Greetings,
Hope this finds you warm and safe.
Sapor tomorrow. Wines w/ work w/ their somewhat spicy menu...
You might look at their wine list for some ideas.
What ever you do, don't open anything that's on their list.
Bob, therefore we, will never hear the end of it (agian).
Amended List below.
Expensive tricks for wine (fwd)
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 10:03:30 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Greetings,
Lots of good discussion and fresh steak at Erte.
Group had a lot to catch up on, plus 12 interesting cabs.
This week, it's Sapor and wines you think will pair with the
menu (some spice). White, red, sparkling and even rose'.
Not sure who's coming. I'll start the list with
some guesses.
Bob
Betsy
Warren/Ruth
Alicia
Jim
Thanks to all who responded.
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2007 16:11:12 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Rose' at Sapor
Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2007 10:57:43 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 11:45:04 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Been a while since we've been to Sapor..... Stay Cool.
Cheers,
Jim
We're going to Sapor at 6:30 on Thursday.
Style du jour is Rose'
We pay $5 per person in leu of corkage.
Please include this amount (pre-tax and pre-tip)
when computing the amount you owe.
The 1/3 rule still works. e.g. I have an app
or a salad($8) and an entree($17). SO, $8 plus $17 plus $5
for a "pre total" of 30. 1/3 is 10 for tax and tip
so I pay $40.
Part of their wine list is on their web site.
If you happen to bring something that's on the list or the shelf
(easier than you might think. Ask Russ about a split of
something obscure he'd bought at a winery that was on
their shelf as well.... ) we'll just save it for
another week. We're never short of wine.
http://www.saporcafe.com/
428 N. Washington, Mpls
612 375 1971
Yes
Bob
Lori
Betsy
Sapor is very close to Sam's Wine Shop (closes at 8:00 M-Th).
January 14, 2009
The Curious Cook
For a Tastier Wine, the Next Trick Involves ...
By HAROLD McGEE
I HAVE used my carbon steel knife to cut up all kinds of meats and vegetables, but I had
never thought of using it to prepare wine. Not until a couple of weeks ago, when I dunked
the tip of it into glasses of several reds and whites, sometimes alone, sometimes with a
sterling silver spoon, a gold ring or a well-scrubbed penny. My electrical multimeter
showed that these metals were stimulating the wines with a good tenth of a volt. I tingled
with anticipation every time I took a sip.
My foray into altering wine flavor with knives and pennies ended in failure. But it was
one small part of a fruitful inquiry in which I learned new ways to get rid of unwanted
aromas, including the taint of corked wine, and what aeration can really do for wine
flavor.
It all began when a colleague sent me the Wine Wand, a glass device that is said to speed
the aeration of a freshly opened wine and bring it to its .peak flavor. in minutes. During
his blind tasting, my colleague found that the wand seemed to soften the flavor of several
wines almost as well as an hour.s decanting.
The Wine Wand is a hollow glass tube that has a large cut-glass knob at one end and
contains a rattling handful of pierced faceted balls that look like costume jewelry beads.
A small wand for use in a wineglass sells for $325, with a travel case. A larger version
that fits in a bottle is $525, with case.
The promotional literature explains that the wand speeds aeration by means of .permanently
embedded frequencies, one of them being oxygen..
This sounds like pseudoscience, and I couldn.t imagine how a glass tube could alter the
aeration of wine, apart from dragging in some air as it is inserted into the bottle or
glass. Yet when I and two dinner companions compared glasses of a red and a white wine
with and without the Wine Wand, we found some differences.
I soon discovered that the wand is one of several wine-enhancement devices marketed to
drinkers who can.t wait for their wines to taste their best. But it doesn.t come with the
weirdest explanation. That distinction belongs to a bottle collar that claims to modify a
wine.s tannins. With magnets.
A couple of wine enhancement devices simply aerate wine, just as sloshing it around in the
bottle or glass would. There is a battery-powered frother, and a small glass channel that
adds turbulence and air bubbles as the wine flows through it from the bottle into the
glass.
More intriguing was something called the Clef du Vin, or .key to wine,. a patented French
product sold in several sizes, starting with a pocket size that costs about $100. It
consists of a quarter-inch disc of copper alloyed with small amounts of silver and gold,
embedded in a thin stainless-steel plate. The user is directed to dip the disc briefly
into a glass of wine. A dip lasting one second is said to have the same effect as one year
of cellar aging.
