I've actually done this many times and I'm pretty attuned to a Riedel
Overture Red and my little 20 year old Panasonic microwave. It took about
three years to perfect. But then again I freeze wine, too.
In Australia, I was incredibly surprised at how often many different
WINEMAKERS served wine at totally inappropriate temperatures (especially big
reds too warm). They didn't care ... it was the stereotypical 'live fast
die hard' aussie attitude showing. But beer was always served cold as can
be ... they have a 200ml size from the tap just for that purpose. Only
foreigners step up to the bar and ask for a pint.
J.
-----Original Message-----
From: wine-bounce(a)thebarn.com [mailto:wine-bounce@thebarn.com] On Behalf Of
Jim L. Ellingson
Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2008 3:42 PM
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Wine Temp ASAP
I stumbled accross this while looking for something
unrelated:
Hey Warren, Annette (s). Is this on the exam?
Cheers,
Jim
FYI/FYE
March 3, 1999
A Sommelier's Little Secret: The Microwave
By WILLIAM GRIMES
A NEW question is creeping into wine service in New York: How do you want
that cooked?
For many years, Americans have confounded the rest of the world by drinking
their white wines too cold and their red wines too warm. Sommeliers no
longer hesitate when diners ask that a luscious Corton-Charlemagne be
plunged into an ice bucket. They just do it. It's easy.
Red wine poses a different problem, since it often arrives at the table with
a slight chill. If the diners want their wine the temperature of a blood
transfusion, and fast, the sommelier must resort to wiles, and the wiliest
wile of all, it turns out, is the microwave oven.
Sometimes it's the customer who wants his wine 'waved. Sometimes it's the
hard-pressed sommelier who makes the decision to go nuclear. But it happens.
There really are wines that go into that silent chamber at 58 degrees and
come out, like a client at a tanning salon, flush with radiation and 7 to 10
degrees warmer.
''There is no way any sommelier is going to admit to doing it,'' said
Dan
Perlman, the wine director at Veritas. ''They'll say, 'I've heard
of it,'
like I just did. I'm in the clear, though, because we don't have a
microwave.''
The practice is by no means widespread, or even widely known, but it is
something that happens at even the top restaurants. Alexis Ganter, the wine
director at City Wine and Cigar, reacted with stunned silence when informed
about the microwave trick. Then he let out a long, shuddering sigh and
moaned, ''Oh my God.''
Like other members of the ''wine is a living thing'' school, Mr.
Ganter
expressed deep fear of this new technological breakthrough. Others showed a
native American willingness to at least experiment. ''It makes
sense,'' said
Ralph Hersom, the wine director at Le Cirque 2000. ''I don't see that it
would harm a wine, but I'd recommend doing it with a younger wine.''
Still others fessed up, some expressing shame but others not. ''I did it
once when I was working at a wine bar in Madison, Wis.,'' said Eric Zillier,
the wine director at the Hudson River Club. ''It was an '85 Burgundy from
Verget, one of my favorites, but I made the customer, who was very
insistent, swear he would never tell anyone I did it.''
Christopher Cannon, at the Judson Grill, has used the microwave and doesn't
mind saying so. It's a method of last resort, but it is a method that works,
and he will use it. ''I zap it for 5 to 10 seconds,'' he said. It
seems more
reasonable than the customer who wanted his Gaja barbaresco served with ice
cubes.
And why not? Most Champagne houses turn their bottles by machine, not hand.
The plastic cork and the screw top work just as well, if not better, than a
cork. So why resist the microwave?
''The microwaves are heating the water, which is the main constituent of
wine,'' said Christian E. Butzke, an enologist at the University of
California at Davis. ''If you do that for a very brief period -- 10 seconds
maximum -- no other chemical reactions are going to take place, and nothing
will be destroyed.''
The phenolic structure of the wine, Mr. Butzke said, should not be disturbed
by the microwaves. ''It is awkward,'' he admitted, ''because
you associate a
microwave with TV dinners.''
Wine makers, somewhat surprisingly, do not run screaming from the room at
the idea. ''It's not something I'd do with a fine wine,''
said Richard
Draper, the wine maker at Ridge Vineyards, ''but if it's an industrial
product, which 90 percent of wine is, it's been through a lot worse
already.'' As for fine wines, Mr. Draper said that his objection to
microwaving was philosophical rather than rational.
