Showing posts with label Wine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wine. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

ICC2011: Coverage of Spanish Wine and Cheese Pairings

Iberian Blood and Curd: Pairing Wines and Cheeses of Spain

Spanish cheese expert Enric Canut and Sommelier Kerin Auth
Spanish cheese expert Enric Canut and Sommelier Kerin Auth
Take a seasoned, affable expert in Spanish cheese like Enric Canut and a motorcycle-riding, Spanish-speaking wine expert like Kerin Auth, and expect to see an increase in your Iberian wine pairing vocabulary. If you'd never thought of Albariño as a lush, fleshy woman or Godello as an austere lady, then maybe you should. And if you'd never picked up a fishy, harbor aroma from a cow's milk cheese aged for five months on the island of Menorca and then nibbled on some Mahon-Menorca Cured DOP, this workshop had you reassessing your priorities. A spot-on pairing of a Zamorano (that tasted of mussels) with a "barely legal" (according to Auth) Amontillado Sherry (Palomino, Gonzalez, Byass Viña AB—Auth's "every day drinking Sherry—literally") filled the room as neighbors broke into chatter with one another. Auth put it another way, "The Sixth Sense of wine pairings brings you to a place you never had before."

Click here to read on StarChefs.com

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Top Pairs: Indian Food Wine Pairings at NYC's Junoon



See the News & Media section of Chef Vikas Khanna's blog
This feature appears alongside Sam Sifton's review of the restaurant in The New York Times  : )



Top Pairs: Indian Food Wine Pairings at Manhattan's Junoon Restaurant

by Jessica Dukes with Will Blunt with photos by Shannon Sturgis 
Vol. 16
June 2011
An ice-cold bottle of Kingfisher Lager leaps into your head—because you’re familiar with the beer’s bready sweetness and punchy herbal hops, and because you’ve been asked, “what goes with both Madras curry and Rogan Josh?” In India, from the Kashmir to Kerala, proteins and vegetables typically cede center stage to sauces of varying density, curries, spice, and heat. And chilled malt and hops have long been the antidote to piquant aggression. But for the thinking person’s beverage director or sommelier, India’s kaleidoscope of spice combinations and variable heat spectrum begs for something more than a simple thirst-quencher.
The dryness and low alcohol content of a cold brew may be adept at soothing palates set ablaze by spice, but Master Sommelier and lecturer Scott Carney of Junoon in New York City wants to introduce guests to the illimitable nuances of wine and their power when paired with Indian food. With wine, he hopes “to give the food and its complexity more respect. Beer is the default beverage setting [for Indian cuisine.] But I think the food here warrants something more than that.”
Restaurant
Who
  • Sommelier Scott Carney
  • Long before Scott Carney came on as beverage director of Junoon, he was an integral player in the New York City wine scene, earning his Master Sommelier title while directing the beverage program atGotham Bar & Grill. Since Junoon's opening in December 2010, Carney has built the restaurant's wine list from scratch, assembling 250 labels to accompany Chef Vika Khanna’s cuisine. Carney's pairings harmonize wine with the complexities of Indian spices and sauces, and complement the wide array of cooking techniques found in Indian gastronomy. He has found that, unlike beer, wines can either amplify the heat in a dish or soothe the palate suffering from too much spice. Carney is inspired by the “excitement of sensory travel,” and invites diners “to pack curiosity and explore the sub-continent” through the interplay between its cuisine and the fruit of the vine.
Wine
2008 Esprit de Beaucastel Tablas Creek
Dish
Monkfish Tikka Tandoor: Hung Yogurt, Serrano Chilies, and Mustard Seed Puree
Pairing Note
Chef Vikas Khanna’s tandoor clay oven produces tender, meaty, monkfish with a deep, roasted flavor. The aromatic, creamy, and spicy sauce envelops the table, whose guests, Carney hopes, will avoid guzzling beer by rote. Carney selects a 2008 Beaucastel Blanc, with a rounded body and low acidity to pair with the dish. Its elegant honeysuckle and lemon nose, with some tropical fruit, thyme, and tarragon notes, neutralize some of the dish’s more assertive flavors. The Serrano chilies inspired Carney, when he first began building the wine list in December 2010, to play with diners’ expectations about heat through complementary and contrastive pairings. With the Beaucastel, a creamy texture bordering on coconut oil coats the mouth, and sidesteps the pepper’s capsaicinoid scorch. “Chili peppers are hot, and the logic is that with heat like that, wine with a viscous quality will retard the influence of alcohol and spice.” And the wine’s cool, wet-stone finish keeps pace with the lingering, potent flavors of the sauce.

