December '08

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This is all of the wines we shipped in December

 

2008 Porcupine Ridge Syrah, Coastal Region, South Africa

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Porcupine Ridge SyrahIn 1652 Jan van Riebeeck, a Dutch surgeon, eager to find a way to relieve the symptoms of scurvy, suggested to the Dutch East India Company that the Cape Province of South Africa would be suitable for growing grapes. Nine years later the first wine was pressed from grapes grown on cuttings brought from France.

The prime grape growing areas of South Africa spread out from Cape Town, and include the Paarl (‘pearl’ in Afrikaans), which to the east encompasses Franschhoek (‘French corner’) home of the first French Huguenot settlers. Boekenhoutskloof, its homestead dating from 1784, is located in the Franschhoek Valley.

The owners of Boekenhoutskloof have revamped an ancient cellar, and have installed state-of-the-art equipment as well as a quality maturation cellar. Marc Kent is the winemaker for the Boekenhoutskloof wines as well as the range of wines called Porcupine Ridge.

There are approximately 20 hectares of vines at Boekenhoutskloof – 25% of which are planted to white varieties: Sauvignon Blanc, Semillon, Viognier; and 75% of which consist of reds: Syrah, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Merlot. All vineyards employ extended double perold trellises. The soil types are not homogenous, ranging from deep, rich alluvial soils along the river’s edge to iron ridge clay on hillsides with areas of decomposed granite.

The fruit is predominantly sourced in Malmesbury, with a small portion of Wellington fruit also used. Certain parcels are naturally fermented, but most are inoculated with selected Rhône strains. About a third remains unoaked, the balance is matured in old French barriques and on French oak staves.

Raspberry, mulberry, and licorice dominate the palate and nose of this medium-full bodied wine. Try it with poultry, salmon, and smoked meats. Drink now – 2013.

Welcome to The Extraordinary Wine Club

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Welcome to The Extraordinary Wine Club.  You are one of the first subscribers, and this is the inaugural shipment.  I’m particularly excited about this club, because it provides me with the chance to put my favorite wines directly into your hands.  The thing that I miss most now that I don’t work on the floor in a restaurant is sharing my favorite wines with people: this club provides me with a chance to do that, if in a slightly different way. 

 

We expect the wines for this club to be ready (to pick up, or ship) on or around the 19th of every month.  In the future you will receive an email notification one to two days before your wines are ready.   More than just a notification, the email will provide you with links to the wine descriptions on the brand new website wineclub.jakekosseff.com.  The website will contain all of the information that is included with this note, and a few additional touches, including the ability to comment on the selections you have received and share your food and wine pairing experiences with the rest of the members.    Keep checking back, as the sight will be continuously updated and improved and more information will be added whenever it is available.  It is my intention that this sight becomes the ultimate reference for all things relating to the wine clubs.

 

I will also update you on any special offers for club members through these emails.  Like our special offer this month: refer a friend to one of my clubs, and receive $50 off your next shipment (we’re really offering this, it’s not just an example, so tell your friends!). 

 

I value your inbox space, so I will usually send you only one email per month outlining your picks for the month and any special offers that relate directly to you (I will send an additional email if there is something important to report).  But there are two other great newsletters that are associated with this club, and my guess is that you already receive at least one.  To sign up for my Extraordinary Newsletter, follow this link.  To sign up for Cellar 46’s (my partner in this wine club)  newsletter, follow this link.

Most importantly, enjoy the wines.  That is what this is all about. 

Best,

Jake

December Extraordinary Wines from Off the Beaten Path

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Welcome to Extraordinary Wines from Off the Beaten Path.  This month we started full throttle, exploring  Kremstal in Austria, Cafayete in Argentina, some nooks and crannies in France,  and Jumilla in Spain (if you get only red wines, add South Africa and Washington to the mix).  The wines are all unique, all delicious, and all of them have great stories to boot.   I know you will have fun on this wild ride.

To see detailed descriptions of each of the wines for this month, click here, or follow the 3 whites, 3 reds tab in the categories box to the right.

If you selected all Red wines, click here, or follow the 6 reds tab in the categories box to the right.

