And then there were 7+.
Might be prudent to bump the res from 8 to 10.
Always prudent to reserve your spot with Bob or the list.
Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2008 17:01:45 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Barbera at Arezzo (R=8, N=5, t=6:30pm)
User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.13 (2006-08-11)
Update:
Bob made the reservation for eight people (R=8).
Five have spoken (N=5).
We need to call if we'll be more than eight persons.
Time is damn near always 6:30 and this is no exception (t=6:30pm).
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2008 16:36:33 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Babera at Arezzo???
Here's what I know.
Lori and Dave would like to do Barbera at Arezzo.
No idea on others or who's making the reservation.
It's been a long time since we were there.
Recall we pay $6/head in lieu of corkage at Arezzo.
yeses
"festive" Bob
Pronto Pup Ruth
"Brush after eating that junk" Lori
Dave "Old Mill" T
Jim "The Bees" E
Bill "Barns" S
Betsy "Krafts" K
Hoping to join us.
Alicia "Sausage Queen" A.
regrets:
Warren
Russ/Sue
Fred P
Shee-raw (?)
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 08:09:35 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Other Italian at Arezzo
Jim-We decided on Arrezzo for Thurs. The wine is not Piedmont and not Tuscany. Everything
else goes. The players are Bob, Betsy, Ruth and Lori. Bob will call today for a
reservation. We don't have a back up plan. Lori
----- End forwarded message -----
Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2007 11:35:43 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Barbera at Arezzo
Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2006 12:52:29 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Greetings,
The group is going to Arezzo, 6:30 on Thursday.
Vin du jour is Other Italian i.e. not from Tuscany,
not from Piedmont.
on 6/12/06 5:46 PM, Jim L. Ellingson at
jellings(a)me.umn.edu wrote:
> Greetings,
>
Bob will make the reservation for 8.
Can adjust up or down as needed.
>
> Bob has negotiated a $5 per person charge in
> leu of corkage. Menu is on line. Wine list is not on line....
>
> Prices are reasonable, w/ $10-12 pizza and most entrees (Primi) under $20.
>
>> Who
> Arezzo Ristorante
> 612 285-7444
> 5057 France Ave S, Minneapolis, 55410
>
www.arezzo-ristorante.com
----- End forwarded message -----
Cal-Ital's second act
After a slow start, Italian grapes find their place in California
Tim Teichgraeber, Special to The Chronicle
Friday, August 1, 2008
Winemaker Greg Graziano examines clusters of Sangiovese g... Graziano produces Pinot
Grigio, Sangiovese and Tocai Friu... Chris Dearden, who makes Italian-style wines for
Benesser... Benessere's 2005 Napa Valley Sangiovese. The winery relea...
During the last two decades, California wines made from Italian grape varieties have seen
both a promising boom and a crushing bust, leaving only the most dedicated specialists
still standing. Their hope is that grapes like Sangiovese, Barbera and Nebbiolo, maybe
even Dolcetto, Cortese and Aglianico will yet have their day in the California sun.
Whether motivated by their love of the grapes and the wines they make or a desire to pay
tribute to their Italian heritage, a few Cal-Ital champions remain dedicated to their
cause despite tough financial challenges.
"Sometimes it's easier to make headway doing something different," says Jim
Gullett, whose Vino Noceto winery produces several such wines in the Sierra Foothills.
At least that was the rationale among California's early proponents of Italian
varieties. Many would learn that the varieties were surprisingly challenging to grow, and
sometimes even harder to sell. After two decades of learning the hard way, the
movement's survivors can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel, and may be
able to show others the way.
Make no mistake, Cal-Ital wines are still a tough sell, but by most producers'
accounts the resistance to them seems to be waning now that many of the weakest have been
weeded out, the best have improved, and the weak dollar has driven up the price of imports
and making for a mixed, but bullish, market. Almost one-third fewer tons of Sangiovese
grapes were crushed in 2007 than a year earlier, according to the Wine Institute, but the
price rose almost one-third. Less prominent grapes like Dolcetto, Cortese and Nebbiolo
have all shown increases, though plantings remain small.
There was never a compelling reason why Italian grape varieties shouldn't succeed in
California. The climates of the two regions are generally similar. And with tens of
millions of Americans of Italian descent, Cal-Ital wines - California wines made from
Italian grapes - shouldn't be hard to like.
At least that's what a lot of people thought in the late 1980s. Unfortunately,
sometimes even the best laid plans go awry. Two decades later, only Pinot Grigio has
emerged as a bona fide success.
Sangiovese was the great red hope of the Cal-Ital movement, a more elegant alternative to
Cabernet Sauvignon, modeled after Tuscany's Chianti Classico, which Americans already
knew and loved.