+ Click dish photo to enlarge
Wine
2007 Grüner Veltliner Achleiten Prager
Dish
Nadru Kofte Handi: Kashmiri Lotus Root, Homemade Cheese, Red Bhutan Rice, Cashew Nuts, and Cardamom
Pairing Note
Khanna’s lotus root patties with potato and paneer cheese is a traditional and bold vegetarian dish from the Muslim-influenced northern Kashmiri region. And the accompanying nutty sauce of crushed almonds and cashews has a spicy bite, thanks to paprika. For the pairing, Carney considered differing goals for Eastern versus Western palates, and landed with both feet firmly in the Orient, where taste buds seek out extra heat. By wielding a wine with a higher level of acid, Carney succeeds in amplifying the flame—and the result is more eye-opening stimulation than wallop. This Veltliner from Austria is intense, with notes of guava and lime. It has a fistful of peppery spice, balance from a touch of sweetness and cream, and a staunch, enduring finish. Carney is proud of the complementary interplay between the wine and the dish. “Wines like the Grüner or a Sauvignon Blanc celebrate heat with their vibrant acidity. This is a famous old vineyard, with old vines. There is also a coolness to the wine because of its moderate alcohol; a dryness but a richness. It’s a very good combination.”

+ Click dish photo to enlarge
Wine
2008 Gevrey Chambertin Vieilles Vignes Fourrier
Dish
Duck Tellicherry Peppercorn Handi: Tellicherry Peppercorns, Garlic, Curry Leaves, and Tamarind
Pairing Note
For a French twist on Indian flavors Khanna combines tart tamarind with intense, almost fruity Tellicherry peppercorns from the Malabar Coast, curry leaves, and unctuous duck. “Pinot Noir is a classic complement to game,” says Carney. “Duck is traditionally served with a little bit of fruit, either a sauce or compote. There are notes of earth [in the Gevrey]—it is a terroir wine in that regard—and the restraint and balance of a high-quality wine.” The young Burgundy bursts with aromatics: strawberry, cherry, underbrush, bristly pine, and peppery spice. On the tongue it’s bright, acidic, and full of fruit. Carney’s missive with the pairing was to demonstrate to the diner that, “wine is like another sauce, of sorts, meant to season the food, not dominate it, and add value in net terms to the dining experience.”

+ Click dish photo to enlarge
Wine
2001 Côte Rôtie Patrick Jasmin
Dish
Lamb Shank Handi: Braised with Onion, Tomato, Yogurt, and Junoon Seven Spice
Pairing Note
Lamb braised for hours in a traditional Northern Indian sauce awakens the romantic in Carney. “I love the idea that the lamb was slow-roasted and that the wine was aged—this wine is 10 years old. It still has power, but it has a maturity, as well.” The softened, leathery Syrah partners well with the slow-roasted meat. Delicate, deep flavors and spice in the wine align gracefully with the depth of flavor in the dish. Carney believes that splitting hairs over peppercorns, cumin, and cardamom, while attempting to locate each ingredient’s flavonoid touch-point, is a foolhardy exercise in missing the point. “The idea of the perfect pairing is a bit precious.” Instead, he hopes to alert tables to the possibilities that wine and the food can offer each other, especially in the context of an ancient cuisine that historically lacks the Western tradition of wine—for the diner, it’s a passage to adventure, either by the glass or bottle.

