Greetings,
Is anyone going to the TT tasting? Any idea what he'll be pouring?
Cheers,
Jim
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June 21, 2010
A Thin Field of American Gew�rztraminers
By ERIC ASIMOV
I�VE been a big fan of California gew�rztraminers for a long time. Let me be more precise.
I�ve felt that many California gew�rztraminers, particularly those from the Anderson
Valley in Mendocino County, were exactly the sorts of dry, lively, aromatic wines that
would make almost anybody fall in love with this unusual, idiosyncratic grape.
Or maybe not. I may be a pushover for a good gew�rztraminer, but its attractions are by no
means universal. Its exotic aroma, often described as a combination of litchis, grapefruit
and roses, can have a polarizing effect, like cilantro or licorice. Some people simply
hate it. Others are mystified by it because it�s so different from the usual run of dry,
crisp white wines.
But many California winemakers love it. It�s rarely any estate�s most important wine, but
I�ve always been surprised by how many producers make a little gew�rztraminer on the side,
especially because I almost never see people in restaurants actually drinking it. I drink
it pretty infrequently myself. Nonetheless, I love dry gew�rztraminer with Cantonese food,
even if this oft-cited recommendation has become a clich�, and I think gew�rztraminer is
more versatile with food than its singular aroma would lead one to believe.
Feeling this way, I was eager and excited at the recent prospect of a wine panel tasting
of 20 American gew�rztraminers. I was hoping to discover some new producers to recommend,
and looked forward to discussing how rewarding these wines could be. Instead, to my
surprise and to the panel�s, we were tremendously disappointed by the wines, finding a
bare 9 to recommend, not our usual 10. For the tasting, Florence Fabricant and I were
joined by two guests, David Gordon, the wine director at Tribeca Grill, and Rebecca
Foster, a former sommelier who now works for Tempranillo, an importer and distributor
mostly of Spanish wines.
We did not limit ourselves to California bottles, or to the Anderson Valley. Maybe the
wines would have fared better if we had, but the sad fact is that Anderson Valley
gew�rztraminers are difficult to find. Some of the best, like Navarro and Lazy Creek, are
available only in restaurants or directly from the wineries. Others, like Londer or Husch,
you may find in retail shops if you are lucky. We ended up with nine wines from New York
State, six from California, three from Washington and two from Oregon.
So what went wrong? Better to ask, what didn�t? Some of the wines had off aromas or
flavors, characteristics that you rarely encounter in modern wines. Others were
reminiscent of the dry rieslings of Germany in the 1990s, when the term �dry� was taken
too literally and almost every last bit of sugar was wrung out of the wines, leaving them
brittle and acerbic.
Wines with appreciable levels of acidity, like riesling, chenin blanc and Champagne, need
at least a little bit of residual sugar for balance. Gew�rztraminer, too, though it
doesn�t have as much acidity as these other wines, needs a touch of sweetness � perhaps
not even enough to notice � if only so it will seem pleasingly dry rather than coarse and
strident.
�Dry doesn�t have to mean a total lack of residual sugar,� said David, who described some
of the wines as painful to drink.
Of course, the gew�rztraminers of Alsace, the grape�s home territory, all too often have a
surplus of sugar, so balance with this grape is not necessarily easy to achieve.
We found other problems as well. Some of the wines lacked sufficient concentration, and
tasted diluted. Others were oddly simple, lacking even the slightest degree of depth.
Often, we sensed a disconnect between the aromas, which might resemble the classic scent
of gew�rztraminer, and the flavors, which seemed muted.
�If you�re going to make gew�rztraminer, you know you�re not going to make money on it,�
Rebecca mused. �So why bother if you�re not going to do it right?�
All of our complaints should not obscure the fact that we did find some good wines, though
from some unexpected areas. Oregon is not known for gew�rztraminer, nor is it known for
the Umpqua Valley, a region south of the Willamette Valley with a climate apparently cool
enough for good gew�rztraminer. I wish we had found more wines like our No. 1 bottle, the
2007 Brandborg, rich, floral and pink-hued with just enough residual sugar to give the
wine flesh. Incidentally, at $15, the Brandborg was also our best value.
Our No. 2 bottle came from the Finger Lakes of New York, which makes sense when you think
about it, since, like Alsace, the Finger Lakes region is also a good place for riesling.
The 2007 from Dr. Konstantin Frank, one of my favorite New York riesling producers, was
restrained and pretty, with the classic gew�rztraminer flavors.
And what about California? Of the six bottles from California, only one came from the
Anderson Valley. Sadly, that bottle, a 2008 from Handley Cellars, did not make our cut. It
was one bottle where the attractive aromas seemed dissociated from the reticent flavors.
We had a 2008 from Stony Hill, another of my favorite gew�rztraminer producers, but
unfortunately that bottle was corked. Sigh. Our top bottle from California, No. 3 in our
tasting, was the 2007 Thomas Fogarty from Monterey County, which had an almost Alsatian
richness and purity, with a fine, balancing acidity.
No region came off particularly well in our tasting, not even the Finger Lakes, which had
four of our top nine bottles. Both the 2007 from Red Newt Cellars at $38 and the 2007 from
Hermann J. Wiemer at $22 did not offer much value for the price.
Tastings like this one are quick snapshots. Ours unfortunately came out a bit blurred. I
still have confidence in Anderson Valley gew�rztraminers, and I will look out for the
small California gew�rztraminer producers that I have enjoyed in the past, like Stony Hill
and Coraz�n from Cathy Corison, the noted Napa cabernet producer, who gets her
gew�rztraminer grapes from the Anderson Valley. I will also keep my eyes open for Bedrock
Wine Company, which uses the same old vines in the Compagni Portis Vineyard in Sonoma
County that used to go into the excellent Bucklin gew�rztraminer.
Otherwise I will pick my bottles carefully.
Tasting Report: Floral Aromas With a Bit of Sweetness
BEST VALUE Brandborg $15 ?? ? Oregon Umpqua Valley 2007
Full, rich, fresh and balanced with spicy floral aromas and a touch of sweetness.
Dr. Konstantin Frank $16 ?? ? New York Finger Lakes 2007
Balanced, restrained and pretty with straightforward floral and grapefruit aromas and
flavors.
Thomas Fogarty $15 ?? ? California Monterey County 2007
Clear, true grapefruit and floral aromas; touch of sweetness.
Hook & Ladder $16 ?? California Russian River Valley 2008
Balanced and energetic with aromas of flowers, honey and lemon.
Anthony Road $16 ?? New York Finger Lakes 2008
Floral and slightly sweet but balanced and pleasing.
Chateau Ste. Michelle $10 ?? Washington Columbia Valley 2008
Lively, fresh yet simple with aromas of flowers and grapefruit.
Red Newt Cellars $38 ? ? New York Finger Lakes Sawmill Creek Vineyards 2007
Dry and restrained with aromas of flowers.
Hermann J. Wiemer $22 ? ? New York Finger Lakes 2007
Simple and straightforward with a touch of sweetness.
Halleck Vineyard $36 ? ? California Russian River Valley Pine Creek Ranch 2006
Aromas of citrus and flowers, but acidity is out of balance.
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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 *
* james(a)brewingnews.com James.Ellingson(a)StThomas.edu *