Copper, silver and gold are all known to react directly with the sulfur compounds found in
wine. Copper (and the iron in my knife) also catalyzes the reaction of oxygen with many
molecules. Slow oxidation in the bottle is known to cause the tannins in aged red wines to
become less astringent, and it.s widely believed that aerating a young red, for example by
decanting it, promotes rapid oxidation and softens its tannins.
Maybe this Clef was something more than a gimmick.
To help me evaluate the Wand, the Clef and the whole idea of enhancing freshly opened
wine, I called on two friends, Andrew Waterhouse and Darrell Corti. Mr. Waterhouse is a
professor of wine chemistry at the University of California, Davis, and a specialist in
oxidation reactions and phenolic substances, including tannins. Mr. Corti is the
proprietor of Corti Brothers grocery in Sacramento, one of the most influential wine
retailers in California, and a recent inductee into the Vintners Hall of Fame.
We met at Mr. Corti.s house for an afternoon of taste tests, lunch and discussion. Some
tests were blind, others open-eyed. By the end, we had indeed detected some differences
between carafes and glasses of wine that were treated with the Wand or the Clef, and the
wines that were left alone. The differences were not great, and not always in favor of the
treated wine, which usually seemed to be missing something.
Mr. Corti said: .There do seem to be differences. The question is, are they important
differences? You could buy a lot of good wine for the price of that wand..
He also pointed out that the Clef is a very expensive version of the copper pennies that
home vintners have long dipped into wine to remove the cooked-egg smell of excess hydrogen
sulfide.
Mr. Waterhouse thought the elimination of sulfur aromas is all that these accessories .
or, for that matter, aeration . had to offer.
.A number of sulfur compounds are present in wine in traces and have an impact on flavor
because they.re very potent,. he said. .Some are unpleasant and some contribute to a
wine.s complexity. You can certainly dispose of these in five minutes with a little oxygen
and a small area of metal catalyst to speed the reactions up, and change your impression
of the wine..
But Mr. Waterhouse maintained that no brief treatment could convert the tannins to less
astringent, softer forms, not even an hour in a decanter.
.You can saturate a wine with oxygen by sloshing it into a decanter, but then the oxygen
just sits there,. he said. .It reacts very slowly. To change the tannins perceptibly in an
hour, you would have to hit the wine with pure oxygen, high pressure and temperature, and
powdered iron with a huge catalytic surface area..
So why do people think decanting softens a wine.s astringency?
.I think that this impression of softening comes from the loss of the unpleasant sulfur
compounds, which reduces our overall perception of harshness,. Mr. Waterhouse said.
With devices debunked and aeration unmasked as simple subtraction, the conversation turned
to genuinely useful tips for handling wine.
Mr. Waterhouse said that the obnoxious, dank flavor of a .corked. wine, which usually
renders it unusable even in cooking, can be removed by pouring the wine into a bowl with a
sheet of plastic wrap.
.It.s kind of messy, but very effective in just a few minutes,. he said. .The culprit
molecule in infected corks, 2,4,6-trichloroanisole, is chemically similar to polyethylene
and sticks to the plastic..
He also counseled a relaxed approach to wine storage, which he adopted in the 1980s after
moving from California to Louisiana and back.
Mr. Waterhouse had a small collection of fine wines that he kept for a few years in a New
Orleans closet with no temperature control. When it came time to return to California, he
thought there was no point in shipping wines that had probably been spoiled in the
southern heat. So he started opening them.
.There was one bottle, I think a Concannon cabernet, that was absolutely spectacular,. he
recalled. .A lot of that wine had sat in our accelerated aging system and reached
perfection.
.So there.s no single optimal temperature for aging wines. I.d tell people who don.t keep
wine for decades to forget about cellar temperatures. Take those big reds and put them on
top of the refrigerator, the most heat-abusive place you can find, and in three years
they.ll probably be at their peak..
Mr. Corti agreed.
.Wine is like a baby,. he said. .It.s a lot hardier than people give it credit for..
wine(a)thebarn.com
http://www.thebarn.com/mailman/listinfo/wine
----- End forwarded message -----
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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 *