• 24Jul

    The Winery

    The Torciano Winery Estate was born just a little over 300 years ago in the little town of San Gimignano in the province of Siena, Tuscany, North Central Italy.  It all began with Bartolomeo Giachi, the founding father, who left Florence in 1720 and settled permanently in Ulignano, a village belonging to the municipality of San Gimignano.  The first walls of the residence and corporate center were called “Tenuta Torciano”.  Over three centuries and thirteen generations later, the Giachi family is still making great “luxury” wines following many old traditions and culture of the past while evolving through modern innovations. Their philosophy emphasizes wines “handmade……made in Italy” with special attention given to “the finest quality, excellence, exclusivity and originality”.

    Today Pierluigi Giachi, the current owner and winemaker, carries on the family tradition along with his wife Luciana Cilemmi and son Emanuele Bartolomeo Giachi plus many other family members.  Torciano produces red, white, Prosecco and Toscano wines in standard size bottles as well as magnums, double magnums and imperials plus olive oil. They feature Chianti, Vernaccia di San Gimignano, Super Tuscans, Brunello di Montalcino, Chianti Classico, Nobile di Montepulciano and others. 

    Tenuta Torciano is in proximity to the Mansion of Torri, with the Hospital La Scala and the Monastery of the Cistercian monks.  They also own the Chigi Tower in San Gimignano which is one of the fourteen historic towers of the city. You can taste wine there, dine there, or maybe even get married there! If you visit Tenuta Torciano, you will find hectares and hectares of vineyards, a truffle ground with more than 700 trees and a green garden and vegetable garden.  You can experience wine tasting lunches and dinners among the rows, wine tasting in the barrel room or under the stars.  You can attend cooking classes, make pasta and pizza,  and cook with truffles.  You can go truffle hunting with the dogs and taste Torciano wines.  Or go horseback riding or on a Vespa adventure and taste their wines.  When you are exhausted from all of this adventurous wine tasting, maybe spend the night at the Torciano Hotel Vecchio Asilo.  My personal favorite would be the “Ferrari Wine Tour”!  Although we won’t be having any of those experiences or taking their helicopter tour or wine cruise, we were lucky enough to taste many of their wines right here in Southwest Florida when Luigi, from the Torciano family team, did a private Torciano Wine Tasting dinner for us at our friend Carol’s home on Sanibel.  And as expected we purchased some of them to share with our local winelover friends at our own “Torciano Wine Dinner” – Rakos-style. 

    Our Torciano wine line-up.

    This is the story of our dinner party for eight foodie winelovers at our home on June 24, 2022 – complete with the menu, pictures and all of the wines that we paired with each course.

    The Restaurant

    An iconic Italian winery requires some very special Italian menu items. Since a cookbook from Jonathan Waxman’s Barbuto was staring at me from my rack of cookbooks, I browsed through it once again and immediately saw some recipes that should pair beautifully with our chosen wines from Torciano. And just like that, our menu began to take shape! Here’s the story of Barbuto:

    Barbuto is a neighborhood restaurant from Chef Jonathan Waxman located in New York’s West Village. It has been a gathering spot welcoming locals and visitors alike for over 15 years.  Barbuto first opened in February 2004 in its original location at Washington and Jane Streets.  It closed in 2019 but reopened in October of 2021 just 300 steps away from the original – 113 Horatio Street at West Street. 

    The name “Barbuto” means “bearded” in Italian and references Chef Waxman’s own facial hair.  When the initial concept was developed, Jonathan and his business partner at the time Fabrizio Ferri both had beards plus Fabrizio’s Irish Wolfhound Gideon, who is immortalized in the logo. 

    Barbuto is a casual restaurant featuring Chef Waxman’s Italian cuisine filtered through a California lens. The food is simple and seasonal with signature dishes such as JW roasted chicken, JW potatoes, kale salad and pan-fried gnocchi.  If you are in New York City and want to dine there, hope you made reservation on Resy 30 days in advance or plan to take your chances for the few tables saved for walk-ins each night.  The bar is first come, first served. 

    Jonathan Waxman is a native Californian who grew up in a family that celebrated the culinary arts.  He received a diploma from La Varenne Cooking School in Paris, then moved back to California and went to work at Domaine Chandon and later on to Chez Panisse with Alice Waters.  In 1979, he became executive chef at Michael’s in Santa Monica moving on to his restaurant  Jams in New York City at 1 Hotel Central Park in 1984.  Back in 2016 he won the coveted James Beard Award for Best Chef: New York City.  When in Atlanta, check out Baffi, his restaurant named after an Italian mustache.  Never having eaten in any of those restaurants, I am familiar with Jonathan from his numerous TV appearances on Top Chef and Master Chef.  He is the author of three cookbooks including: “The Barbuto Cookbook”, “A Great American Cook” and “Italian, My Way”. 