December The Next Big Thing

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Welcome to The Next Big Thing.  This month’s shipment yields three exceptional, micro-produced wines that are sure to excite even the most jaded palates.  We start with a Pinot Blanc from Marlborough, New Zealand that might be the most exciting white wine I’ve tasted in all of 2008.  That is followed by a Pinot Noir with the humble appellation of Bourgogne, and a character that is far from humble: and you have one of only 1888 bottles produced.  We finish up in Napa Valley, with a Syrah that is nothing short of spectacular. 

To see detailed descriptions of all of the wines in this months shipment, click here, or go to The Next Big Thing in the categories tab to the right of the page.

December Champagne & Sparkling Wine Society

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

Welcome to The Champagne & Sparkling Wine Society.   This month we explore 3 great wines, that are related only in so much as they are all delicious.    The first wine, a lovely Argentine brut made from Chardonnay and Pinot Noir from high in the vineyards of Mendoza is a sensation in its home country despite its relatively tiny production, and you’re about to see why.  The next, one of my perennial favorites, is from the Loire Valley, from a noble Vouvray producer, and made entirely from Chenin Blanc.  The last is an exceptional Champagne from a house that we don’t see much in the U.S..

To see detailed descriptions of the wines for this month, click here, or follow the Champagne & Sparkling Wine Society Link under Categories on the right of this page

NV Veuve Fourny & Fils Grande Reserve Brut Premier Cru á Vertus, Côte de Blancs, Champagne

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

fourny-signThis is nothing short of thrilling Champagne, as is everything produced by this stunning, and totally off-the-radar producer in the exceptional Côte de Blancs cru of Vertus. Veuve Fourny & Fils was founded in the 1930’s as Champagne Albert Fourny, based around 8.5 hectares of vineyards, all in Vertus, that had been owned and managed by the family since 1865. In the 1950’s, when Albert passed away, the house was renamed Veuve Fourny. Since 1993, Albert’s grandsons Charles Henry and Emmanuel have been in charge.

The house owns 8.5 hectares of vineyards, and purchases fruit from another 4 hectares, which are for all intents and purposes vertus-vineyardscontrolled by them. This makes them a grower-producer in all but name, and their approach is much more that of a grower than of a negociant. All of the grapes in their wines come from Vertus, and they believe that that is one of the purposes of the house to produce wines that reflect the terroir of Vertus (this is a very unusual attitude in Champagne). Only the Cuvées (the light, first pressing of the grapes) are used for their fourny-grand-reservebase wines, which are fermented and aged in a combination of temperature-controlled stainless steel tanks and oak barrels. After blending, bottling and secondary fermentation, the wines stay in the cellars for a minimum of 3 years before disgorgement (the minimum time for NV Champagne is 18 months).

Grande Reserve Brut is a blend of three vintages, and is made from roughly 20% Pinot Noir and 80% Chardonnay with about 40% of the blend coming from reserve wines. 10% of the base wine was aged in barrel. This wine has a gorgeous, tiny, even bead, with fresh, intriguing nose, and a rich, elegant mouth feel. It’s really exactly what I want in a glass of Champagne. This Champagne is a wonderful candidate for ageing, and will continue to get more complex through 2012, but again, it’s awfully good now, so I will have a hard time waiting.

The food to eat with this wine, is, well, just about anything. But as there is a bit of delicacy to this style, I wouldn’t have this with a steak. This is my favorite new (to me anyway) Champagne that I have tried this year.

2006 Bourillon Dorleans Hélène Dorléans Vouvray Brut Loire Valley, France

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

This wine is one of my favorite non-Champagne sparklers every year. It has a combination of freshness and chalky minerality that are rare in all but the best Champagnes, and a quality of bubbles that is second to none.

Bourillon Dorleans was founded in 1921 by Gaston Dorleans and is located equidistant between the town of Vouvray and the A10, just a few hundred yards north of the Loire River. In addition to owning some of the most superb vineyards in the appellation of Vouvray, the domaine also uses a series of elaborately decorated 15th century chalk caves to vinify, age and store its wines. Committed to ‘reasoned agriculture’ the domaine uses as little chemical input as possible in the vineyards, and the majority of the grapes are hand harvested.

Only 2500 cases of the Hélène Dorleans brut are made. The wine is made entirely from Chenin Blanc (known locally as Pineau de la Loire) in the Méthode Traditional, and aged for 16 months on the lees. The wine has 7 g/l residual sugar (well under the 12 g/l maximum for brut Champagne) which provides a nice foil to the racy acidity, but doesn’t come off as tasting sweet. This hint of sugar is also the key to the wine’s effortless pairing with a stunningly diverse group of foods.

