I haven't heard of a group meeting this week.
Butterfly Bob is busy this week and next, so
Pinto and Barolo are excellent choices.
Wine shop at 46th and Chicago (Ken and Norms?) is hosting a
tasting across the street at Michaels Cafe. Tix are $20 in
advance, $30 at the door. We were able to sign up w/o
providing a credit card. Wines from Artisan/Wine
Co, Etica, and others along with Greek nosh.
Presentations from Cat & Fiddle, Etica, Paustis Wines,
and The Wine Company.
There's a new model intro at Motorworks BMW on Friday.
I suspect it's the 1 series (e.g. 135)
Also on Friday, Arborfest fund raiser at Macalaster.
Sample beer and food at Kagan hall. Live music.
proceeds bennefit the Family Tree Clinic.
Cheers,
Jim
[wine, wine tastings, wine dinners, wine education] A Spring Wine Tasting...
Date: Apr 21, 2008 (Mon)
Time: 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Cost: $20
Place: Michael's Cafe
4810 Chicago Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55417
View Map
Phone: 6128220030
Join us for a wine tasting. Admission includes samples from principal regions around the
globe, light appetizers by Chef Michael, and music by Pat Mackin, Casual Sax.
$20 Advance ($30 at the door) includes a 10% discounted coupon at Ken $ Norm's
Liquors, plus 10% discount at Michael's Cafe, and a chance at a $100 value door
prize.
Presentations from Cat & Fiddle, Etica, Paustis Wines, and The Wine Company
April 21, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist
Of Wine, Haste and Religion
By ROGER COHEN
I was dining the other night with a colleague, enjoying a respectable Russian River Pinot
Noir, when he said with a steely firmness: “We’ll pour our own wine, thank you.”
This declaration of independence was prompted by that quintessential New York restaurant
phenomenon: a server reducing a bottle of wine to a seven-minute, four-glass experience
through overfilling and topping-up of a fanaticism found rarely outside the Middle East.
I know I’m being elitist here, a terrible thing in this political season, and quite
possibly nobody in small-town Pennsylvania gives a damn how wine is poured. But I don’t
care and, come to think of it, last time I was in small-town Pennsylvania — at Gettysburg
— I drank rather well.
Acceptable cappuccino was also available throughout the commonwealth at Dunkin’ Donuts
outlets, which makes one wonder if liberal elitism really begins and ends in Cambridge,
Hyde Park and Berkeley these days. I even saw a Volvo somewhere west of Harrisburg.
But that’s another story, albeit important, of seeping American
sophistication-cum-Europeanization.
The liberation I felt at my colleague’s I’ll-pour boldness was intoxicating. That’s right,
I thought, we need to take our lives back. Drinking at your own pace is the best revenge.
It’s humiliating to pay through the nose and suffer at affronts to good taste. Wine should
glide, not glug, from a tilted, not tipped, bottle. The time that goes into the making of
it should be reflected in the time it takes to drink.
That’s so obvious that I got to wondering why wine glasses, even at fine New York tables,
get filled almost to the brim, and refilled to that unseemly level, every time you’re
distracted from Second Amendment-authorized armed guard of your receptacle.
As with many things, there’s a generous view and a mean one.
The kind interpretation would be that, through a gross misunderstanding of the nature of
pleasure, servers and the restaurant managers behind them are convinced that solicitude is
measured by the regularity with which a glass is topped up.
The uncharitable view would be that, guided by an acute understanding of the nature of
commerce, servers are told by restaurant managers to hustle clients through a meal and as
many bottles of wine as possible.
After long reflection, of at least 12 seconds, as measured on my elitist Rolex, I’ve
decided the second theory is more convincing.
It’s more plausible partly because it tracks with another unhappy New York dining
phenomenon at some remove from the languorous pleasures of Manet’s “Déjeuner Sur L’Herbe.”
I refer to the vacuuming away of your plate, at about the speed of light, the second you
are deemed to have consumed the last mouthful.
Just as you prepare to dab bread into the unctuous leftover sauce from those
slide-from-the-bone short ribs, the plate vanishes. The fact that others around the table
may still be eating — and to be without a plate is to feel naked in such circumstances —
does not trouble the stealthy masters of this Houdini routine.
As usual, in such matters, the French have it right. If you deconstruct the leftover, you
find something that’s yours, a little messy, even mucky, but yours. No wonder there’s
pleasure in poking around in it a little. Manet’s revelers are surrounded by their picnic
leftovers. Nobody’s whisked them away.
In the same way, that mix of soil, hearth and tradition the French call “terroir” is
personal. You poke around in it and discover that some ineffable mix of the land, its
particular characteristics, and a unique human bond has found expression in a wine – not a
“Cabernet” or a “Pinot” or a “Merlot” but, say, a Chambolle-Musigny Derrière La Grange.
That’s because “derriere la grange” — behind the barn — a small parcel of land produces a
Burgundy distinct from another 50 yards away. Discovering this takes time, just as it
takes time after bottling — perhaps a decade — for fruit, tannin and acidity to attain
their full harmony.
American wine is rushed onto the table, as well as into the glass. Most is drunk five to
ten years too early. But, hey, this is a country in a hurry: Google’s founders made a
couple of billion dollars overnight last week, an un-French achievement. This is a great
nation.
Perhaps it’s so great I should wear an American flag lapel pin. Perhaps it’s so great I
should put myself in a duck blind this weekend. Perhaps it’s so great I should join the
great U.S. blood sport of anti-intellectualism. Perhaps it’s so great I should go bowling
more often. Perhaps it’s so great I should stop praising France and conceal the fact I
speak French.
But I don’t want to grow bitter. Maybe I’ll just cling — yes, cling — to my glass and the
religion that’s in it.
Blog:
www.iht.com/passages
--
------------------------------
* 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 *