By the early 1990s, a number of wineries scattered around the state had begun producing
Sangiovese and a few other varieties like Barbera, Nebbiolo, Dolcetto and Pinot Grigio.
Among them were Martin & Weyrich in Paso Robles; Montevina, Boeger and Vino Noceto in
the Sierra Foothills; Greg Graziano's Enotria and Monte Volpe brands in Mendocino
County; and Seghesio in Dry Creek Valley, which had been growing a little bit of
Sangiovese since 1910. Even Robert Mondavi launched a Cal-Ital brand called La Famiglia
with winemaker Jim Moore at the helm.
Moore had worked in Montalcino, the home of Italy's great Brunello wine, and he knew
how great Sangiovese was made. Moore believed that Sangiovese planted in the right place,
like the Napa Valley hillsides, could make world class wine, and he wasn't alone.
Movement gains credibility
In 1987, renown Italian producer Piero Antinori announced that he was partnering with
British brewing concern Whitbread and Bollinger in the purchase of a property atop Atlas
Peak in Napa Valley and he was going to plant Sangiovese - not Cabernet. Suddenly the
Cal-Ital movement had credibility.
Others followed suit in planting Italian grapes, including winemaker Chris Dearden of Napa
Valley's Benessere Vineyards, which released its first Sangiovese in 1995.
"I thought we could be the pinnacle of production for Italian varieties publicized by
Antinori and Mondavi," says Dearden. He was just one of many that saw Sangiovese and
other Italian grapes as a growing opportunity.
You can often identify pioneers by the arrows in their backs. Some of the early Cal-Ital
wines showed real promise - specifically those from farmers who knew how to grow difficult
grapes like Sangiovese, and those who had tasted enough Italian wines to know what made
them great. Unfortunately, others were simply chasing a trend and had no idea what they
were getting into. The result was a flood of mediocre Cal-Ital wines that undermined the
good ones.
"Most of the winemakers that were making Italian varietals didn't have a f- clue
about what Italian wine tasted like," says winemaker Greg Graziano. "All they
cared about was what their neighbor was making, and they had no idea what was going on in
the world."
Graziano produces Northern Italian-style wines in Mendocino County from Nebbiolo, Arneis,
Barbera, Cortese and Dolcetto grapes under his Enotria brand and several other Italian
varieties like Sangiovese, Pinot Grigio and Montepulciano under his Monte Volpe label, a
sort of tribute to the Italian wines he loves. For the most part he purchases grapes to
make his wines, and has coaxed Mendocino farmers into planting several varieties, often
persuading them to grow them organically or biodynamically.
Courting retailers
Graziano is a road warrior, traveling the country to ferret out adventurous retailers and
sommeliers willing to try and judge Cal-Ital wines on their merits.
Not everyone had as clear an aesthetic vision. Even Atlas Peak, the $25-a-bottle
Sangiovese that was supposed to lead the way stumbled through the 1990s. Piero
Antinori's estate never managed to make extraordinary Sangiovese, and was generally
seen as overpriced. Young vineyards, inexperienced winemakers and competitively priced
Italian wines were all part of the problem.
Italian varieties like Sangiovese and Nebbiolo were never intended for novice growers or
winemakers. "If you think Pinot Noir is tough (to grow and vinify), Sangiovese is
Pinot Noir squared, and Nebbiolo is Pinot Noir cubed," says Moore. "Nebbiolo is
the toughest red grape to make in the known universe."
Nebbiolo, the noble grape of Piedmont, is the source for the brilliant wines of Barolo and
Barbaresco, but it hasn't made outstanding wines anywhere else. Moore even has a
"Letterman top 10 list" of Nebbiolo's fatal flaws, "10: It buds out
too early; 9: It ripens too late; 8: It has too high in acid and tannin ..."
Martin & Weyrich's Nebbiolo vines were planted in 1992 from Italian vine cuttings
sourced from unnamed persons at an undisclosed rendezvous location during the 1990 Italian
World Cup, and smuggled into the United States as a so-called Samsonite clone.
"Twenty-five years of experience with the variety is the key, and we still have so
much more to learn," says winemaker Craig Reed.
Today Reed makes 4,500 cases of Nebbiolo, and it's the winery's No. 2 or 3
seller behind a wildly successful wine called Allegro, a slightly sweet, lightly bubbly
Moscato that sells 70,000 cases a year. "That one keeps the lights on," says
Reed.
Moore says that even with a few good Nebbiolos out there, "Nebbiolo may never succeed
in California. If it has to any degree, it's where Pinot Noir was in 1970, when there
were a handful of decent ones, but it wasn't on anyone's radar screen."