This wine is meant to be consumed now, as it tastes wonderful, but will be at its peak through 2010, and may gain a little toastiness in the coming year at the expense of some of its fresh fruit character. There are too many great parings to mention, but anything from simple white fish preparations, to Japanese food, to all manner of cheeses (particularly aged goat cheese). Roast pork and poultry are also perfect matches for this lovely wine, and the winery suggests plum tart . . . but I’m going to have to try that to be convinced.

bourillon-dorleans

NV Bodega Cruzat Brut Mendoza, Argentina

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

This is the name for sparkling wines from the overperforming mid-sized Bodega Campo Negro in Cruz de Piedra, Maipu, Mendoza. Cruzat has quickly become the most sought after small producer sparkling wine in Argentina, and once you try a bottle, it’s easy to see why.

Mendoza is a giant region, in which the majority of Argentina’s premium wines are currently made. Campo Negro’s vineyards lie at altitudes between 1300 and 1400 meters in the areas of Cruz de Piedra, Altamira, San Carlos and Tunuyán, all within Mendoza.

This wine is made from 75% percent Pinot Noir, and 25% Chardonnay, all grown on Campo Negro’s extensive, sustainably farmed vineyards. The wine is made in the méthode Champenoise and spent over four years on its lees (that’s 12 months longer than the minimum requirement for vintage Champagne, and 30 months longer than the minimum requirement for non-vintage Champagne).

This is a wine for drinking now, and should develop more post-disgorgement aromas over the course of 2009. Try this wine with cheese, salmon, pork and poultry, and anything else you’d like that has a bit of salt.

2005 Lagier-Meredith Syrah, Mount Veeder, Napa Valley, Calirfornia

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

imagesThis is an incredible wine. For me it constitutes the best of both Syrah and of Mount Veeder rolled up into a very pretty, very powerful, and very intriguing wine.

This is a joint , and sole (they have no employees or partners) project between Carole Meredith, and David Lagier. Carole is a famous genetic ampelographer from UC Davis who was one of the group of researchers that determined the heritage of many of the most planted grape varieties in the United States and France, including the true heritage of Zinfandel grapes. David Lagier was the winemaker at Mondavi for fourteen years. In 1986 they purchases a plot of land on Mount Veeder (1300 feet of elevation) to capture the cooling influence of both the San Francisco Bay and the higher altitude combined with the stunning sunlight that mountainside vineyards in Napa provide in such abundance to their crops. Because they do everything themselves, the didn’t plant the vineyard until 1994, and didn’t make their first wine until 2000. But the results have more than confirmed their wisdom in sight selection.syrah-at-lagier-meredith

They are arrestingly straightforward people, and prefer to let their wine speak for itself rather than discuss every new (or old) technique that they use. Lagier-Meredith only makes one wine, a single bottling of Syrah from their vineyard on Mount Veeder. They make less than 1,000 cases each year. They don’t like the influence of new oak on the Syrah, so they use only older barrels, and don’t filter at all. David’s primary responsibility is the winemaking, and Carole manages the vineyard, though I suspect that with no employees they both do quite a bit of everything.

The 2005 Syrah is their best wine to date, and is both incredibly powerful, and incredibly elegant: a rare feat. This is a big red for steaks, lamb, hamburgers and wild game, but it is also at home with blue cheese, and because of the intense concentration of fruit, and the spicy character, it handles moderately spicy foods like Southwestern and Barbeque really well. This is also a wine that has the right combination of fruit and structure to age beautifully and will drink well through at least 2018 (though at least one important critic disagrees with me on this!).

2005 Domaine David Clark Au Pelson Bourgogne, France

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

david-clark“What’s going on here! a lowly Bourgogne . . . this is supposed to be about the next cult wines, have we just been had?” You are about to ask me. I’ll let you answer the question yourself, but please wait until you’ve tried this wine.

David Clark was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, to Scottish Parents (I know, still not promising). They sent him back to the United Kingdom for school, and he finished up with an engineering degree from Cambridge. He worked for a brief time for IBM, but became infatuated with wine, and after drinking his way through France decided to pursue winemaking. He worked the 1997 harvest at Mayacamas in Napa Valley, and the 1998 Harvest at Tahbilk in Australia. While in Australia, he became a software engineer for the Williams Formula One Team. He traveled the world with them for four years, eventually becoming the director of pit stop strategy. In this time, he saved enough money to go to enology school. In 2003 he attended the one-year course that the Lycee Viticole in Beaune. Upon graduating, he purchased a tiny plot outside the village of Morey-St.-Denis. Thus Domaine David Clark was born.

