If others are interested I will bring a case of the Pio Cesare Moscato.
It's $16/btl.
Annette Stadelman, CWE
Director of Wine Education &
Restaurant
Division Sales
Phillips Wine and Spirits
1999 Shepard Road
St. Paul, MN
55116
651-637-3351
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2007 1:55
PM
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings@me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Thu, 6 Jul 2006 11:28:14 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson"
<jellings@me.umn.edu>
What I
know of who's coming and an article on Rieslings from
the
SFGChronicle.
Many of the app's we sampled with 3M group were
boring.
Entrees were good.
Reservation if for 10 people at
6:30.
Style du jour is Riesling, but anything you think will
go w/
spicy food is a good
bet.
Bob,
Betsy
Annette
Ruth
Jim
Annette
will be bringing a case (?) of that wonderful
Pio Cesare Moscato di
Asti. Bob and I are in for a
least 1 bottle
each.
Cheers,
Jim
Krua Thailand
432 University Ave W
(3 east of Dale, 1 west of Western)
St Paul, MN
55103-1933
Phone:
(651) 224-4053
----- Forwarded message from Betsy Kremser
<Betsy.Kremser@co.anoka.mn.us>
-----
Date: Fri, 30 Jun 2006 15:46:14 -0500
From: "Betsy Kremser"
<Betsy.Kremser@co.anoka.mn.us>
To:
<wine@thebarn.com>
Subject: [wine]
Rieslings at Krua Thailand
Bob made reservations for 10 at Krua
Thailand on Thursday, 31 May.
Sparkling wines and Rieslings are the styles
of choice.
Krua Thailand
432 University Ave W
Saint Paul,
MN 55103
651-224-4053
It's on the south side of University
between Arundel and Western.
Bring glasses. Bob says they
don't have much in terms of glassware
to
offer.
----- End forwarded message
-----
Refreshing German Rieslings are sweet, but not to a
fault
- W. Blake Gray, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, July 6,
2006
Click to View
The worst thing about the World Cup is that
it ends too soon.
The world's greatest, most popular sporting event
takes a whole month, but just when the biological clock gets accustomed to 7
a.m. games, and the neighbors are used to screams of "Goooooaaal!" at 7:15,
the whole shebang's over.
If the finale on Sunday leaves you thirsting
for more, extend the Cup feeling with the greatest wine of host country
Germany -- Riesling.
German Rieslings are consistently among the most
excellent wine bargains. The best ones are complex, delicious and refreshing.
Plus, they're generally low in alcohol, allowing you to have one more glass
than usual.
But there's a catch: A word that rhymes with "neat" and
"petite" and has come to be an expletive for many wine lovers. Instead of
speaking this verboten word aloud, we use polite euphemisms like
"off-dry."
So I'll say it out loud: Yes, most German Rieslings are
sweet.
But the good ones balance that out-of-favor characteristic with
high acidity, making them food-friendly and thirst-quenching without being
cloying.
Sweetness isn't such a bad thing for food pairing. Because of
it, German Rieslings go nicely with spicy dishes that make other wines taste
unpleasantly "hot" (high in alcohol). German Rieslings are among the few wines
that go well with Thai food, with its complex combinations of spicy and sour
elements. They're good with Mexican food as well.
Bad nun
flashbacks
Unfortunately, German wines' reputation is stained for many
Americans by the lingering stigma of Blue Nun -- as iconic for the bad-taste
1970s as bell-bottoms or wild-colored polyester shirts.
Beyond the
specter of the Nun, the complicated labels on German bottles have also
hampered their acceptance in the U.S. market. While language is a barrier,
it's not the only one.
Many Americans have a passing understanding of
French wine lingo, as much of it has been accepted into English. Spanish and
Italian wines more or less follow the French model; if you understand
appellation controlee ("name controlled," it signifies the region where the
grapes were grown), then you can figure out its equivalent in Spanish and
Italian.
German wines require learning not just new words, but new
concepts. The most important is ripeness level -- grapes for Auslese wines are
riper than those for Spatlese, so the wines are sweeter. Kabinett grapes are
less ripe than Spatlese.
In the bargain price range, though, you don't
usually have to worry about these classifications, as most cheap German
Rieslings are QbA -- a more general classification with less ripe grapes. It's
an indication of how confusing German wine labels are that few of these wines
actually say "QbA" anywhere on the bottle. You just have to surmise it from
the absence of the other terms.
Ironically, because the grapes are less
ripe for less-expensive wines, the resultant wines are usually less sweet,
making them ideal for people who believe that adjective is
derogatory.