Likewise, Sangiovese is no easy grape to manage. "Young Sangiovese just produces and
produces," says Montevina general manager Jeff Myers. Growers who don't cut back
the crop wind up with watery, pale wines that lack body and color. "With vineyards
now approaching 20 years old, we're getting better concentration and
consistency."
Producers unite
Still, the Cal-Ital movement had momentum. Producers of Italian varieties banded together
to form the Consorzio Cal-Italia and staged annual tastings at Fort Mason in San Francisco
that drew thousands of wine fans. At its peak, around the year 2000, the consorzio had
about 140 members.
Then came 9/11. Only a week before, Moore had sold one of his L'Uvaggio di Giacomo
wines to Windows on the World restaurant atop the World Trade Center, placing it on one of
the most iconic American wine lists. By 2002, the market had stagnated. Even the wineries
making good wines from Italian varieties were struggling to sell them to the broader
market but were continuing to sell them directly to loyal consumers who had come to know
their quality.
Moore and Greg Graziano and Martin & Weyrich found open-minded retail and restaurant
buyers in the Midwest, while others, like Noceto and Benessere, sold directly to customers
that were looking for something different.
Vintners shapen skills
Through the hard years, dedicated Cal-Ital vintners honed their skills, and their
vineyards matured. Even Nebbiolo has made remarkable progress in California, most notably
at Paso Robles' Martin & Weyrich winery. "We considered giving up on it, but
it's a labor of love," says winemaker Reed, whose favorite wines are Barolo and
Barbaresco made from Nebbiolo.
Though Pinot Grigio has been a big hit, Sangiovese, Dolcetto and Aglianico from California
are still a hard sell, even when well executed. Today's Cal-Ital wines are often as
good as their like-priced Italian equivalents, especially now that the weak dollar has
European prices rising, but they're often regarded as being "fake Italian"
when French varietal wines like Chardonnay and Pinot Noir from California are regarded as
perfectly legitimate rivals to their European counterparts. "The wine business has
always been Franco-centric," explains Moore.
"We've all gone to the Italian restaurant, and you meet the Italian guy.
He's like, 'But this wine's not Italian,' " says Graziano.
"I'll say, "What do you have that's Italian? You've got dried
pasta and olive oil! Your bread is from L.A., your vegetables are from Southern
California, and your meat is from California. Don't give me this crap!' "
"I had that experience at Angelini on Melrose, one of the best trattorias in Los
Angeles," echoes Moore. "I showed him my wines and he was blown away. I said,
'Are you going to buy any?' He says, 'No, because I have my Italian
wines.' I said, 'Wait a sec, you have Burgundy and you have Russian River Valley
Pinot Noir. You have Napa Cabernet and you have Bordeaux. Should you have only Rhone Syrah
and none of this Australian Shiraz?' He says, 'You know, you have a point.'
But did he buy any? No."
Unpopular label
For some the term Cal-Ital itself has been a sore point. "I don't want to hear
the term Cal-Ital anymore," says Benessere's Dearden. Does anybody say
Cal-Franco? Cal-Espana? Get rid of it," says Dearden, who is tired of his work being
regarded as a "failed experiment."
The most dedicated California devotees of Italian varieties have proven that it can, in
fact, be done well.
Though it's easy to wonder if some would have chosen another path if they had it to
do all over, Noceto's Jim Gullett sees a light at the end of the tunnel in consumers
in their 20s and 30s who are looking for something new. "Now people are interested in
what's new and different ... You need to be a little bit zealous about it and have a
good story and a lot of confidence. You have to be willing to accept a little
defeat."
"How long did it take California, and Oregon to figure our how to make Pinot Noir
with consistency? It's at least as tough to make Sangiovese as Pinot Noir," says
Gullett.
He has no regrets, but is he happy? "Yes, but I probably wouldn't be if it was
much harder to sell," says Gullett.
For the best California producers of Italian varieties, the clouds are parting.
They're looking forward to a decade where they're more competitive in quality
and value to the Italian wines they were modeled after, Cal-Ital producers once again see
the glass half-full.
Montevina's Jeff Myers puts it succinctly: "We're real happy with where
we're at."
Tasting notes
WHITES
2007 Benessere Napa Valley Carneros Pinot Grigio ($26) A superb California interpretation
of the Italian style - ripe, flavorful and full with green apple, nectarine and cream
flavors and a crisp, minerally finish.
2007 Enotria Mendocino Cortese ($15) From the grape that makes Gavi di Gavi in Piedmont,
this lovely white is every bit as refined as the best Italian examples, with sweet-tart
Granny Smith apple, cream, fennel and lemon drop flavors.