By 2005, an outstanding vintage on all accounts, David had accumulated a bit (1.5 ha) of land, and made nearly 6,000 bottles of wine (bottles, not cases). The wines are stunning. His meticulous vineyard practices and hard work (he is his only employee) have endeared him to his neighbors, and some of the best vignerons in Burgundy sing his praises, no small feat for a foreigner in France, much less the hyper-insular world of Burgundy. Christophe Roumier even sold him a small plot of Gamay to use for his Bourgogne Passetoutgrains, which is the best wine of this appellation that I have ever had.

This wine is from the single vineyard Au Pelson, which David Clark farms organically (he will be certified beginning in 2009). 1888 bottles were made

miveraison

(157 cases) were made, of which only a few boxes made it to the US. The vineyard yielded 28 hl/ha in 2005, and David made no additions of any sort to the wine (everything here is 100% natural). The wine was aged in 1 four year-old barrique, and one new barrique, though the wine from the new barrique was racked to another old barrique after four months. The resulting “humble” Bourgogne has a depth of flavor, and a focus of fruit and earth that is rare even among Grand Crus, and an aroma that is slow to develop, but haunting when it arrives. In a 2007 interview with Jancis Ronbinson, David said that he is now “getting to the point where [he] wants some more glamorous vines.” (update: he has 4 Ouevres of Vosne-Romanee). The good news here is that the wine is produced in such miniscule quantities that it will take a while for anyone to find out about it. The bad news is that it is awfully hard to get even now.

Although this is a shoe-in for classic red Burgundy pairings like wild mushrooms, braised beef, and anything with truffles, it is also stunning by itself, and probably deserves a little contemplation before being tossed around with food. This is a wine that is drinking wonderfully now, but will also age admirably through 2015 and beyond: I am conservative here, because it is the first vintage, and has no track record.

2006 Pyramid Valley Kerner Estate Vineyard Pinot Blanc Marlborough, New Zealand

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

growers-collection-logoI couldn’t have been more surprised to rank a Pinot Blanc among my favorite white wines of 2008. Much less a wine from New Zealand.  But Pyramid Valley is a very exciting winery. My notes on this wine read:

Dry (nearly), rich, creamy, stony. Just a hint of oak (15% new French). Super-complete on the palate. Rich, layered, long. Toasted apple, marmalade, coriander, fresh cassia, baked lemon, fresh cream, honey.

Needless to say, I had to find out more about the people who made such a stunning wine from such a humble grape. In brief, what I discovered confirmed that this was, in fact, a very special winery and destined, for nothing but the right reasons, for fame.

The winery which, along with its four “home” vineyards, is located near Waikari in North Canterbury, on the south island of New Zealand, is owned by Claudia and Mike Weersing. They purchased it in 2000, after a long search for the perfect place to make exceptional wines from Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. Claudia manages the vineyards, where she adheres to strict biodynamic practices. Mike has a background in wine that is as impressive as any I have heard of: he has worked for Hubert de Montille, Nicolas Potel and Domaine de la Pousse d’Or in Burgundy, Jean-Michel Deiss and Marc Kreydenweiss in Alsace, and Randall Graham in Spain, among others. Mike has become a strict non-interventionalist winemaker, following practices of biodynamics in both the vineyard and the winery, and is a firm believer in high-density plantings (at 10,000 to 12,000 vines per hectare they have the highest by a long stretch in New Zealand) and low yields, and cultures all of his own yeasts from the naturally occurring yeasts in the vineyards.

But regardless of technique, it is the wines here that truly shine. This wine is one of the wines that they call their Grower’s Collection. The Grower’s Collection wines come from select vineyards that are worthy of singling out for praise. In each case, the Weersing’s agree to pay the maximum amount that the vineyard would have made by selling the grapes to someone else, and agree to pay for all of the extra work that they demand in the vineyard. This way they ensure that everything is done to their exact specifications (sometimes they even do it themselves). The Grower’s collection includes a number of exceptional Pinot Noir’s as well as a Semillon, a Riesling and this Pinot Blanc from Kerner Estate in the Waihopai Valley in Marlborough.