Some wine lovers even see magical powers in the microwave. Richard Dean, the
sommelier at the Mark Hotel, used to serve a wine club that gathered once a
month at the Honolulu hotel where he worked. The members were convinced that
warming a red wine in the microwave for five seconds put an extra five years
of age on the wine.
A professional to the tips of his fingers, Mr. Dean did not laugh. He did
not argue. Nor did he tell his customers that the hotel had no microwave. He
simply disappeared with the wine, reappeared after a decent interval, served
it, and everyone was happy -- until a rival hotel snitched on him. ''That
was embarrassing,'' he said.
The same sommeliers who shrink before the microwave do not mind employing
all sorts of nontechnological tricks, like running a decanter under warm
water before pouring the wine in it, replacing glasses on the table with
glasses that have just come out of the dishwasher, or even putting the
bottle in the dishwasher. Joseph Funghini, the wine director at the Post
House, said that he has wrapped a bottle in a warm towel. Others plunge the
bottle into a bucket of warm water.
Nearly every restaurant, bending to American preferences, has raised the
storage temperature from classic cellar temperature, which is 55 degrees, to
about 60 degrees. (Wines in long-term storage remain at 53 degrees to 55
degrees, with a humidity of 70 percent.) ''Ninety-five percent of customers
will object to 55 degrees,'' Mr. Hersom of Le Cirque said.
Some object to 75 degrees. ''I had a customer, very sophisticated, who
simply liked to drink red wine at body temperature,'' said Mr. Perlman of
Veritas. ''He asked that it be decanted and then placed on a shelf above the
stove.'' Mr. Perlman has a lot of stories like that. There's the customer
who wanted the Champagne decanted, to get rid of those annoying bubbles, and
the one who wanted to add fruit juice to his Mouton-Rothschild to make a
sangria. Mr. Perlman suggested a more modest red. The customer said no. He
wanted a good sangria.
The microwave, however, seems to be the philosophical point of no return.
Some sommeliers simply cannot cross the threshold.
''You're destroying everything in the wine that makes it wine,''
Mr. Zillier
of the Hudson River Club said. ''It's catastrophic.'' When
informed of Mr.
Butzke's line of argument, he dug in his heels. ''Instinct tells me the
fragile biochemical ingredients are going to be affected by the highly
excited water molecules,'' he said. ''You're cooking it. If you
put wine in
a saute pan to bring the temperature up, people would laugh at you. What's
the difference?''
Convenience, for one thing. Efficiency for another. And one thing more.
''You get a sick feeling in the pit of your stomach, but you do these
things,'' Mr. Perlman said. ''After all, the customer is paying for
the
bottle of wine.''
Now for the Gory Details: How to Nuke a Wine
THERE is a very simple way to bring a chilled wine up a few degrees in
temperature. Let it sit at room temperature for 15 minutes. This technique,
known to the ancients, produces spectacular results with minimal effort. But
there are times when the harried host does not have 15 minutes. That's where
the microwave comes in, for those with the nerve to put a cherished bottle
on the hot seat.
The microwave moment presents itself more frequently than one might think.
True, most people do not have wine cellars, and therefore their wine is more
likely to need chilling than warming. They do, however, have refrigerators.
The red wine that was left to cool off a bit can come out cold, and white
wine is almost certainly well below cellar temperature after several hours
on the shelf. This is not a good thing. Cold helps mask the deficiencies of
a white wine, accentuating its crispness and thirst-quenching properties,
but it kills the taste of a complex white. Enter, to boos and hisses, the
microwave oven.
Before enlisting its help, remove the metal cap from the top of the bottle
and discard. It is not necessary to remove the cork, since warming the wine
a few degrees will not significantly expand the volume of air between the
cork and the wine. Set the microwave on high power. Every five seconds of
microwaving will elevate the wine's temperature by two degrees. Five degrees
is probably the most extreme variation anyone would want to shoot for. A
big-bodied red wine should be served at 60 to 65 degrees, a complex white
wine from 55 to 60 degrees, and a light, fruity red at 50 to 55 degrees.
Roses and simpler whites can be served at 45 degrees or even a little
cooler. A digital thermometer inserted in the bottle neck will provide an
instant progress report. WILLIAM GRIMES
--
------------------------------
* 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 *