Monteros (Valencia) 2004 ($10, Tasman Imports/Wine Partners);
Carchelo (Jumilla) Monastrell 2004 ($10, Classical Wines/Henry);
Agarena (Utiel-Requena) 2003 ($7, Tasman Imports/Wine Partners).
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
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