This is a powerful white wine that will drink well now through 2015 and possibly longer. Because of the power of this wine, it is a great candidate for all sorts of cheese (hard, soft, blue, cow, goat), but will also do equally well with fish, shellfish, pork and poultry.

2006 Saviah Cellars The Jack Columbia Valley, Washington

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

06-the-jack-front-2_75x3_75I don’t have a big story to tell about this winery: Rich Funk, the owner and winemaker of Saviah Cellars moved to the Walla Walla Valley in 1991, and fell in love with the local wines. By 2000, he had his own winery, and though he had no formal training, the wines have been, without fail, delicious. He’s an incredibly nice guy, and I can’t quite figure out why more people don’t know about what he’s doing. He’s what I call a practical winemaker, as opposed to an idealistic one, reacting to each situation as he sees fit, rather than making bold proclamations about what he does and doesn’t do. If the wine continues to be this good, I say let the French make bold statements, and continue being practical.richard-funk

The wine is made up of 88% Merlot from McClellan (as in Casey . . . of Seven Hills Winery) Vineyard in Walla Walla Valley, and Milbrandt and Preston Vineyards in the Columbia Valley; 6% Cabernet Sauvignon from the McClellan Vineyard: 4% Cabernet Franc, also McClellan, and 2% Syrah from Lewis Vineyard. It is aged in 100% American oak (by the way, if anyone ever tells you American oak isn’t as good as French oak, tell them you know better, it just depends on the circumstances) 30% of which is new.

It’s a rich, fruity wine, with a nice dollop of cocoa, coffee and spice from the oak, but the tannins are soft and lush, and it’s not in the least bit aggressive. Because of the softness of this wine, it goes with a wide range of food, from hamburgers to roast salmon, and is spectacular with blue cheese. This is a wine to drink, not to think about, and I say drink it now, knowing that if you can’t bear to open the bottle, it will last easily through 2010.

2005 Neil Ellis Sincerely Shiraz Western Cape, South Africa

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

sincerely-shirazThere are three stories here, the first is that this is an alarmingly good bottle of wine (you’ll see for yourself soon enough I’m sure) and the other two have to do with the place the wine is from and the very exceptional producer.

South Africa doesn’t get a lot of respect from most wine consumers, and in some sense it is South Africa’s fault. After European and North American countries lifted their embargo, South Africa flooded the market with cheap, strange wine from the Pinotage grape that was mass produced by a government cooperative called KWV that had 100% control of all winemaking in South Africa. We can’t forget those wines, they were strange on good days. But South African wines can be wonderful, and the winemaking and grape growing situation in the country has improved greatly in the last 20 years. Hundreds of the small farms that used to be forced to sell their grapes to KWV are now making hand-crafted wines of great quality. The Western Cape, in particular (home to the famous area of Stellensbosch, among others), is one of the world’s perfect climates for grapes. There is plenty of sun, but also an intense cooling influence from the Atlantic currents that keeps the wines fresh and allows them to hang on the vines for a very long time. Shiraz is quickly becoming the preferred red variety (I guess calling it Shiraz is a Southern Hemisphere thing!)

Neil Ellis is one of the stars of this revolution, and his philosophy of partnering with vineyards for the long term, and encouraging them to take serious quality measures has definitely paid off. The Syrah for this wine comes primarily from the the Oude Nektar Farm (where the winery is located) in Jonkershoek, Stellensbosch, and from Contreberg Farm, in Groenekloof, Darling. The wine spends 10 months in 1-4 year old French oak barrels, and the hint of oak compliments the smoke and spice that are a natural part of the flavor of Syrah from this area.

This is a great wine for Texas style barbeque (dry), and just about anything grilled. It’s also particularly good with sweet potato French fries (actually all kinds of sweet potatoes). The wine is at its peak now, and will continue to drink well through 2011.

2004 Domaine Gauby Les Calcinaires Côtes de Roussillon Villages

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

It’s hard to know where to start with this wine. It is from one of my all time favorite producers, and from one of my all time favorite places. I think I’ll start with the place, because it’s pretty neat.

