We're going to TDV this week.
Bob's handing the reservation.
Vin du jour is central Italy, non tuscany.
5 regions. Umbria, Abruzzo, Molise, Lazio and Marche.
Some of these regions are rare. Others are just mis-spelled.
Montelpuciano d' Abruzo would be an obvious red, although
there may well be more whites than reds from these regions.
All colors are welcome.
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2007 14:20:52 -0600
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Date: Tue, 28 Aug 2007 14:55:47 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Date: Thu, 15 Feb 2007 09:34:25 -0600
Greetings,
Blessed be all who respond yea or nay.
Here's an interactive map of Tuscany. click on the DOCs to see
the areas.
http://winecountry.it/regions/tuscany/
Trattoria da Vinci
400 Sibley St., St. Paul, 55101
651 222-4050
It's in the "far end" of down town St. Paul, near the Farmer's
Market. If you're traveling on I94, take the 7th St. Exit.
Who?
Annettina
Bobino
Rutheletta
Warrenesco
Betsylini
Davidetto
Alicianna
Jim-a-roni
Louisiano
Russeloche
Cheers,
Jim
SPIRITS
Ratafia liqueur makes the most of California citrus
In Southwest France, ratafia is brandy infused with fruit and spice. But that doesn't
mean you can't make a version using vodka.
By Corie Brown
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 26, 2008
Lou Amdur, owner of the wine bar Lou on Vine, sits back on his heels as he peers into the
recesses of a low kitchen cupboard. Bottles clink against each other as he rummages in the
dark. Finally standing up, he sets an unlabeled bottle on the kitchen counter.
"Ratafia," he says.
The opaque elixir before us has the questionable, slightly brownish hue of oxidized
dessert wine. Then Amdur pours a splash into a juice glass, releasing inviting citrus
aromas. We take sips. Tart orange and clove flavors infuse the earthy warmth of brandy in
a drink dancing with fresh fruit.
In Southwest France, ratafia is a fruit- and spice-
infused brandy made at home. Transplanting ratafia to his Southern California kitchen,
Amdur marries rustic French traditions with our region's bountiful supply of backyard
citrus. After plenty of kitchen experiments, he's decided that almost any citrus
makes delicious ratafia, so he bottles a batch whenever a new citrus fruit comes into
season.
"What's exciting is how you can capture the essence of fresh fruit in a cordial
that will stay fresh for years," Amdur says. "We're so jaded about the
abundance of the fruit growing all around us. Ratafia is a thrifty way to take advantage
of it."
That's easy for him to say. A dedicated home cook and wine connoisseur who succumbed
to his twin passions and became a restaurateur two years ago, Amdur has been making this
stuff since shortly after he first tasted it at a farmhouse outside of Toulouse, France,
in 2002.
I'm intrigued, but I'm too nervous to make my first ratafia by myself, so I
offer him a Sunday brunch in exchange for a ratafia tutorial.
Amdur's interest in homemade ratafia started when a Los Angeles neighbor with a
backyard bitter (or sour) variety of orange tree deposited a grocery bag of fruit at his
door. The ratafia he'd enjoyed in France was made with oranges. "Once you taste
ratafia, you realize how commercial liqueurs like Grand Marnier really are. They
don't taste fresh," he says. "It totally changed my mind about
orange-flavored liqueur."
A celebratory drink
THE name ratafia, according to some accounts, comes from the Latin phrase rata fiat,
meaning "to ratify." At the close of a business deal or the signing of a treaty,
ratafia -- originally made with unfermented or partially fermented wine-grape juice and
distilled grape spirits -- was a celebratory libation. For his first batch of homemade
ratafia, Amdur used a Paula Wolfert recipe. He carefully stripped the zest from the
oranges, trimming away the last bit of the peel's white pith. He cut the zest into
quarter-inch strips and tossed them into a Mason jar with an equal amount of the fresh
squeezed bitter-orange juice and brandy, with half again as much simple syrup.
Traditional ratafia can be made with either brandy or clear distilled spirits, which calls
to mind the limoncello liqueurs of southern Italy. The difference is more than the kinds
of fruit used to infuse the alcohol. Ratafia includes fresh fruit juice; limoncello
typically relies on lemon zest and sugar without incorporating juice.
Amdur closed his ratafia jar, gave it a shake and stashed it under the kitchen sink,
returning every few days to give it another shake to help the alcohol maceration of the
fruit. After two months, he strained the fruit from the ratafia, then removed the sediment
by letting it settle at the bottom and pouring off the liquid while leaving the pulp
behind, much like the lees are left in the bottom of a barrel after wine is racked from
one barrel to another.
Success with the bitter oranges persuaded Amdur to ignore tradition and try other fruits
using a similar equation of proportions for fruit zest, fruit juice, brandy and simple
syrup. Kumquat, which produces a racy aperitif with a sophisticated, tart edge, turned out
to be a favorite. Meyer lemon was disappointing because the mildness and lower acidity of
the fruit made a ratafia that lacked zip. Pomegranate was a disaster, producing a
regrettable cough-syrup ratafia.
Tart citrus fruit is best, Amdur says. Blood oranges and sour mandarins (tangerines) are
particularly good.
On the morning of my Sunday brunch-meets-ratafia-making session, the farmers market was
overflowing with tangerines, so they were my choice.
I invited some neighbors over to help, handing each arrival an apron as well as a sharp
paring knife, cutting board, juicer and wide-mouthed rubber-sealed jar. Amdur showed the
group how to carefully cut the white pith from the zest, then cut the zest into strips.
The painstaking work went slowly even as the kitchen buzzed with the energy of four sets
of partners competing to see who could produce the largest pile of zest the fastest.
Sweetening by stages
"THE more zest, the better the ratafia," Amdur said, cheering us on. "The
important thing is to remove all of the bitter pith and the seeds."
The simple syrup added with the fruit juice and zest during maceration reduces any overt
tartness. But he suggests going lightly on the simple syrup, and in stages. "You can
always add a touch more after it has macerated if you don't think it is sweet
enough," he says.
Go slowly with the spices. It doesn't take much to overwhelm the fresh fruit flavors.
Every time Amdur makes ratafia, he cuts back the spices a little more. He's down to
one clove -- slightly toasted to bring out the flavors -- and a smashed cardamom pod.
After a frenzied half an hour of zest cutting, we had the ingredients for ratafia and it
was time to pour in the spirits.
There are several possibilities for a ratafia base liquor. Wolfert suggests Armagnac, the
fine French brandy from the region of the same name southeast of Bordeaux, and it worked
beautifully for our ratafia-party batch.
Other recipes call for distilled grape spirits, the clear alcohol made from surplus wine
grapes that is readily available in Southwest France. In Southern California, vodka is a
reasonable substitute, Amdur says.
He likes the efficiency with which clear spirits suck the fruit flavors out of the zest
for a bright, vibrant drink.
Brandy, however, produces a mellower, more complex ratafia. I made a batch using
inexpensive brandy instead of Armagnac, and another using vodka, but the ratafia made with
Armagnac was best, with deep, complex flavors that supported the fresh fruit.
The ratafia made with the inexpensive California brandy was fun and delicious but lacked
the complexity of the Armagnac batch. And though I understand the appeal of the clean,
bright fruit flavors of the vodka ratafia, I prefer the warmth brandy brings to these
cordials.
But there are still experiments to consider. Since that ratafia-making party, I often find
myself staring at my bowl of fruit or pondering the stalls at the farmers market.
Blueberries? Kiwis? Grapefruit? The ratafia possibilities seem endless.
corie.brown(a)latimes.com
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, cel: 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *