FYI from Chuck et al:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* 1st Annual Rosé Tent Tasting at W.A. Frost
Only about 25 spots remaining for the tasting.
Cost for this event is $20 and you can RSVP by
contacting
Solo Vino at 651-602-9515.
Solo Vino -
+http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?et=1102591487803&s=241&e=001iiftf2ARBs7mfqukIaG5Md6pMIZGPf-blkwU7Y3of8W5dUgLdy_iNSi
+T3my95DIx7UJOKg37nbYoZi8M5jfcSWdN0ViLEnM2Ahkh-qm27VQ7tLz-EFeQ1Q==
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Solo Vino517 Selby AvenueSaint Paul, Minnesota
55102
651-602-9515
info(a)solovinowines.com
http://www.solovinowines.com
An article from LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-rose27-2009may27,0,2505289.story
From the Los Angeles Times
WINES
Roséines bloom in many shades
By Patrick Comiskey
May 27, 2009
More than any other wine category, rosés a mood. There is simply nothing better on a warm
afternoon, a salve for sun-drenched, heat-driven thirst. It is more often gulped than
sipped, never contemplated, rarely complicated.
But there is much to say about a bottle of roséeyond "it's empty."
It's made, after all, in a broad array of styles from nearly every red grape known to
man, in nearly every wine region on Earth. So before your next gulp, read on; a wine with
so many shades deserves a closer inspection.
To begin, "rose" is just one of the colors it comes in. To it let's add
ruby, copper, salmon, amber, almandine, maraschino, blood orange, madras and sunset and
grapefruit pink, fuchsia, sepia, saffron, cayenne, pale rust and more. The wine is a
painter's palette for the color red -- in fact, strictly speaking, many are a truer
red than any red wines (which tend, of course, to be more purple).
You'd think these colors would provide clues to its taste -- the darker the hue the
deeper the wine, for example. Sometimes, that's true. But dark wines can also be
sweeter, softened by a secondary fermentation.
In fact, the pale ones often can deceive. The coppery roséof Bandol belie the rigor of the
grape variety Mourvedre, which girds these wines with well-built, earthy tannins. Ditto
the even paler roséof the Loire, which disguise in their prettiness the pleasingly bitter
grip of Cabernet Franc.
Roséets its color from contact with the skins of red grapes -- and that color varies
depending on the grape, and on how long the contact. But there are other factors, like how
it's made. Sometimes the wine is a saigné wherein the juice is "bled" off a
larger tank of red wine (usually with the side intention of concentrating the latter).
Sometimes, like a watercolor pigment, a rosés the sum total of white and red juice.
Perhaps the best, however, are destined for rosérom the get-go, from vines grown toward
that aim, with grapes allowed to macerate for a few hours or a day for color, pressed off,
transformed by fermentation into the perfect sunny-day beverage.
Roséor beginners
If you're new to roséit's best to start on the cheap, and many quality bottles
are, most originating in southern France or Spain.
For sheer frivolity I like the wines of the Languedoc, made usually with some combination
of Grenache, Cinsault and Carignane, such as the rosérom Domaine L'Hortus. Or you
might try a youthful rosado from the Rioja; usually these are a deep color red and very
inexpensive; one of my favorites comes from Faustino, but the ubiquitous Marques de
Caceres is an annual steal at $9.
Domestic bottlings are a great option too, made in a ripe style for easy drinking. New
plantings of Iberian and Rhone varieties have made Mediterranean-inspired wines
increasingly common, like the blend from Verdad, Rioja-style pink with lots of up-front
strawberry fruit and lifted berry flavors. Or consider the delicate roséf Syrah from Ojai
Vineyard, bright juicy cherry in a pale cast. Solo Rosa puts its sentiments right there in
its name (only rosé- get it?) and makes toothsome pinks from the Russian River Valley.
Roséor experts
No one takes rosémore seriously than France; nearly every major wine region has a
prominent version, including Bordeaux and even Burgundy. Odder still are Cabernet Franc
roséfrom the Loire, found mostly in the department of Anjou. These are strictly food
wines, with a pleasing but pronounced bitterness, and a grabbing, chalky minerality ideal
with something like roast chicken. All that said, the South of France, in the regions that
hug the Mediterranean and the Côd'Azur, is where roséexcel.
The most serious of all, produced by the most studious of roséroducers, would have to come
from Tavel, in the southern Rhone. The entire production of the AOC is of the pink
variety. The best are, in a word, intense: intensely colored, intensely flavored, and
confer a grippy mineral tang to deep strawberry flavors.