2006 Monte Volpe Mendocino Pinot Grigio ($14) Fresh and expressive and flavorful with
zesty green apple and lilac aromas, fresh apple flavors and a clean finish. A terrific
value.
2007 Terra d'Oro Santa Barbara County Pinot Grigio ($16) Focused and aromatic with
beautiful freesia, lavender and honeydew aromas and crystalline citrus, melon and mineral
flavors. Excellent.
REDS
2003 Benessere Napa Valley Aglianico ($50) This powerful Southern Italian red variety
seems to like Napa Valley. From a 1/2-acre block of the BK Collins vineyard comes this
dark, full red with vanilla, licorice, blackberry and blueberry aromas and deep plum and
berry flavors finishing with sturdy tannins on the graceful finish. The most Cabernet-like
of the great Italian reds. Winery only.
2006 Enotria Mendocino Dolcetto ($17) This wine captures well the many charms of this
underappreciated Northern Italian variety from its pretty violet aromas to its bright
blackberry and cherry fruit, racy acidity and gritty tannins that soften with age.
2004 Enotria Mendocino Barbera ($17) Beautiful blueberry and blackberry pie aromas,
vanilla, fruity middle, very approachable with a nice spank of acidity and tarry tannin on
the finish. Lovely.
2005 L'Uvaggio di Giacomo Lodi Barbera ($18) Very young, with tight blueberry,
blackberry and cranberry aromas. Dark, very ripe blackberry fruit in the middle and a
tight finish, but should develop some jammier flavors and soften soon.
2002 L'Uvaggio di Giacomo Il Leopardo Central Coast Nebbiolo ($36) Another solid
showing. Elegant, perfumed, textbook Nebbiolo from Stolpman Vineyards in Santa Barbara
County with complex plum, cherry, cinnamon, licorice and tar flavors.
2003 Martin & Weyrich Reserve Il Vecchio Paso Robles Nebbiolo ($22) A seamless,
beautifully matured red from the frustrating variety of Barolo and Barbaresco with
amber-rimmed brick red color, dried rose, lavender, sweet oak, licorice and mushroom
aromas, pretty, expressive, tangy cherry and raspberry fruit kissed with toast and a
velvety finish. Superb.
2006 MonteVina Amador County Barbera ($12) A fruity red that's at once bright and
deep with juicy cherry, raspberry, rose, toast and tar aromas, a round mouthfeel and
bright cherry fruit on the finish. Perfect for a picnic or pizza.
2005 Monte Volpe Mendocino Sangiovese ($17) Delicious, fruit-driven California Sangiovese
with youthful violet aromas, fresh blueberry and cherry pie flavors trailing into a
moderately astringent finish typical of the grape.
Washington and Oregon
Wash-Ital and Or-Ital might not have the same ring as Cal-Ital, but the Golden State
isn't the only place where growers and vintners have been honing their skills with
Italian varieties.
Benchmark producer Ponzi makes a very nice white from Arneis, which is native to Piedmont.
Earl and Hilda Jones of southern Oregon's Abacela Vineyards grow a daunting pastiche
of Italian grapes, including the varieties Dolcetto, Sangiovese and Freisa.
A number of Washington state wineries are making first-rate wines from Italian varieties,
especially Sangiovese. Star Walla Walla producer Leonetti makes a small batch of it each
year. Like its other wines, the Sangiovese is excellent and at around $70 a bottle,
pricey. Stella Fino, also of Walla Walla, and Cavatappi are two Washington wineries that
focus on Italian varieties with great success. Stella Fino sources its Sangiovese ($25)
from the excellent Pepper Bridge vineyard in Walla Walla, and Cavatappi's superb
Maddalena Nebbiolo ($25) comes from Washington's historic Red Willow vineyard, where
many varieties were first planted in Washington. Others to look for include Andrew
Will's Ciel du Cheval Vineyard Sangiovese ($30) and Maryhill's Brunello-like
Reserve Sangiovese ($32).
Some Italians are still wary of growing Italian grapes in the New World. After abandoning
his Sangiovese dreams in Napa Valley, Tuscan producer Piero Antinori partnered with
Chateau Ste. Michelle on Washington's Red Mountain in an estate dubbed Col Solare,
which makes one red wine, a Bordeaux blend, without a drop of Sangiovese.
Tim Teichgraeber is a San Francisco writer. E-mail him at wine(a)sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/08/01/WIMT11K9VO.DTL
This article appeared on page F - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
--
------------------------------
* 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 *
----- End forwarded message -----
--
------------------------------
* 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 *