My favorite wine this week is from a producer that
understands the marketing value of modern labels. The 2005 Schmitt Sohne Relax
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10) has a strikingly cool blue bottle that gives
orders in huge white letters to people with a Blue Nun fixation: "Relax." And
enjoy it -- the delicious flavors of peach, pear and apricot have a slight,
fruity sweetness. The 9.5 percent alcohol level means that if you can normally
drink two glasses of 14 percent alcohol wine, you can have three glasses of
this.
I had the 2005 Rudi Wiest Rhein River Rheinhessen Riesling ($10)
with takeout rotisserie chicken and it was a wonderful match. The wine's apple
and quince flavors tasted vibrant throughout its long finish. The 2003 Rudi
Wiest Selections Mosel River Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10) is also pretty
good, if simpler, tasting mostly of apple. It's sweeter than the Rhein River
version.
German from California
The 2005 Ironstone Vineyards
Pfalz Riesling ($10) is a multicultural oddity; a German Riesling from a
California winery.
Ironstone Vineyards was founded in 1990 in Murphys,
in Calaveras County, by the Kautz family, whose ancestors were winemakers in
the Pfalz region of Germany. Ironstone specializes in red wines but wanted to
add a white wine; however, the family wasn't growing white grapes, so they
looked overseas to Zimmerman-Graeff & Mueller, a German producer that
makes wine for several other companies as well. ZG&M made Ironstone a
proprietary blend for this delicious wine, which smells and tastes of lychee
and fresh-cut flowers. Crisp and slightly sweet, the wine has vibrant acidity
that makes it refreshing and food-friendly.
Three well-respected German
producers make similarly fine Rieslings in the bargain price range. The 2003
Loosen Dr. L Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10), 2004 Two Princes Nahe Riesling
($11) and 2003 S.A. Prum Essence Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($11) all have an
apple and brown sugar character. The Essence, another wine with a modern
nickname, also offers hints of apricot and toast, and is a bit less sweet than
the other two. None has an alcohol level higher than 10 percent.
The
2005 St. Urbans-Hof Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10) looks more traditional,
with a religious icon and plenty of German terms on the front label. It's the
most unusual of the wines recommended here, with strongly green, herbal aromas
and flavors of green apple, apricot and green-leaf lettuce that linger on a
medium-long finish.
With the exception of the Ironstone wine, of which
10,000 cases were imported, the problem with recommending German Rieslings is
that most are low-production wines that may not be easy to
find.
Riesling Down Under
Enter the world's mass producers: the
Aussies. The 2005 Banrock Station South Eastern Australia Riesling ($5) is an
excellent deal for the price. Many Australian Rieslings are bone-dry, but this
is in the German style, slightly sweet but not cloying, with flavors of
lemon-lime and mango.
Finally, for people who think sweetness is a
plus, not a curse, the 2005 Hardys South Eastern Australia Riesling ($19 for
3-liter box) is unabashedly for you; it's like a liquid candied apple. And the
bag-in-box style will preserve the wine in your refrigerator for as long as
four weeks after opening, perhaps long enough for the pain of Australia's exit
from the World Cup on a bizarrely awarded penalty kick to fade.
No
matter who wins the Cup on Sunday, a toast with the greatest varietal from the
host country is appropriate. And since it's low in alcohol, you can also drink
a cup to a better performance by the U.S. team (sigh) in South Africa in
2010.
Shopping list
These are the best deals The Chronicle found
this week.
Rieslings
2005 Banrock Station South Eastern
Australia Riesling ($5)
2005 Hardys South Eastern Australia Riesling
($19 for 3-liter box)
2005 Ironstone Vineyards Pfalz Riesling
($10)
2003 Loosen Dr. L Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10)
2005
Rudi Wiest Rhein River Rheinhessen Riesling ($10)
2003 Rudi Wiest
Selections Mosel River Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10)
2003 S.A. Prum
Essence Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($11)
2005 Schmitt Sohne Relax
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer Riesling ($10)
2005 St. Urbans-Hof Mosel-Saar-Ruwer
Riesling ($10)
2004 Two Princes Nahe Riesling ($11)
E-mail W.
Blake Gray at wbgray@sfchronicle.com.
Page F
- 3
URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/07/06/WIG65JOL5F1.DTL
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Lee
Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings@me.umn.edu *
*
University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax
651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave.,
St. Paul, MN 55104 *
----- End forwarded message
-----
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James
Ellingson, jellings@me.umn.edu *
*
University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753
*
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN
55104 *