The other serious Mediterranean roséomes from Provence, in particular the province of
Bandol. The region's most famous, Domaine Tempier, produces astonishingly complex,
well-built roséof Mourvedre and Grenache, aged in puncheons, possessing unusual depth for
a pink wine. The more ubiquitous Cô de Provence wines are less expensive, and often as
good, like the old-vine bottling from Domaine Saint Andre de Figuiere, from less-storied
vineyard sites.
Roséor weirdos
Then there are those roséso pure in intent, so oddly made, from such exotic places, that
they're worth graduating to. Some of these are traditional, some are merely willful;
all are unexpected, some downright weird.
To start with, two opposite extremes from Spain: From the Basque region comes a slightly
fizzy, wonderfully bracing rosado called Txakoli, by the producer Gurrutxaga. It's
made from an indigenous grape, Hondarriba Belza, which brings an amaro-like bitterness to
the finish. And from Rioja, consider the wonderful late-release older wines from Lopez de
Heredia -- I found a 1998 Viñondonia Rosado that is a wonder of complexity and
strangeness, with aromas of narcissus flowers and freshly tilled soil -- not for everyone,
but fascinating.
Italy isn't known for its rosébut Montepulciano, in Abruzzo, has an established DOC
for its Cerasuolo, a powerful rosato with a deep red cherry color, firmly packed flavors,
and an almondy aftertaste. There certainly isn't much Greek rosén the market, but I
found a roséf Agiorgitiko from Gaia with the very helpful name of "14-18h" --
the number of hours required for the juice to remain on skins and achieve its vivid color
and strident flavors.
I wouldn't have dreamed that I'd find a German rosébut the Rheingau producer
August Kesseler makes one from Pinot Noir (or as they say there, Späurgunder) with a
Kabinett level of sweetness and fierce, almost Riesling-like minerality.
Meanwhile, probably the oddest rosé've tried from the U.S. comes from Peter
Cargasacchi in the Santa Rita Hills, for his Point Concepcion label, called Celestina. It
is a Pinot Grigio, but for any Grigio lover, the look of this wine will be an affront: It
is a fiery blood orange, the color of a smoky sunset.
Pinot Grigio, after all, is a white wine made from a red grape (not exactly red, but more
coppery gray, which is where it gets its name). Instead of avoiding color, Cargasacchi
macerates the fruit to extract it, not unlike the wines of its cousin, Pinot Noir. This
wine has a richness that no Pinot Grigio could ever aspire to, and a leesy, umami-like
sweetness that leavens its full-bore flavors of cherries spiced with orange peel. It
leaves you with plenty to ponder in a wine that doesn't usually register a second
thought.
food(a)latimes.com
and a few from the SFGC's top 100 wines for 2008:
Roséazing upon an increasingly crowded field of pink wines, and reviewing notes of the
many we tasted, a perhaps obvious conclusion was reached: roséeems at its most refreshing
when it's made as its own wine, not as the leftovers from red-wine winemaking. These
all were outstanding; just remember to enjoy them before next summer rolls around.
2007 Clos du Bois Sonoma County rosé$12) A roséf impressive depth from a very familiar
name. A mix of 70 percent Syrah and 30 Merlot yields bright notes of lime and raspberry,
with clean, lean lines and a bit of intriguing grip to the finish.
2007 Heitz Wine Cellars Napa Valley Grignolino rosé$18) This storied Napa winery is
typically more focused on Cabernet, but bright pink Grignolino (a native Piedmontese
grape) has long been one of its straightforward pleasures. It was in fine form this year -
lean, nuanced and lively, with freesia, cranberry, nectarine skin and a tart, refreshing
finish.
2007 Zepaltas Wines California rosé$17) Not to distract from his red wines, but emerging
Pinot talent Ryan Zepaltas showcases beautiful Pinot fruit in a different form. A blend of
his various red-wine lots, it's full of engaging strawberry and peach, and exactly
what Pinot roséhould be: high-toned, vivacious and complex.
2007 Toad Hollow Eye of the Toad Sonoma County Dry Pinot Noir rosé$10) In a day when Pinot
of any sort fetches top dollar (see Page 16), how amazing that this Healdsburg label not
only opts to make some into roséut keeps the price at a sawbuck. It caught our attention
not once but twice this year, first in a lineup of 140-plus pink wines, then again during
a bargain hunt. Sweet herbs and cherry-candy aromas give way to bright fruit and a
slightly loamy nuance. Subtle and very pretty.
. Jon Bonnék
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* 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 *