Thursday, March 18, 2010

Quinta Do Vallado


Quinta do Vallado Douro Wines. 


Quinta Do Vallado made an appearance in Wine Spectator in the February 2010 issue.  Dennis came in almost the same week with a trio of these inky still wines from Douro region in Portugal.  We are now selling their 2007 Douro Red for around 11.00/glass a deal for a wine that received 93pts.  Trying single varietals has lately been my prerogative since the Court of Masters test is coming up, so I've been very curious about Portuguese varietals like Touriga Nacional, Touriga Franca and Tinta Barroca.  Quinta Do Vallado has a single varietal Touriga Nacional which is the middle wine in the image above.  

Smokey cocoa and black currant dominated the nose on the Touriga with the classic tongue-on-roof-of-mouth grit that I associate with Port wine.  I've been really hoping to find good still wines from Douro because these grapes make amazing Port and most of the time, such cheap blow-your-palette-up red still wines.  Thank sid, Quinto Do Vallado delivers, and I would encourage sommeliers to try the Touriga Nacional, I liked it better than their reserva... but perhaps a little unfairly because so much of that region is renown for their dedication to blending, and the Reserva delivered more point-scoring fruit. 


Dennis is the perfect example of people of love their job!

Monday, March 8, 2010

Guess Your Palate! and Rhone syrah Outta St. Joseph

Ty Martin, from Cepage Selections blind tasted me on this Kermit Lynch wine. 

There's a disconnect between the customer and wine server in that, neither of us know each others' palate.  There are a few tricks I use on a day to day basis to gather information without seeming like a butt hole:

Are you interested in a red or white wine?

For Red: Would you like a light, medium or full-bodied red wine
2nd Level Red: Are you looking for a wine with more fruit or more earthiness?

For White: Are you looking for a dry or sweet wine
2nd Level White: are you looking for a wine with a fruity presence and a bigger style or one with more delicacy and zesty-ness?

This way, we get to the bottom of that person's desires without saying directly "new world, old world, fruit forward" or "oakey" which can offend.  If there's one thing that I would like to see more from other sommeliers is an acceptance that no matter how fruity a particular wine from Vacqueyras or Chinon is, it's still going to be a earth-bomb.  

Ty Martin stopped by while I was having this epiphany and poured a mystery wine into my glass.  Looking at it's color I couldn't help but think one thing... SYRAH!  But instead of jumping to conclusions, doing a proper analysis makes a much stronger argument: 

Mystery Wine:

APPEARANCE: 
Clarity: hazy/murky
Brightness: Dull / Opaque
Intensity: Lots of extracted color, High-intensity
Color: Deep Purple/Violet to light pink meniscus, low rim variation indicating a younger wine
Viscosity: Medium, estimated 13.5% 14% alcohol 

NOSE: 
Condition: Sound and clean
Intensity: Medium plus, lots of big things happening in the aroma
Aroma/Bouquet: Young smells of fruit, not any bottle aged, yeast bouquets
Fruit: Black cherries, black olives, slight raisin 
Earth: Yes, revealing gravel
Wood: Yes, slight spice characteristics including clove, but not overly so, perhaps a blend of used oak
Other Aromas: a herbal nose with oregano, tarragon and slight notes of gardenia flowers

PALATE: 
Sweetness Level & Body: Dry with a Full Body
Fruit: Olives, Cranberries, Cherries, Sour Plums
Wood: a light spice layer makes me think it's with used French Oak
Other: herbal notes of tarragon
Tannins: Medium Plus, dryness on the roof of my mouth, with a gravelly feel
Alcohol: Medium, possibly 13.5% or lower
Acidity: Medium, moderate acidity
Complexity: Interesting palate that evolves from an initial sweetness to sourness and tannin character, medium-plus complexity
Finish: acidity clears finish, raisin characteristics remain, medium length finish

INITIAL CONCLUSION:
Old World wine, from a cool to moderate climate, probably syrah or mostly syrah about 2-5 years of age

FINAL CONCLUSION:
Because of the olive aromas and color, I really think it's a Northern Rhone unfiltered/naturally produced Syrah from the 2007 vintage.  I also would guess it's retail at around $45. 




Wine: 2006 Domaine Faury St. Joseph Red Wine (Northern Rhone Syrah!) Retail for $27 at Kermit Lynch

I would pair this wine with a braised portobello mushrooms and roasted potatoes with tarragon and a mint compote. a side of crispy kale would be a nice way to compliment the herbal characteristics.  The mint would bring out the fruitiness in the wine and the portobellos to accentuate the body. 





Saturday, March 6, 2010

American Beer and Brussel Sprouts

The vegetal traits of brussel sprouts, asparagus and artichokes are often the most challenge food to pair. 

Inspired by a side dish at Bix in San Francisco, we roasted brussel sprouts with lemon, olive oil and thyme.  The roasting brought out slightly sweeter characteristics in the veggies, and the lemon was a great way to give it a nice tinge of acidity which is easier to pair with. 

New Belgium is now one of the few mass distributed beer brands that is still made/run in the States, the majority of "All American" beers are owned by InBev. 1554 has a smokey nutty quality while still maintaining a light/drinkable body.  Citrus and beer have always worked well together, and even though this beer is very smokey, it made the perfect transition from the smokiness of the beer to the roasted characteristics in the brussel sprouts. 




Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Portuguese Red Wine with Cheesy Polenta and Cauliflower

We pulled a bottle of vacqueyras for dinner and it smelled like wet cardboard.  

We opened a bottle of Vila Santa, a non-port red wine from Portugal. 2006 Joao Portugal Ramos Vila Santa Vinho Regional Alentejano.  Or in other words: red wine made from Aragones, Touriga Nacional, Trincadeira, Alicante Bouschet and Cabernet Sauvignon.  




For dinner, Justin made truffle oil & european butter polenta with sea salt, I sauteed oyster mushrooms with dried garlic and oregano and a few sun dried tomatos.  The polenta and mushrooms were broiled in the oven with mozzarella.  

On the side I sauteed onions in gram masala and cumin with cauliflower and a little brown sugar and sea salt. 

A rich vegetarian meal to hold up against the bold wine. 



Court of Masters style tasting analysis: Appearance: 

Clarity: Opaque
Brightness: Not Bright
Intensity: Medium Plus to High
Color: Deep Purple
Rim: pink to deep violet
Viscousity: Medium

Nose: 
Clean
Intensity: Medium Plus
Aroma: Youthful
Tobacco, Dark Red Fruits like Raspberry, darker cherry, little blackberry with hints of chocolate dust. 
Wood: Yes
Earth: Dusty Earth, Clay Earth, 

Palette:
Sweetness: Dry
Fruits: Cherry, plum, 
Body:  Medium Light
Earth: Clay / Slight sweet basil characteristics
Wood: Yes, very light wood characteristics
Alcohol: medium
Tannins: moderate grape tannins
Acid: Medium Low
Complexity: relatively low
Finish: medium low
Quality of Finish: Slight herbal notes lighter plum