Domaine Gauby is located about 20 Kilometers northwest of Peripignan, in far northwest of Roussillon, close to Spain. The climate here is dry, and the soil is particularly infertile. Imagine the set of one of Clint Eastwood’s Spaghetti Western’s and you can get a good approximation of what it looks like. The soil is poor, and vines are old, and the result is that they have very low yields, and make very intensely flavored wines. In the bad old days of French wine, before there were laws protecting appellations, the wines from this area were the preferred strengtheners for the much less sturdy Bordeaux and Burgundy that were being shipped to Great Britain and the New World. After this became illegal, it was said that blending one barrel of wine from Fennouillide (the area is named after the fennel plants that grow like tumbleweed) would give 50 barrels of non-descript plonk enough character to make an enjoyable wine.

About thirty years ago, the current generation of vineyard owners began to realize that their parents had wasted an incredible resource, and started to keep their grapes for themselves and make wine. Gerard Gauby is widely credited with starting this movement, and his wines have become the standard for wines from all over Roussillon. Part of what makes them great is that he continues, after thirty years of success, to evolve and improve: he now boasts entirely biodynamic farming, and entirely natural winemaking (he doesn’t add ANYTHING to the wines). His wines have a depth, and power that only comes from very special places that are very carefully farmed (low yields, no chemicals, and utmost respect for the vines). The results are really spectacular.

This wine is made from 50% Syrah, 25% Mourvedre, 10% Carignan and 15% Grenache. 20% of the wine is aged in Barrique for 10 months, to round and soften the wine, and the wine is not fined, filtered nor cold stabilized. Les Calcinaires is a powerful, with layers of deep flavor, but feels very elegant on the palate, with freshness and acidity to spare. I recommend decanting this wine for 5 or 10 minutes before you drink it, the aromas really benefit from the air. 6,000 bottles of this wine were made (I said bottles, not cases).

This is a great pairing with fish (really, especially sea bass, halibut and salmon), any type of beef, root vegetables, and just about anything else. Just don’t serve it with anything sweet. This wine already has a bit of bottle age, and is drinking well now, but will continue to drink well at least through 2012.

2006 Bodegas Olivares Altos de la Hoyas Monastrell VV Jumilla, Spain

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

olivares20altosJumilla, a virtually unheard-of vineyard area southeast of Madrid, is one of the gems in a country that is full of great wine. The soil in Jumilla is made up of sand and chalk, and as a result, the area escaped the devastation of Phyloxera, the North American root louse that destroyed most of Europe’s vineyards towards the end of the 19th century and forced the majority of vineyards throughout the world to be planted on the roots of different (mostly native American) vine varieties. This has two great benefits: first, Jumilla is one of the very few (less than 10 I think) sources of vines that are more than one hundred years old in all of Europe; and second, that Jumilla vineyards are planted on their own rootstock – a distinction that many serious wine geeks (me included) believe allows the wine to have a more intense varietal flavor and a purer expression of the place that they are from. But don’t tell anyone . . . I’d prefer to keep Jumilla as our little secret.

Bodegas Olivares,  as a winery is a relatively new creation. The Olivares family has owned some of the best vineyards in Jumilla for some time, but always sold the wine off in bulk to other producers. In 1996, they hired Francisco Selva as a winemaker, and began keeping their exceptional grapes for themselves and making some stunning wines. The vineyards the family owns are all planted on their own rootstock, and many of the vines date to 1872! The wines are made almost entirely from Monastrell (a.k.a. Mourvèdre, Mataro or, in rural Roussillon, estrangle chien – the dog strangler), with occasional tiny bits of Grenache thrown in. The winery employs mostly 2 to 3 year old French oak barrels, which they purchase used from the best Burgundy producers. All in all, a classy operation, with some of the most exceptional vineyards in all of Spain.

Altos de la Hoya Monastrell Vielles Vignes is Bodegas Olivares’ flagship dry red wine (they also make a stunning sweet red called simply Monastrell Dulce). Altos de la Hoya refers to the location in Jumilla of the vineyards: it is the coolest, and therefore best, subdistrict of Jumilla. The Monastrell plantings that make up this wine are all from original rooted vines, a large part planted in 1872. The wine is dry and immensely powerful, with a stunning dark purple color and a heady, spicy aroma that is haunting. This is a wine that requires big food: think Southwestern cuisine, Barbeque, steak, venison, lamb, and the super rich, slightly sweet food from the best restaurants that serve “New American” cuisine. This is also a great wine for Blue Cheeses like Spain’s Cabrales. This wine will also age admirably, and can be drunk now through 2015 without a second thought.