+ Click dish photo to enlarge

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Wine List Adventures: Off-roading Chilean Terroir

Click here to read this feature on StarChefs.com


Wine List Adventures: Off-roading Chilean Terroir

by Jessica Dukes
 Antoinette Bruno
May 2011


Biographies

Vintner Derek Mossman
MOVI Chile (Movement for Independent Vintners) - Santiago, Chile
Sommelier Fred Dexheimer
Juiceman Consulting - New York, NY

Chilean Wine Map

Long, skinny, bumpy Chile is studded with 14 (and counting) appellations. It’s currently the world's fifth largest wine exporter, behind France, Italy, Spain, and Australia. And it's not just exporting quantity, but quality. Chile's dropping serious cellar-worthy bottles, perhaps best exemplified by the major upset of the 2004 Berlin Tasting, when Errázuriz's “Seña,” an iconic Bordeaux-style blend from the Aconcagua region, placed ahead of both Château Lafite and Château Margaux. Just as exciting, Chile’s affordable varietals and blends increasingly surpass their wholesale average of $10 to $20 in value—and what sommelier doesn’t love a wine that over-delivers?

But even with all its value and variety, Chilean wine is still underrepresented on stateside wine lists. Long appreciated in Canada, the UK, and Asia, Chile is only now making inroads onto American wine lists and by the glass programs. So when we got the opportunity to visit Chile this April, we went straight to the heart of Chilean wine country to see—and sip—for ourselves.


Selling Chile

Wines in Chile are divided into regions, D.O.’s, appellations, and growing areas: 2008 Polkura, Marchigue (growing area), Colchagua (appellation), Rapel (D.O.), Central Valley (region) [click image to enlarge]
Chile's many valleys are divided into regions, D.O.’s, appellations, and growing areas: 2008 Polkura, Marchigue (growing area), Colchagua (appellation), Rapel (D.O.), Central Valley (region) [click image to enlarge]
Exposure and conversation are the missing links between American wine lists and Chilean wines, according to Derek Mossman, co-owner of Garage Wine Company near Santiago, Chile and co-founder of MOVI Chile (Movement of Independent Vintners). The Toronto expat and Chilean wine industry veteran says "People still think of Chile as one country, whereas when you think of France, you think of 15 [wine] countries. Chile is seen as just kind of one more new world nation. But you can bring wine tourists to Chile for three or four days, you can do it six times over, and you still will not have seen everything."
As a consultant for Wines of Chile through his company Juiceman Consulting, Master Sommelier Fred Dexheimer has been traveling with the American Guild of Sommeliers to introduce American somms to Chilean wine. "The perception from on-premise was that Chilean wines were cheap $6.99 Cabernet Sauvignon or Chardonnay—otherwise known as 'first tier' varietals," says Dexheimer. "But I feel that among family and estate reserve wines, that [Chile] competes with any wine within that category."


Grapes Have It Easy

Garage wineries like those of MOVI first took off in France
Garage wineries like those of MOVI first took off in France
Chile’s prime growing conditions have generated a restless new wave of Chilean winemakers, and a series of mini-revolutions have set off around the country over the past 25 years—including bio-dynamism, “terroir hunting,” and reclaiming "lost" grapes. In addition to Chile’s diverse microclimates—ideal for growing a variety of grapes—phylloxera never made it across the ocean, meaning the country’s wine traditions and varietals have developed uninterrupted.

In fact, longevity is one of Chile’s central selling points. Many of Chile’s 117,000 hectares are comprised of self-rooted vines, which have been in cultivation for nearly 500 years (making “old vine” wines with 90 years of heritage seem like pre-teen wannabes). "Some of these vines are six to seven meters deep," says Mossman, who goes on to describe how the soil around many old vines is best broken by horse-drawn plough, encouraging small-scale growers. Dexheimer points out that a side benefit of a heaven-on-earth growing climate, sturdy vines, and healthy grapes is that many wines are organic and biodynamic, even if the winemakers themselves don’t advertise it.


¡Revolución!

Among smaller growers, ancient traditions co-exist with modern day wine production
Among smaller growers, ancient traditions co-exist with modern day wine production
Of course, some winemakers are advertising it, and proudly. Mossman’s Garage Wine Company is among the new wave of "garage" revolucionistas of MOVI, a collective of winemakers like himself practicing natural wine production and changing the way we think about wine. After 11 vintages, Mossman still makes small lots, paints the labels, and waxes the wine bottle necks himself.

