The Next Big Thing - May '09

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These are the wines that shipped with The Next Big Thing in May, 2009

 

The Next Big Thing – May ‘09

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Each month I talk about how great the shipment is, and this month is no exception.  In fact, I’m pretty sure that this month is the best group of wines I have put together for this club yet.  A lot of what I’m excited about is the variety: this month’s wines range from breathtakingly minerally, to incomprehensibly rich, and are all brilliant examples of my deeply held belief that great wines can be made in any style, the key is great vineyards, carefully thought out and executed winemaking, and respect for the grapes.   Most importantly, all of the wines are unbelievably delicious.

As one might surmise from the above description, we travel between the old world (read Europe) and the New World (everywhere else) on our journey this month.  We begin in Austria with a Slovenian/Austrian joint project that delivers in minerality what most white Burgundies could only hope for.  From there, we travel to France’s Southern Rhône Cru of Vacqueyras for a natural, and naturally delicious extremely limited production stunner.  Finally, we land close to home for a Bordeaux-styled blend from California that, as one critic so unoriginally, but totally accurately, puts it, “turns the volume up way above 10″.

If you had all red selections substitute Austria’s Wachau for Italy’s Piedmont and a maverick winemaker and you will get the picture.  Prepare to be surprised, wowed, and convinced that nothing is better than a good bottle of wine.

I hope that you enjoy this month’s adventure.

To see the details, click here

To see the all-red details, click here

2007 Pichler-Krutzler Grüner Veltliner Loibner Klostersatz, Wachau, Austria

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Label

Bottle of Gruner

FX Pichler is one of, if not the, greatest producers in Austria.  The biodynamic Grüner Veltliners and Rieslings from his family’s 100 year old estate encompassing some of the best vineyards in the Wachau, are some of the most stunning white wines that anyone produces, anywhere in the world.  Eric Krutzler, a friend of FX, and I believe FX’s brother in-law, is the Slovenian wonderkind behind the now defunct Dveri-Pax, and the newly formed, and very exciting Marof wines.  They have teamed up to make a wine that is wholly different than what either produces on their own, but equally exciting, and as good as either one.

This wine, from the one of the Pichler Family’s best vineyards, Loibner Klostersatz, is stunningly transparent.  It sings of stones, and bright, citrusy acidity, but underneath the melody lie darker, brooding flavors and aromas of smoke, black pepper, grilled asparagus, exotic flowers and fruit.  Only a few hundred cases were made, and only a fraction of that made it to the US.  Try this wine with asparagus, delicate white fish, shellfish (either raw or cooked) and sashimi.  Drink now-2015.

Loibner Klostersatz

2006 Roucas Toumba Vacqueyras, Côtes du Rhône, France

Monday, May 18th, 2009

The Southern Rhône Valley is, for me, like Greek mystic philosophy (I’m thinking Plotinus here): just when you think that you have a grasp on what is going on, the firmament shifts and the new level of understanding you have provides you with further questions that seem far harder to answer than the questions you originally had.  The Southern Rhône, particularly Châteauneuf du Pape, has been one of my first, and most endearing, passions in wine.  But each time I think that I have discovered the code that allows me to tell good from bad, and great from merely good, a wine comes along that breaks the mold entirely and introduces me to a new group of wines that are yet more profound, and less well-defined.

Two of these recent life-changing revelations are joined in Roucas Toumba.  Vacqueyras, where Roucas Toumba’s meager 3 ha (about 7 acres) of vineyards are located is one such discovery.  Vacqueyras is higher, stonier, and more remote (relatively) than Châteauneuf du Pape.  The wines have more minerality, brighter fruit, and more of the Provençal herbiness that is such a charming character of wines from the southeast of France.  Vacqueyras doesn’t get the love it deserves, in part because for many years the winemaking there didn’t do justice to the terroir: that is changing, quickly.

The other revelatory discovery I have made in the Rhône is a movement towards hyper-natural wine producing.  In the case of Roucas Toumba, this means no chemicals in the vineyard or winery, no synthetic materials (read plastic), no commercial additives (chaptalization, acidity, tannins etc), and a minimum of new oak (he purchases a few barrels each year so that he can rotate them in).  This approach is particularly suited to the Southern Rhône becase of the dry, windy, hot conditions that naturally control rot and other vine scourges, as well as the generally old vines that are in great supply.

Eric Bouletin, is the fiery proprietor of this family estate named Roucas Toumba, which means tumbling stones, after the 18th century home on the property.  Out of the total production of 1100 cases, 300 cases of the top wine, this Vacqueyras, are made from roughly 60% Grenache (aged in large neutral oak), 25% Syrah (aged in small barrels), 12% Mourvedre and 3% white varities.  Think blackberry, Cherry Heering, herbs de Provence, grilled meat, and minerals.  Try it with grilled halibut, roast lamb, anything with mushrooms and herbs, or olives.  Drink now – 2025.

Link to a great via Michelin article (in French, sorry) about Roucas Toumba

2005 Orin Swift Cellars Papillon Napa Valley, California

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Papillon Label

Now for some controversy!  It is currently fashionable amongst wine-types like myself to deride wines, particularly from California, that have too much alcohol, too much glass (I love referring to the giant, ultra-heavy bottles used by certain winemakers as “ego-glass”), and too cool of a name or label.  But who decides what “too much” is?   I am reminded of an episode of WKRP in Cincinatti called “Clean Up Radio Everywhere” (finale for season 3 in 1981)  about a religious organization that blackmails radio stations who play songs it feels are objectionable – but Andy saves the day when he shows the Jerry Falwellesque frontman to be a hypocrite who makes decisions about what is objectionable on the fly, and on his own.  I’m as guilty as the next sommelier when it comes to wines like this: I often unfairly write them off, while secretly admitting that they’re enjoyable to drink.  Orin Swift Cellars wines fit all of the above characteristics, but are better than just enjoyable to drink: they are stunning.

The label is a picture taken by iconic rock music photographer Greg Gorman of Vince Tofanelli’s grape and mud smeared hands with “Papillon” written across his knuckles.  As far as over-the-top labels go, this is actually pretty cool.  The irony of Papillon (French for butterfly) both as a name for this big, burly wine, and as what is written across Vince’s filthy, brawny knuckles bears at least a minute of mirthful reflection (though at least one source says that the wine, and photograph, are called papillon because it was the first word that came to mind that fit across vince’s knuckles).

That brings us to Vince Tofanelli, who’s stunning vineyards outside of Calistoga are the source of most of David Phinney’s (owner/winemaker of Orin Swift Cellars) wines.   The vineyards are organically farmed and the vines are old (many planted with the original planting in 1929) and head-trained.  Tofanelli vineyards are best known for their Zinfandel, but this sure is good.

This blend of 63% Cabernet Sauvignon, 19% Merlot, 9% Cabernet Franc, 7% Malbec and 2% Petite Verdot isn’t subtle.   This is a big, rich wine, but it has layers and layers of complex flavor, beyond cassis and blackberry fruit, there is tar and smoke and spice and entire worlds of smells and flavors to explore.  And despite this blitzkrieg of flavor, there is admirable balance in the form of silky tannins and some welcome acidity.  This is awfully good wine!   While it goes wonderfully with a dry-aged steak, this is a great opportunity to drink a big wine with some of the new American cuisine that has some sweetness to it.  Try cocoa rubbed bison, or even a piece of the soon to arrive Yukon River Salmon (only the fattiest salmon will stand up to this).  Drink now – 2020 +

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