I wanted to clarify a bit here.
Alicia's deal tomorrow is a BYORose' . Bring a bottle of
your favorite pink/blush wine to share.
Cost will be limited to the food you buy plus your
usual generous gratuity.
Best,
Jim
Can someone print this out UC Davis article on how
seldom wine and cheese go together for Bob?
----- Forwarded message from "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
-----
Date: Thu, 16 Jun 2005 15:41:47 -0500
From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Wining about Cheese
UC Davis study challenges classic wine-cheese pairings
- Janet Fletcher, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, June 16, 2005
Click to View
For many people, a bottle of red wine and a platter of good cheese virtually guarantee
pleasure ahead. But according to new research conducted at the University of California at
Davis, that time-tested marriage may be on the skids.
Graduate student Berenice Madrigal has spent the past year investigating what sound
like the makings of a great party: eight red wines, eight cheeses and what happens when
you serve them together.
Thinking of purchasing a nice chunk of cheddar to show off a favorite red wine from
your cellar? Madrigal's study, undertaken for her master's degree in viticulture
and enology, suggests that you might want to reconsider that plan.
"Our definition of a good pairing was that the two enhance each other," says
Hildegarde Heymann, professor of sensory science in Davis' viticulture and enology
department and Madrigal's adviser. "Our work shows this is probably not true
very often."
Madrigal, a petite, soft-spoken 27-year-old from Mexico City, has a degree in food
chemistry from the National Autonomous University of Mexico and a fondness for
cow's-milk Mimolette. But it was Heymann who steered Madrigal to cheese as a thesis
topic, a continuation of the professor's research into the sensory analysis of wine
with food. Cheese made a suitable subject for exploration because the department has no
kitchen.
To Heymann's surprise, few sensory scientists had analyzed the presumed affinity
of wine and cheese. A review of the literature turned up almost nothing. A Swedish
scientist, Tobias Nygren, had looked at white wine with blue cheese -- the cheese mutes
white wine flavors, he found -- but no one apparently had looked methodically at the
intersection of red wine and cheese.
Madrigal's first task was to assemble and train a tasting panel, volunteers --
mostly fellow students -- who would be taught to recognize various attributes in wine and
to use identical language in describing them. For two weeks, the tasters met every day to
master the sensory meaning of 20 common wine descriptors from bell pepper and berry to
astringent and bitter.
Next they evaluated, tasting blind, the eight wines Madrigal had selected: two bottles
each of Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Syrah. In an effort to get wines of
differing styles, Madrigal had chosen a low-priced and high-priced wine for each varietal
pair. Tasters rated each sample on a 1-to- 10 scale for every attribute. Then Madrigal
juggled the sample order and repeated the tasting twice to verify her tasters'
consistency.
Following an intensive day of research at Corti Brothers, the Sacramento fine-foods
store, Madrigal settled on eight types: two hard cheeses (Emmental and Gruyere), two
cheddars (from Vermont and New York), two soft cheeses (mozzarella and Teleme) and two
blues (Gorgonzola and Stilton). Heymann had suggested limiting the samples to cow's
milk cheeses so the analysis didn't get even more complicated.
Over sessions that lasted three months, the same trained team of panelists -- six men
and five women -- tasted each wine with each cheese, then scored the wines on the same 20
attributes they had evaluated before. Then Madrigal switched the tasting order, and the
panelists repeated the task twice.
Months of analysis later, Madrigal and Heymann had their results, captured in a flurry
of colorful spider graphs and multidimensional plots that the average wine lover would be
hard-pressed to decipher. But to cut to the chase, their conclusions may not sit well with
wine and cheese fans.
In virtually every case, cheese diminished everything the wine had to say. It muted
both desirable traits like berry character and less desirable traits like astringency and
bell pepper. It was an equal-opportunity silencer, exhibiting largely the same effect on
each varietal, pricey and not.
From mild Teleme to pungent Gorgonzola, the cheeses made every wine taste less oaky,
less berry-like, less sour. The two blues had slightly more impact on the wines than the
two soft cheeses, but the differences were insignificant for almost every trait.
"The popular press tells us it should have gone the other way," says
Heymann, meaning that cheese would enhance the wines. "We would have assumed that for
at least one cheese and one wine, we would have a hit."
The one attribute that cheese seemed to accentuate in red wine was butteriness, a
quality more often associated with malolactic Chardonnays than with reds. But with every
other wine trait, cheese of every sort activated the mute button, a result Heymann
can't easily explain.
"The decrease of astringency makes sense because you have a coating of the palate
(with cheese)," says the professor. "All you need is a coating between the
mucous membranes and astringent compounds and you diminish astringency. That is the one
effect I would say is a real effect."
The other outcomes -- that cheese diminished fruitiness, oakiness or spiciness -- may
be what Heymann call a cognitive effect. In other words, it's in our heads. We expect
that result, so we find that result. Although she hasn't devised a way to tease apart
the impact of cognition, or expectation, she suspects it's at the root of many
vaunted wine-and-cheese marriages.
"My 'take home' is, you shouldn't worry about which wine you have
with which cheese," says Heymann. "Have the wine you love with the cheese you
love. " If most cheeses affect most red wines in a similar way, by turning down the
volume, it may be pointless to keep looking for a match that soars.
Daniel Baron, winemaker at Silver Oak Wine Cellars in Oakville, says his extensive if
informal research doesn't support the UC Davis team's conclusions. A cheese
enthusiast, Baron says he has invested a lot of time hunting for cheeses that would
complement his famed Cabernet Sauvignons.
"It's been a long journey," says the winemaker, "but in my
experience, the old rules of wine and cheese pairing hold true."
For him, that means no blue cheese ("It really brings out the bitterness in a red
wine"), no triple-cream cheeses ("iffy") and a distinct preference for
well-aged cow's and sheep's milk cheeses such as aged Gouda, Vella Dry Jack and
Manchego -- cheeses that he finds not just tolerable with his wine but flattering.
Other tasters who, like Baron, have experienced a ghastly clash between dry red wine
and pungent blue cheese may suspect that something physiological is to blame. As for the
utter rightness on the tongue of Vella Dry Jack and Silver Oak Cabernet -- how does
Heymann explain that?
"There's that saying, 'Perception is reality,' " says the
professor. "If you perceive that the wine is better with the cheese, then it is.
What's happening in your head is no less real than what's happening on your
palate, but it's probably different."
E-mail Janet Fletcher at jfletcher(a)sfchronicle.com.
Page F - 2
URL:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/06/16/WIGFFD8IBQ1.DTL
�2005 San Francisco Chronicle
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Lee Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax 651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
----- End forwarded message -----
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Lee Ellingson, Adjunct Professor jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 fax 651 XXX XXXX *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *