Sunday, July 31, 2011

Pacific Northwest White Wines

We reconvened on July 31st at Tony and Timm's house for another gathering of our quarterly wine club. We began our night enjoying our "welcome wine," a Chateau St. Michelle Harvest Select Riesling, on the boys' new patio.

This was a 2009 riesling from the Columbia Valley of Washington. A bit on the sweet side, it was fruity and refreshing and medium bodied. Amy said she "sees it on alot of menus." Timm and Corinne both gave it a 'thumbs up' but also suggested that they may not want to drink alot of it because it was so sweet. We enjoyed it with Amy's appetizer of delicious ricotta cheese from Claudio's in South Philly, sliced fresh figs and Savannah honey (from a pump--very impressive). With 11% alcohol, this wine scored a 24 of possible 35. (Laura, our beloved vocabulary/adjective expert was feeling poorly and didnt' join us.)

Next up was a 2009 Willamette Valley Pinot Gris from Elk Cove Vineyards. This wi
ne was very light, both in color and in mouth feel. Corinne liked how light it was, but was disappointed that it didn't have much 'fruity flavor.' Tony commented that he may enjoy it more "if it was colder" but with each subsequent sip, he admitted he "liked it more and more." Yash remarked that it was "alcohol-like" and at 13.5%, was higher than our first offering. The wine scored only a 16.5, again out of 35.

As we settled in for bottle #3 of the night, Amy noted that we had actually tried this wine in a 2010 Wine Club event, but since our recall was almost non-existent, we continued. A 2008 Chateau St. Michelle & Dr. Loosen Eroica Riesling from Columbia Valley (alcohol 11.5%) was our repeat wine and it was a winner. Scoring the highest points of the night at 26, everyone felt that "this wine was a good wine that alot of people would like." Light on the nose, pretty colored, and not too sweet. John made what was perhaps the best critique of the evening as he said, "Eroica was a dramatic piece of music, but not a dramatic wine."

Though following right behind the night's winner, the next wine turned out to also be a 'fan favorite' of the evening. A 2007 white wine from Washington States's Columbia Crest Two Vines Vineyard #10. This wine, a bit more golden in color, did not have much aroma, but was described as "smooth and refreshing." Yash thought it tasted, "nutty." This was a blend of three varietals: chardonnay, sauvignon blanc and semillon. Tony thought that this tasted much better with food. It scored a 23.5 which was the second highest score of the evening.

Pause and gratitude should be given at this point to the meal which Tony lovingly prepared (and grew in his own garden). Starting with a delicious salad of garden greens featuring Tony's tomatoes, dill and cucumbers, we continued on to a lipsmacking dinner of grilled jumbo shrimp, rice, and spinach. At some point, we reviewed oxymorons like 'jumbo shrimp' and given the strong healthcare presence in the room, got to talking about 'for profit hospice' and living wills. Don't ask how that happened, but we did make sure everyone promised to address their healthcare power of attorney forms and advance directive forms before year's end. See? And you all thought we were just drinking!!



Returning to our last two wines, we quickly dispersed of them to get to Amy's homemade desserts! The 2008 Columbia Valley Semillon, L'Ecole No 41, scored a mere 9 points from us. Clearly not many of us are semillon fans as this wine was 89% semillon and 11% sauvignon blanc. The other last wine, a 2008 Columbia Valley Waterbrook Melange wine scored 19. Corinne affectionately called it "the kitchen sink" wine as it was made of seven different grapes. From the top down, 30% riesling, 20% gevurtraminer, 15% viognier, 10% sauvignon blanc, 10% chardonnay, 10% pinot gris, and 5% muscat. A real "melange" of grapes! But not a repeat wine.

The evening ended on a sweet note as Amy brought out her home-made triple ginger ice cream and Vietnamese cinnamon ice cream. Two flavors to accompany her home-made, organic, gluten-free peach and blueberry crumb/cobbler. Let me just say, there was not much talking at the table once dessert was served. Oh, and did I mention the Termini's cheesecake? Yes, we had that too.

All in all, another wonderful Wine Club event. Thank you to our gracious hosts, Tony and Timm. Until our next meeting, get out there and have some grape adventures!!

Sunday, March 20, 2011

French Wine Club, March 12th, 2011


Truth be told, I fell in love in with red wine when I made a trip to Paris. That was 1993 and I've been enjoying red wine ever since. Just not French wine. And judging from the results of last week's Wine Club gathering, I'm not missing much.

So, the theme was French wine and each guest was encouraged to bring a bottle (or two) of a French wine from Burgundy, I think. Amy made a French menu complete with fondue (OK, there was cheese involved), delicious savory crepes (ooh la la!) and for dessert, home made creme brulee with fresh blueberries and whipped cream.

And let me introduce our wines...

1. Louis Jadot 2009 Pouilly Fuisse'
A white burgundy with alcohol content of 13%. Fermented in stainless steel. Comments included: "smells like cake." Not acidic, not heavy, "tastes like a sauvignon blanc" even though it is 100% chardonnay grape. Laura offered "it lacks substance" and "I wouldn't go out of my way." SCORE: 22 points (out of 40 possible points)

2. Chateau L'Hospitalet La Reserve 2008
Truth be told, I bought this because I liked the name and I was interested in buying a white wine from Burgundy. This wine was made of three grapes, grenache, fermentino, and bourboulenc and was aged in French oak for 8 months. Yasheene liked this offering as did Laura. Timm was a definite "no." SCORE: 20 points

3. Chablis Domaine des Malandes 2008
Obviously a white wine, really light colored, somewhat acidic and "green apple sour." Not much depth to this wine, very thin. Alcohol 12.5%. SCORE: 16 points

4. Sancerre La Reine Blanche 2009
$27 at the state store. Yash liked this wine, but Laura dumped it. Someone offered "mushroomy" as a description. Alcohol content 13.5%. SCORE 18 (Laura did not vote).

5. Laforet Pinot Noir
Our first red of the evening. Color is "pretty, but thin." Had a rich smell, with some "tobacco-like smells." Very dry on the palate. Tony really didn't like this wine, neither did Laura. SCORE: 12 points

6. Louis Latour Volnay 2007 Grand Vin De BourgogneThis was "better than the first red." Tony commented "this is much different." Corinne said "I like this." Reminded folks of a "traditional" pinot noir. Alcohol 13.5%. SCORE: 20 points.

7. Chateau D'Or et de Gueules 2007From its label, this looks like a Rhone wine. "Vignobles de la Vallee Du Rhone" Comments included: "a little rough," "very Old World," "it's like drinking sweatsocks, not smelling them." And, "this is what we expect a French wine to be." Hands down winner for the evening's Wine Club with a whopping 27 points! Tony's last comment, "I am not dumping this."