Greetings,
The upgrades at "The Barn" appera to be working. Thank again Russel.
We're going to The 510 tomorrow. 510 Groveland, near the Walker.
What.
Any Pinot from Anywhere.
Who:
Russ/Sue McC
Lori
Betsy
Bob
Jim/Louise
Annette/Matt
Fred/Dana?
Janet/Janet's_friend
Dave?
Bill?
Nicolai?
Cheers,
Jim
----- Forwarded message from The 30 Second Wine Advisor
<wine(a)wineloverspage.com> -----
Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2004 14:54:01 -0500 (EST)
From: The 30 Second Wine Advisor <wine(a)wineloverspage.com>
Reply-To: The 30 Second Wine Advisor <wine(a)wineloverspage.com>
Subject: 30 Second Wine Advisor - The many flavors of Pinot Gris
To: jellings(a)me.umn.edu
THE 30 SECOND WINE ADVISOR, Wednesday, March 17, 2004
___________________________________________________________________
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IN THIS ISSUE
* THE MANY FLAVORS OF PINOT GRIS And it goes with corned beef and
cabbage!
* CHATEAU D'ORSCHWIHR 2000 ALSACE TOKAY PINOT GRIS BOLLENBERG
($14.99) Big and bold, but it's muscle, not fat.
* CAPAROSO 2002 BADEN PINOT GRIS ($20) Quenching ... yet
contemplative.
* ADMINISTRIVIA Change E-mail address, frequency, format or
unsubscribe: "Administrivia" at the end of this page.
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THE MANY FLAVORS OF PINOT GRIS
Pinot Gris (or Pinot Grigio, as vowel-happy Italians call the same
grape) has become such a popular wine for casual sipping in recent
years that some wine enthusiasts tend to dismiss most of it as
bland, boring stuff.
But just like every other significant wine-grape variety, from
Chardonnay to Merlot to Shiraz and beyond, generalizations fail in
the face of specific examples to the contrary. And when we consider
that Pinot Gris is not merely a member of the excellent Pinot
family but may be its progenitor, it boggles credulity to presume
that it can't make a memorable wine.
In search of wines bold enough to stand up to a St. Patrick's Day
seasonal feast of corned beef and cabbage, I recently pulled the
corks from two very different examples, both excellent, and neither
at all what you might expect if your Pinot Gris palate has been
weaned on the usual suspects from Northern Italy or the U.S. West
Coast.
First up was a Tokay Pinot Gris from Alsace, where Pinot Gris was
traditionally called Tokay d'Alsace, based on a purported shared
history with the Hungarian Tokaji, a story mirrored in the Tocai
Friulano of Northeastern Italy. (In an effort to sort out all this
confusion, European Union regulators are changing the rules, with
Tokay Pinot Gris said to be a midway point in an eventual effort to
banish the word "Tokay" and variations from all versions except the
Hungarian.) A big, muscular Alsatian, I found it quite reminiscent
of the style of the highly rated Zind-Humbrecht but, in my opinion,
more interesting.
My second St. Paddy's Pinot Gris is German, from the Baden region,
which not coincidentally is just a grape's throw across the Rhine
from France's Alsace. Warmer and more southerly than Germany's more
familiar Rhine and Mosel valleys, Baden tends to produce richer,
riper wines of greater alcoholic strength than its northerly
neighbors. Today's wine is imported for my friend and frequent
WineLoversPage.com contributor Randy Caparoso, a noted sommelier
and food-wine-matching expert who has recently begun distributing a
select portfolio of quality wines under his personal label. Mouth-
filling and subtle, the wine offers elegance where the Alsatian
Pinot Gris showed brawn; again, however, it's far from being your
grandmother's Pinot Gris.
TALK ABOUT WINE ONLINE
Want to recommend a Pinot Gris you like - or a favorite wine match
for a St. Patrick's Day feast? Whatever your interest in wine,
you're always welcome to participate in the online wine
conversations in our Wine Lovers' Discussion Group. To join in an
interactive round-table online discussion on today's article, click
to
http://www.myspeakerscorner.com/forum/index.phtml?fn=1&tid=49358&mi…
If you prefer to comment privately, feel free to send me E-mail at
wine(a)wineloverspage.com. I'll respond personally to the extent that
time and volume permit.
___________________________________________________________________
CHATEAU D'ORSCHWIHR 2000 ALSACE TOKAY PINOT GRIS BOLLENBERG
($14.99)
Clear straw color, with a golden hue. Forward and complex citric
aromas, grapefruit and lemon-lime, add complexity with a hint of
orange-blossom honey and a lovely scent that evokes wet stones
after a rain. Full and ripe, creamy mouthfeel becomes almost
unctuous as the wine warms in the glass; there may be just a touch
of sweetness, but it's not out of place in the bold context of
acidity, powerful (14.9 percent) alcohol and stony minerality. U.S.
importer: Langdon Shiverick, Cleveland. (March 15, 2004)
FOOD MATCH: Wines as bold as this aren't always easy food matches,
but it had what it took to stand up to a flavorful holiday meal of
juicy corned beef with potatoes, onions and cabbage.
VALUE: An exceptional white wine, fully justifies its mid-teens
price.
WHEN TO DRINK: Ready to drink. Pinot Gris isn't usually considered
a wine for aging, and the golden hue of this 2000 - recently
purchased here, but already two years behind the current release -
suggests that it has already evolved a bit. (For the experimentally
inclined, aging a wine this powerful and balanced might make an
interesting test in challenging the conventional wisdom, if you
have good cellar conditions.)
WEB LINK: You'll find the Chateau d'Orschwihr Website in French and
English at
http://www.chateau-or.com/
FIND THIS WINE ONLINE: Look for Chateau d'Orschwihr on Wine-
Searcher.com:
http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Orschwihr/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP
___________________________________________________________________
CAPAROSO 2002 BADEN PINOT GRIS ($20)
This is a very pale straw-color wine, with fresh and appealing
melon aromas. On the palate it presents crisp honeydew melon and
gentle acidity in perfect balance, with a medium-bodied texture
that becomes increasingly lush as the wine warms in the glass. A
delicious wine, it seems so fresh and quenching that you're tempted
to gulp it, but its clean, subtle delicacy is interesting enough to
justify slowing down for more contemplative sipping. U.S. importer:
USA Wine West, San Rafael, Calif. (March 15, 2004)
FOOD MATCH: Randy Caparoso says this wine is styled for
"contemporary, sauce- (or texture-) oriented cuisines and perhaps
even better in new style dishes (especially 'raw' foods) couched in
natural vinaigrettes." I respect that, but can testify that it also
made a stunning match with good old-fashioned corned beef and
cabbage (albeit with a quality corned brisket from a natural,
hormone-free beef supplier).
VALUE: The $20 tag comes into perspective against the competition:
It dominates the well-known Pinot Grigio labels at the same or
higher price point.
WHEN TO DRINK: It's designed for immediate enjoyment, but certainly
won't fade in the next year or two.
WEB LINK: For information on this and other Caparoso wines, see
http://www.caparosowines.com
FIND THIS WINE ONLINE: Retail and restaurant sources will be found
on the Caparoso Website. You can also find other Caparoso wines on
Wine-Searcher.com:
http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Caparoso/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP
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Wednesday, March 17, 2004
Copyright 2004 by Robin Garr. All rights reserved.
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