Hello everyone,
As most of you know, David & I are moving to Toronto.
We'd love to make it to dinner with you guys at least
once more before we leave. You are welcome to join us
for a great restaurant scene should you ever be in
town!
Another reminder -- Sam's Washington Ave Wineshop is
having a grand opening tasting all day on June 25. It
starts at 11:00 and I think it runs most of the day
...
Also -- If you know anyone looking for a house in
Longfellow, close to the river, creek, and lightrail,
they can find all the info at
www.minnesotahomes.com
(property ID # 100269444).
--- "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu> wrote:
Greetings,
We're heading to Erte. (510 is closed until July)
Wine du jour is Merlot from anywhere and whites from
the Pacific Northwest.
Erte Restaurant.
329 13 Ave NE, Mpls 55413
612-623-4211
6:30 on Thursday.
8 people.
No idea who.
Bob
Betsy
Lori
Russ
Nicolai
Jim
An a reminder, the Big S tasting is tomorrow.
Spotlight, 5:00, $60. Medium nice wines.
Regular tasting, 6:30. typically focussed on the
lower end.
Cheers,
Jim
Spotlight Tasting
Wednesday, June 22nd
Mill City Museum
704 South Second Street - Minneapolis
5:00pm - 6:00pm
S U R D Y K S
Charity Pre-Sale Wine Tasting
Event proceeds will benefit the American Heart
Association
Wednesday, June 22
Mill City Museum
704 South Second Street - Mpls
6:30pm - 9:30pm
Sample over 200 different wines featured in our
Spring Wine Sale. Also sample great cheese
selections and chocolates.
Donation -
$32.00 in advance
$40.00 at the door
________________________________________
October 27, 2004
WINES OF THE TIMES
A Welcome Drop in the Ocean
By ERIC ASIMOV
ROM a marketer's point of view, California merlot
was the great industry success story of the 1980's
and 90's. From almost nowhere 25 years ago, merlot
achieved the dream status of becoming a generic term
for red wine. "I'll just have a glass of merlot,"
became the default at-a-loss order at bars,
restaurants, weddings and bar mitzvahs, the way in
earlier years, "I'll just have a glass of
chardonnay," meant give me white wine, any white
wine.
From a wine lover's point of view, though,
California merlot became a joke, a punch line for
the sort of confected, characterless wines that are
generic in the worst sense of the word. It is still
a remarkably popular wine, though a significant
number of knowledgeable wine drinkers would almost
prefer a glass of dishwater over the dread merlot.
Is this mere snobbery? Or to put it another way, is
it the quality of merlot that has been diluted, or
its status?
To take on the question, the Dining section's wine
panel tasted 25 California merlots. We decided to
give merlot its best shot, choosing to taste wines
only from the Napa Valley, California's prime source
for Bordeaux grapes like merlot and cabernet
sauvignon.
Plenty of merlot comes from Napa, but most
California merlot comes from the vast Central
Valley, from Lodi south to Bakersfield, an area that
is to Napa as agribusiness is to the family farm.
This is the stuff that is shipped by tanker, pumped
by hose and packaged in things like airline splits
and gallon bag-in-a-box containers. It doesn't have
to be bad, but it usually is.
The Napa Valley, on the other hand, prides itself on
the quality of its wines, and prices many of them
accordingly. In an effort to spread out the pricing,
we tasted 8 bottles that cost $25 or less, 10
between $25 and $50 and 7 costing more than $50. My
colleague Florence Fabricant and I were joined by
two guests, Christopher Shipley, wine director of
the "21" Club, and Scott Mayger, wine director of
WD-50.
Of course, we all had feelings about California
merlot, which we put aside as best we could. Mr.
Mayger expressed the most positive view. He said
that merlot's silky tannins and jammy flavors made
it a good steakhouse wine. Having been the wine
buyer in a steakhouse back in the late 1980's and
early 90's, when merlot's popularity took off, he
has tasted plenty of it.
"I couldn't find enough merlot to buy," he said. He
added that the character of California merlot has
changed since then, becoming firmer and more tannic.
I confess that I've never had much use for
California merlot. Merlot is no doubt an important
grape, but as a wine it always seemed to have little
reason for being. What makes merlot important is its
role in the classic Bordeaux blend of grapes.
In the Médoc, it almost always plays a secondary
role to cabernet sauvignon, generally adding soft
tannins and generous flavors to the more austere
cabernet. Merlot plays a greater part in the blend
in St.-Émilion and Pomerol, where with some
exceptions . most notably Château Pétrus, which is
99 percent merlot . it usually accounts for maybe 40
to 70 percent of the blend.
This is significant because in California a wine can
be labeled with the name of a grape only if that
grape makes up at least 75 percent of the wine. Why
would California insist on making a wine primarily
of merlot when in Bordeaux few wines short of a
Pétrus would presume to do the same?
It's not because increasing the percentage of merlot
makes a better wine, but because it means that the
wine can be sold under the varietal name. In other
words, the merlot category is defined by marketing
rather than winemaking.
Having said this, we did find some enjoyable wines.
Our top wine, a '99 from Liparita Cellars for $40,
was bright and balanced, with good structure. Mr.
Mayger called it the most Bordeaux-like of the
wines. Our best value, a 2000 from St. Supéry for
$18, was likewise balanced, with attractive fruit,
herbal and oak flavors, while our No. 3, an '01
Starmont from Merryvale, was concentrated, with
attractive coffee flavors.
If only wines like those were the rule. Too often,
the merlots showed bitter vegetal flavors or
candylike sweetness, or were overwhelmed by oak.
Ms. Fabricant divided the 25 wines into two
categories: those with complexity that were well
made and enjoyable to drink, and those that were
one-dimensional and washed out, perhaps made from
grapes that lacked concentration.
Mr. Shipley, too, found washed-out wine. Even the
more concentrated wines, he said, suffered from
over-manipulation at the hands of winemakers. Too
many, for example, tasted as if acid had been added
to make up for what the grapes lacked in natural
acidity.
Only two of the seven wines priced at over $50 made
the cut, the smallest percentage of any price
category. The most expensive bottle in the tasting,
a $72 2000 Duckhorn, one of the big names in Napa
merlot, was rejected unanimously.
It could be that we did not taste the best choices.
Merlots like Beringer's Bancroft Ranch and Pahlmeyer
are considered top-notch, but are superexpensive and
hard to find.
Or perhaps Napa and the rest of California are not
the best sources of American merlot. I've had
merlots from Washington State that showed firmness
and character.
Or maybe it comes down to marketing. In an effort to
appeal to a new and fast-growing market for merlot,
too many winemakers planted merlot in the wrong
places and made poorly conceived wines. The market
for merlot may now have peaked. The number of acres
planted with merlot continues to grow in Napa,
according to the California Agricultural Statistics
Service, but not so quickly.
If anything, California merlot has become a
cautionary tale. It is not enough to plant vines
willy-nilly to appeal to a growing market. Getting
in on the act is not a formula for making good wine.
Take heed, California syrah makers.
Tasting Report: Some of the Best of a Dubious Lot
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