2006 Domaine Alary La Grange Daniel Vin de Pays de la Principauté d’Orange, S. Rhône, France

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

alary-grange-danielDaniel is the tenth generation of Alary’s to make wine in the village of Cairanne in the Southern Rhône Valley, and his son Denis is the eleventh. The Alary’s are the most respected producers in Cairanne, with land in the best vineyards in the village: Font d’Estevanas, Brunotte, Gerbaude and Jean de Verde. They use oak sparingly, but effectively, and all of the wines have an amazing depth of flavor.

Cairanne lies on the east bank of the Rhône river, north of Gigondas and east of Rasteau. The soil substrate is sandy marl that is typical of this area of the Rhône, covered with conglomerate (read: stones and dirt). The wines from Cairanne are consistently good, and nearly always full, spicy and well-delineated mixtures of Grenache, Syrah, Mourvedre and the other typical Southern Rhône grapes.alary-vineyards

The Alarys also have a small plot of forty-five year old Cabernet Sauvignon that has very low yields and offers exceptionally characterful fruit. However, Cabernet Sauvignon is not permitted in any of the AOC wines in the Rhône Valley. It would be a shame to let these beautiful vines go to waste, so the Alarys blend them with roughly equal parts Grenache, Syrah, Cinsault and Counoise (Cinsault and Counoise are to of the less well-known, but very important blending grapes of this region). Because of the Cabernet Sauvignon in the blend, this wine can’t be given a proper appellation, and is instead labeled as Vin de Pays de la Principauté d’Orange. Because it lacks a fancy Appellation, even though it is every bit as good as their other wines, this wine is always high on my list of the best deals in France. This year is no exception.

A dry, medium-full-bodied red, the spicy notes in this wine make it nearly infinitely flexible with food. A couple of don’t miss combinations, however, are beef in any form, roast lamb, and any sort of stew (in Provence & the Southern Rhône they serve a stew called daube that consists of beef, garlic, vegetables, olives, wine and herbs de Provence and tastes like it was made for La Grange Daniel!). Drink this wine from now until 2011, maybe longer.

2007 Berger Blauer Zweigelt Kremstal, Austria

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

bergerIn the United States, Austria is much better known for white wines (Riesling and Gruner Veltliner), than for its red wine. But there are a lot of really good red wines here as well. What I particularly like is that they are full of fruit and spice, almost like a good Zinfandel. Anyway, this wine is made from the Zweigelt grape (Blauer just means blue, and doesn’t signify any special type), which is the most common of Austria’s high-quality red varieties.

Kremstal is the name for the vineyard areas around the town of Krems on the Donau (Danube) river. The area encompasses both steeply terraced vineyards along the banks of the river (where the whites are grown) and plateaus to the north of the river where the reds thrive. The soil is a strangely soft loess, composed of half soil and half rock, with large portions of limestone and clay. This soil composition, as well as the long, sunny growing season (because it is cool here, grapes stay on the vines for a long time) make for full-bodied, luscious reds.

Weingut Berger is a humble but very forward-thinking, family estate, that makes consistently delicious wines from its own, very small vineyard holdings. No oak is used at all here, on either reds or whites, and the family was one of the first in Austria to have temperature-controlled fermentation tanks and cellars – they were installed in 1990, years ahead of many of their much more famous (and expensive!) neighbors. The total production of all wines at this estate is 5400 cases.

This is a very flexible wine, and will go well with a variety of foods, from charcuterie and cheese, to fatty fish (this is a great red wine and fish pairing), to poultry of all sorts, and even leaner cuts of beef such as flank steak. This is also a wine that, despite its very forward and fruity character, will age admirably, so drink it between now and 2012 . . . maybe longer.

This Wine is an especially good deal because it comes in a very unusual one-liter bottle (you get 33% more for free!).  The winery has stopped using corks altogether because of the risk of cork taint in the wines, but there are no one-liter bottles available to accommodate screw-caps yet, so they have chosen to close the wine with a crown cap (like on a beer botle!) rather than using a cork.  Don’t worry, the wine is really classy despite the pakaging.

2006 Les Rocailles/Pierre Boniface Roussette de Savoie, France

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

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Ah, where do I start here! This is one of my favorite white wines that nobody has ever heard of. Just thinking about the charmingly old-fashioned label spawns waves of good thoughts. But here’s a little information to help you understand why I like this wine so much.