Founded in 2009, just before an 8.8 earthquake rocked Chile’s Central Valley, MOVI now comprises some 18 wineries spread throughout the country—all of them small, family-owned, and hippie-minded. Many of the winemakers have come from abroad, and together they make a colorful cast of characters of sculptors, musicians, and community builders (one MOVI member, the owner of Erasmo winery, dedicated himself to rebuilding neighboring homes destroyed by the 2010 earthquake)—not to mention an Italian count and even “a red-bearded, Malbec-growing Kiwi,” laughs Mossman. "[MOVI] likes to take a walk on the wild side."

And this wild-winemaker approach seems to be working: Wine author Jancis Robinson named winemaker Andres Costa Lagos’s organic 2005 Rukumilla from the Maipo among her top 10 favorite natural reds. Vino Von Siebenthal has taken multiple awards (including Best Red Wine) from the Concours Mondial Bruxelles and Gillmore Hacedor de Mundos has received consistent 88+ ratings from Wine Enthusiast.


Starry Night Vineyard on the Maipo Coast, in Chile’s Central Valley
Starry Night Vineyard on the Maipo Coast, in Chile’s Central Valley

Wild Reds

Chilean winemakers are in the process of reclaiming wild, self-rooted, and long-forgotten vines. Other "lost" varieties continue to be discovered, often growing of their own accord in overgrown fields and sometimes simply mislabeled. The Carmenère grape, once used in French Bordeaux blends, fell into disuse in France due in part to its long maturation period, and was thought to have been extinct until a snooping French scientist discovered it as mislabeled Merlot in 1995. Since then, Chile’s experiment-loving vintners have been having a field day with it.

Chile’s sun-warmed Central Valley gives Carmenère the extra-long growing season it needs. It’s the last grape to be picked during the autumn harvest, which is taking place now, south of the equator. Mossman’s describes the grape’s color as “deep black,” and its flavors typically comprise red fruits like cherry and ripe strawberry, as well as humid earth, spice, and vegetable notes, recalling the sun-drenched Aconcagua, Maipo, Rapel, and Maule valleys (the four regions from north to south comprising the Central Valley) where the grapes are grown.

In a recent tasting of MOVI wines at Starry Night Vineyard on the Central Valley's Maipo coast, we tried a 2008 Vino von Siebenthal Carmenère from the Aconcagua valley (a high altitude valley north of Santiago). We thought that the wine’s enthralling inky deep color and smoky aroma, with a hint of ash, expressed starry nights on the vine high in the Andes. We also thought it would pair deliciously with grilled lamb and were reminded of the culinary world’s current love affair with smoke’s alluring properties.

At Starry Night, we also tried a 2008 Hereu Syrah, Malbec, and Carignan blend from the Central Valley, and fell in love with its mint and eucalyptus notes and its balance between fruit and acidity. Carignan, another Mediterranean variety, also fell into disfavor in France but has found renewal in Chile. Its deep and ponderous roots "make very different wines than the Cabernet and Bordeaux style varieties commonly available from Chile,” according to Mossman. Although it’s dismissed as coarse or astringent in France, Mossman says, "for some reason dry-farmed in Maule, it simply rocks. This is something that Chile can do better than any other country on the planet—old-vine, dry-farmed Carignan!" Chilean Carignan is known for terrific color and an "acidity that’s like vibrancy for life!" touts the Toronto transplant.

The Terroir Hunters

Winemaker Ana Maria Atabales of Starry Night Vineyard pouring a glass of wine from a steel tank
Winemaker Ana Maria Atabales of Starry Night Vineyard pouring a glass of wine from a steel tank
Chile’s rain-shadowed Central Valley, particularly the Maipo D.O. surrounding Santiago, has long been known for its iconic big-shouldered Bordeaux blends. But on the cooler coast, a peaceful, though clamorous—and prosperous—revolution is taking place with Syrah, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Sauvignon Blanc. Dexheimer says “winemakers are pushing as far as they can make it to the coast … and there are even experiments in aromatics like Pedro Ximenez, Riesling, and Gewurztraminer.”

The experimental phase in Chile stretches as far back as the 1980s, when Pablo Morande of the Concha y Toro winery departed from the centrally located valleys near Santiago and started planting vines in a cool, windswept, coastal depression—virtually in the middle of nowhere—and essentially founding the Casablanca appellation. “Everyone was saying he was crazy,” says Dexheimer. Morande’s bet on the cool coast paid off and kicked off a new kind of winemaker in Chile, the Terroir Hunter—perhaps best embodied in bottle form by the Undurraga winery’s “TH: Terroir Hunter” estate wine. The wine hails from the Leyda growing area of the then new San Antonio region.

