Wine

A collection of links from the reporters and editors of the Dining section.
A collection of links from the reporters and editors of the Dining section.
42 minutes ago
craig.camp posted a photo:
craig.camp posted a photo:
about 1 hour ago
craig.camp posted a photo:
craig.camp posted a photo:
about 1 hour ago
I assembled her new table and chairs while she was napping…
I assembled her new table and chairs while she was napping…
about 2 hours ago
A review of the Binyamina Reserve Unoaked Chardonnay 2011 and the Highland Park Loki 15-year-old single malt Scotch Whisky. By Joshua E. London and Lou Marmon Washington Jewish Week  May 9, 2013 Last week we noted that a wine’...
A review of the Binyamina Reserve Unoaked Chardonnay 2011 and the Highland Park Loki 15-year-old single malt Scotch Whisky. By Joshua E. London and Lou Marmon Washington Jewish Week  May 9, 2013 Last week we noted that a wine’s flavors are primarily the result of how and where the grapes are grown coupled with the skill of winemaker, and that wine is essentially free of additives. There are parts of the wine producing world where the nonadditive approach is simply common practice and well-established tradition, while there are other regions where this sort of nonadditive winemaking is actually regulated. Even where regulation prevails, however, there are sometimes stipulated allowances for certain invasive steps and ingredients. In some regions for example, where grapes develop with low sugar content, the winemakers are permitted to add some sugar to provide more sugar than the grapes can do on their own for the yeast to ferment into alcohol (this is commonly referred to as “chaptalization”). Another common additive is sulfur dioxide (SO2), generally noted with the slightly alarming all caps, “CONTAINS SULFITES,” on the back of most wine labels. Even though this sounds bad, sulfites are naturally occurring anyway because wine yeasts produce sulfur dioxide during the fermentation process. Indeed, wines with no added sulfites contain anywhere from 6 to 40 parts per million of sulfite already. Additional sulfites are added merely to preserve freshness and stop fermentation in fruits and juices. Sulfite use has been in vogue since Roman times. In modern winemaking, sulfur is used as an antiseptic to kill yeast, bacteria and molds, and sulfur is also used as an antioxidant because it can inhibit enzymes that cause oxidation. Mostly though, as we noted last week, the most frequent “additive” to wine is simply the use of oak barrels, either as the vessel used for fermentation or, more commonly, as the vessel used for aging the wine. Various types of oak have diverse effects upon the wines. For example, American oak is thought to impart more vanilla flavors into wine as compared to French oak. The interior of the barrels are also “charred” or “toasted” by fire to various degrees by the cooperages, depending on the species of oak and the specifications of the client. It is up to the winemaker to choose the oak type, toast level and duration of contact with the developing wine. Occasionally, in any given harvest (“vintage” in wine-speak), some of the wine may be given, say, medium toasted American oak treatment while other wine might be given lightly toasted French oak treatment, and then all of the barrels will be blended together for the final product. Since oak barrels are expensive, some wineries merely add oak chips or staves of oak barrels to the stainless steel tanks in order to approximate some of the same effects of actual barrel Aegina. The positive influences of oak are upon the color, body, texture and character of the wines. However it can also be used to mask flaws and, for a while, there was a tendency toward too much oak, resulting in some wines tasting more like twigs than fruit. Not surprisingly the pendulum has shifted. Now there are wines that the consumer had associated with oak-aging that are increasingly being made in stainless steel, with no oak influence at all. Chardonnay has long been made into noteworthy wines without seeing any wood at all. The advocates of “unoaked” Chardonnays believe that the wood masks the wine and that unoaked more accurately expresses the nuances of the grape. A kosher Israeli example is the Binyamina Reserve Unoaked Chardonnay 2011, a vibrantly flavored wine expressing loads of peach, pineapple, orange and melons on a medium frame with a clean, mineral laced finish. Spirits-wise, rather than leap headlong into another discussion of oak and whisky we thought we’d return to
about 3 hours ago
So, like, what is this stuff, anyway? I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 character...