Savoie, located on the French side of the Swiss border, and nestled in the Alps, is nearly as large as Bordeaux, yet produces only one-fiftieth as much wine. The majority of wine here is made from the Jacquère grape, and is crisp and refreshing: like an alpine stream. This is not one of those! Roussette (sometimes called Altesse) is a less-common, but more prized variety, producing wines that are richer and more complex, yet still refreshing and reflective of their alpine environment.

When Pierre Boniface took over Les Rocailles from his father they made one wine (Apremont, from Jacquére grapes) from just under 20 acres of vineyards. Pierre now makes nine different wines, has greatly improved the facilities by adding stainless steel fermentation tanks to capture the purity of fruit, and has increased his vineyard holding ten times over. He makes about 6,000 cases of Roussette de Savoie from just over 22 acres of vines. Eighty percent of his wines are sold within Savoie, and a further ten percent throughout the rest of France. This leaves a measly 600 cases of his Roussette for the entire rest of the world!

This wine has a perfect combination of richness, fruit, and acidity, and a wonderful texture to boot. It’s a really, really, pretty wine. It’s also very flexible with food: the locals drink it with veal and pork (wild boar, actually) and it does wonderfully with Reblochon and Tomme de Savoie (the two most famous local cheeses). I also love this wine with just about any roast root vegetable. This is the most age worthy of the whites this month, and will last well into 2012, but I have a lot of trouble saving wines that taste this good now.

2007 Crios de Susana Balbo Torrontés Cafayete, Calchaquí, Salta, Argentina

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

criostorrontesCafayate is probably the greatest place in the world for Torrontés grapes. With elevations between 4800 and 5600 feet, there are few wine regions in the world at higher altitude (all of which are in Argentina). The weather here is dry, the soil is sandy, and there is intense sunlight despite the cooler temperatures: these conditions are perfectly suited to Torrontés.

Torrontés is THE white grape of Argentina, it is even a popular flavor for ice cream there. There is nothing quite like the way it tastes, but if I had to describe it, I would say it tastes like a combination of Viognier and Sauvignon Blanc, with the best characteristics of each grape. In fact, ampelographers (grape identification scientists) think that it is a cross between Muscat of Alexandria and Criolla Chica (called the Mission grape in California).

Susana Balbo is one of the great Argentine winemakers, and one of the few who is a woman. After making wine for others for 20 years, in 2001 Susana started producing wine under her own label. There are two lines of wines: Susana Balbo and Crios (Children) de Susana Balbo. The Crios line is for wines that are fruitier and simpler, and among other things, don’t get as much oak treatment. Because of the nature of Torrontés, there is only a Crios bottling, and it never sees any oak at all (though it is plenty rich on its own). All of Susana’s wines follow.

This is not a wine to hold on to, it’s a wine to drink with great gusto before the end of 2009. Some of my favorite pairings with this wine are sashimi or nigiri sushi, anything deep-fried (especially tempura), salmon, shrimp, crab and lobster.


2007 Domaine des Cassagnoles Cuvée Gros Manseng Vin de Pays de Côtes de Gascogne, France

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

cassagnoles-logoVin de Pays de The Côtes de Gascogne is the appellation for wine that comes from the same geographical area as Armagnac in Southwest France. Cool Atlantic air rushes into the valley along the Garonne river (to the North) and the Adour River (the the South) and tempers the otherwise very warm summers, creating grapes that have very fresh fruit flavors, and lots of racy acidity.

Domaine des Cassagnoles is a modest estate, with 76 hectares (about 190 acres) of land just west of the town of Condom along the Baise-Darre river. All of the grapes (for the wines and the excellent Armagnac, which isn’t available currently in the US) are made from the estate vineyards. The Proprietors, Gilles Baumann and Janine Cardeillac Baumann took over the estate from Janine’s parents in 1974. Their daughter Laure joined the estate officially in 2002.

This wine is one of four that the Baumanns make from the 9 hectares of Gros Manseng that were planted in the late seventies. It is aged briefly in oak, and the richness from the oak ageing rounds out the zingy fruit of Gros Manseng very nicely. The combination of richness and acidity make this great for an aperitif or with soft cheeses, and it also goes well with roast chicken, white fish of all sorts and simple pork dishes (whithout a lot of spice) or anything with truffles. This wine should drink well from 2008 – 2010 and maybe longer – but there’s no need to wait, drink it now, it’s delicious.

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