Winemakers followed in hot pursuit of Morande’s Casablanca "discovery," planting vines further north and south along Chile’s coast and up into the cooler foothills of the Andes. In the wake of these modern day conquistadors, the cool and rainy south saw new appellations in Bío Bío and Malleco, while running down the coast from north of Santiago, the Elquí, Limarí, Choapa, Casablanca, and San Antonio appellations—freckled with numerous sub-regions and loosely defined "growing areas"—were born.

Drinking It In

MOVI winemakers like Felipe Garcia of Bravado Wines (pictured here with his 2007 Facundo Garcia Schwaderer blend of Carignan and Cabernet Sauvignon) work to produce wines on a human scale.
MOVI winemakers like Felipe Garcia of Bravado Wines (pictured here with his 2007 Facundo Garcia Schwaderer blend of Carignan and Cabernet Sauvignon) work to produce wines on a human scale.
But a wine isn’t defined by its D.O., affordability, or age. It’s all about what’s in the glass and, most importantly, how it pairs with cuisine. And it turns out that Chilean coast-hugging wines love food just as much as their interior-grown cousins. At Boragó in Santiago, Chef Rodolfo Guzman's Asparagus, Bell Pepper, and Potatoes served in Miniature Bucket with Smoking Embers of Tepu Wood and Rosemary was paired with a clean Veramonte Sauvignon Blanc from the Casablanca region. The wine’s roundness and minerality stood up to the wafting embers and bitterness in the grilled bell pepper, and its peach and grassy notes teased through the smoke to clasp with the flavors of rosemary and charred asparagus.

We tried a few Syrahs from the central coast with the MOVI vintners at Starry Night. From Marchigue, a growing area in the Colchagua Valley south of Santiago, a Polkura 2008 Syrah stood out for its balance, body, aromatics, mineral edge, and spice. Mossman compared it to a football player who’s also a teddy bear. "It could be left open for a week, easily—it’s that big!"

A Syrah from Trabun winery in the Cachapoal valley (just north of the Colchagua) had nice fruit, was delicate and smooth, and had a lovely, smoky nose. Says Mossman, "Syrahs in the new world tend to be overly or very mature. But not here. This is a ‘stinky’ French-style Syrah; there is evolution in the bottle here. Decanted, it’s beautiful. This is what garage wines are like: you’re seeking a purity of fruit. Less is more."

Call it terroir off-roading, call it liquid adventure: the sommelier who laps up the ebb and flow of wine trends is rewarded with pleasurable, drinkable research. Bloodless (and quaffable) revolutions like the one taking place in Chile are a cause for celebration for sommeliers, best begun by a toast. ¡Viva la uva! Long live the grape!

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Go Godello!

I was asked to bring a Godello wine to lunch on Easter, by my picky host (with impeccable taste!), a card-carrying Spain expert. I had been bound by oath not to bring any wine issued by a certain Spanish importer. Okay. Unaccustomed to checking the importer label, I paid for a bottle and left the shop. As the door closed behind me, I remembered. I checked. I reentered the shop, and sheepishly explained my need to exchange the bottle for another. The saleswoman thought that was fine, but wanted me to know that the importer in question is well-respected and personally responsible for having put Spanish wines on the map. I stopped myself from telling her that I had been warned against showing up with anything imported by "that marketing whore". Instead, I smiled. I then chose the wine pictured above, Casal Novo, Godello, Galicia 2009.

Lunch was about an hour and a half out of town by train, and lasted six hours, thanks to leisurely cooking and multiple courses. We opened the bottle (one of five for the six guests present), with a dish of seared scallops and a pomegranate beurre blanc. My host was pretty damn excited about the Casal Novo. And it paired really well with the rich, tart sauce and sweet scallops. The wine is straw-colored, with an intense, bright lemony aroma. It was a little like a lightbulb in a glass and provided some extra spark to the table. On the tongue it was acidic, peachy, and with a pleasant minerality. Pretty yummy. So Mom, if you're reading: pick up a bottle!