So, like, what is this stuff, anyway? I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers! 10 Tendril White Label Pinot Noir (Willamette Valley): Inching its way towards spicy awesomeness, should really bloom in 5 or 6 years $48 B+ >>find this wine 10 Euclid Sierra Foothills Syrah (Sierra Foothills): Not afraid of exploring the feminine side underneath the manly, smoky exterior. $40 B+ >>find this wine 09 Z'ivo Pinot Noir (Eola-Amity Hills): Juicy wild cherry, slathering itself in spices as it admires its own sexy-thang-ness. $40 B+ >>find this wine 11 Cloudburst Chardonnay (Margaret River): Like plugging into the Death Star's power generator, if made of lemon curd & stone fruit $150 A- >>find this wine 11 Altos Las Hormigas Terroir Malbec (Uco Valley): Argentina's silkiness + France's peppery spice and flowers = our crowd-pleaser. $17 B >>find this wine 11 Altos Las Hormigas Reserva Malbec (Mendoza): A well-lit view of a peppery, chalky and deep dig into their mysterious bit of earth. $30 B+ >>find this wine 08 Nieto Senetiner Cadus Finca Villa Blanca Malbec (Mendoza): From 100 yr old vines, this gaucho has far to ride & ain't in a hurry. $NA A- >>find this wine 11 Nieto Senetiner Malbec (Mendoza): High volume, high on the oak, but high on the quality, age-ability, likeability & nods to France $12 B >>find this wine 12 Nieto Senetiner Don Nicanor Chardonnay Viognier (Mendoza): Starts with honeydew, fnishes with grapefruit, cleans up along the way. $20 B+ >>find this wine 06 O Fournier Syrah Cabernet (Uco Valley): Kind of like artisanal Spanish tailoring on some high-end South American threads. $95 A- >>find this wine 06 O Fournier Alfa Crux Red (Uco Valley): Savory, herbal, meaty Malbec meal served up on stylish and elegant earthen dishware. $48 A- >>find this wine 11 O Fournier Urban Uco Torrontes (Cafayate): Floral, pithy, rich, structured, and coming to the rescue of your wine spending account $10 B+ >>find this wine 09 O Fournier B Crux Red (Mendoza): Leatehr-clad dark and light berries, duking it out over a span of austere, flower-laden territory $27 B+ >>find this wine 12 O Fournier Urban Uco Malbec Tempranillo (Uco Valley): Sweet, plummy, and a little forward, but underestimate it & you'll regret it. $12 B >>find this wine 11 O Fournier B Crux Sauvignon Blanc (Uco Valley): Melons & hay; also, about as sexy and heady as a passionate roll in that hay. $19 B+ >>find this wine Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today! Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com Copyright © 2012. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For May 20, 2013 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!
about 3 hours ago
Have to say, it’s pretty amazing that you can buy a six year old wine as a current release for just over $20.
Have to say, it’s pretty amazing that you can buy a six year old wine as a current release for just over $20.
about 3 hours ago
One of my wine guys over at Shoppers Vineyard recommended this wine, I was looking for more good wines from the South of France. There is quite a renaissance going on there driven by new generations of wine makers and...
One of my wine guys over at Shoppers Vineyard recommended this wine, I was looking for more good wines from the South of France. There is quite a renaissance going on there driven by new generations of wine makers and...
about 3 hours ago
Why should you care? The distinctive South African variety called pinotage was created in 1925 at the University of Stellenbosch by crossing pinot noir and cinsault, the latter grape known at the time as  “hermitage” in South Africa. Alt...
Why should you care? The distinctive South African variety called pinotage was created in 1925 at the University of Stellenbosch by crossing pinot noir and cinsault, the latter grape known at the time as  “hermitage” in South Africa. Although pinotage is the Cape wine region’s signature red grape, it’s a variety that polarizes tasters, especially those outside South Africa. Its detractors are put off by what they describe as aromas of burnt rubber or banana, and many traditionally styled examples make rather rustic ambassadors for South African wine. But the best pinotage bottlings are complex, deep and serious wines, and many modern-style examples are juicy, stuffed with fruit and utterly satisfying at a reasonable price. What does it taste like? The suave, cleanly made Painted Wolf 2010 Guillermo Pinotage Swartland from Painted Wolf is one of the best values in pinotage I’ve tasted in recent years. Its perfumed aromas of black raspberry, blueberry, spices, game and smoke reminded me of syrah. On the sweet, pliant palate, ripe acidity frames black and blue fruit flavors, and the wine’s smooth, building tannins give it the structure for at least a few years of positive development in bottle. My rating: 90 points. How much does it cost, and where can you find it? $20; Southern Starz.
about 5 hours ago
Jean Tatin tasting grapes during the vintage Many congratulations to Jean Tatin (Quincy) and to Château Soucherie the two Loire trophy winners at this year's Decanter World Wine Awards. Jean won the under £15 Loire Sauvignon Trophy for h...
Jean Tatin tasting grapes during the vintage Many congratulations to Jean Tatin (Quincy) and to Château Soucherie the two Loire trophy winners at this year's Decanter World Wine Awards. Jean won the under £15 Loire Sauvignon Trophy for his 2012 Cuvée Vin Noble, AC Quincy. Château Soucherie won the Loire Sweet Wine Trophy with their 2010 Coteaux du Layon Chaume.
about 5 hours ago