    I selected several recipes from “The Barbuto Cookbook” to pair with the wines of Torciano at our dinner plus a few Rakos-style variations that all sounded like excellent pairings for our very special Italian wines.  “Meatballs and Polenta” with “Mushrooms, Ricotta and Parsley Bruschetta” should be – and definitely were! – superstars at our Antipasti course.  Our Primi course included both Barbuto “Potato Gnocchi with Cherry Tomatoes and Fresh Corn” and a “Red Goddess Salad”.  I made both dishes for this course according to the Barbuto recipes. Secondi superstars were “Pan Seared Red Snapper with Black and Red Lentils” and “Rib Eye Steak with Grilled Lemons and Greens”.  Chuck and I prepared these items according to Barbuto generally speaking maybe with a little Rakos-variation here and there, but we will never tell! There MUST be dessert and some Barbuto “Chocolate Shortbread Cookies” made a perfect addition to our dessert table.  Mariann made those cookies and they were fabulous! Panna cotta is always one of my “company dinner” go-to desserts and this one was superb. Dave made some homemade focaccia bread for us and we were ready for our culinary adventure.  

    Torciano – Barbuto Wine Dinner Menu

    Aperitivo

    Red Pepper Stuffed Olives, Pecorino, Provolone Piccante,

    Salted Pistachios, Almonds, Chips and Parmesan Crisps

    The Spritzes

    The Hugo: Mint, Lime, Elderflower Syrup, Prosecco & Sparkling Water

    B. Nardini Bitter Spritz: Bitter Nardini, Prosecco & Soda  

    Antipasti

    Meatballs on Grilled Polenta

    Mushrooms in Madeira with Ricotta and Parsley Bruschetta

    Charcuterie Board: 

    Taleggio, Caciocavallo, Parmigiana and Mozzarella

    Italian Cheeses with Smoked Beef Salami

    Pickled Cauliflower and Carrots

    Marinated Olives, Green Olives and Sicilian Herb Olives

    Rao’s Roasted Peppers with Raisins and Pine Nuts

    Rosemary Focaccia Bread by Dave

    Sesame Grissini Breadsticks

    2019 Chianti “Crete Rosse” Red Wine, Chianti DOCG red wine from Tuscany, Italy – Sangiovese and Canaiolo grapes, 12.5% alcohol

    “It’s characterized by bright red color tending to garnet with age.  The bouquet is intense and fruits and flavor is austere, full-bodied, tasty and slightly tannic, refining to smooth and velvety with time.  This wine goes well with roast game, red meat, spicy cheeses, pasta and risotto with meat sauce.”

    2015 “Cavaliere” Super Tuscan Blend Red Wine, IGT Toscana red wine from Tuscany, Italy – Sangiovese and Merlot grapes, 13.5% alcohol, 4 years in barriques

    “It’s bouquet is round, complete and elegant with a dry, full and smooth flavor. Sangiovese almost always plays the dominant role in the blend with Merlot used to soften the wine’s texture and make it more approachable in its youth.  The Merlot also adds fruitiness and juiciness complementing Sangiovese’s more savory and herbaceous qualities.”  “This wine demands excellent first courses and risottos with sauces made from game, red meat, and mature spicy cheeses.” 

      Primi

        Homemade Potato Gnocchi with Cherry Tomatoes & Fresh Corn

        Red Goddess Salad

    2016 “Baldassare” Super Tuscan Blend Red Wine, IGT Toscana red wine from Tuscany, Italy – Sangiovese Grosso, Cabernet and Merlot grapes, 13.5% alcohol, 4 years in barriques

    “This combination (Sangiovese, Cabernet and Merlot), with clay-based soil and particular climate, are the ingredients which create a superior red nectar.  With deep ruby red color tending to garnet with age has a round, complete and elegant bouquet.  Hints of wood can be perceived amidst typical herbaceous notes.  Its flavor is dry, full and smooth.  The quality and structure demand excellent first courses and risottos with sauces made from wild board and hare, tasty red meat dishes such as roast game, vegetable soufflé and spicy mature cheeses.

    2016 “Bartolomeo” Super Tuscan Red Wine, Toscana red wine from Tuscany, Italy – Sangiovese and Cabernet, 13.5% alcohol, aged 4 years in barriques

    “The Sangiovese is the predominant grape variety in this wine and the calm, elegant characteristic of the Cabernet give this wine ample olfactory complexity and greater strength to both body and flavor.  The color is deep ruby red, tending to garnet with age.  With dry, full and smooth flavor, rich with personality and well structured, complete and elegant, with an evidently aristocratic character; hints of wood can be perceived amidst typical herbaceous notes”.  “This wine demands excellent first courses and risottos with sauces made from wild boar and hare, tasty red meat dishes such as roast game, vegetable souffles and spicy mature cheeses.”   

    Secondi

        Pan Seared Red Snapper

       with Seasoned Black Beluga and Red Lentils

    2019 “Barona di Torciano” Tuscan Blend White Wine – IGT Bianco Toscana from Tuscany, Italy – Trebbiano, Sauvignon and other white grapes, 12.5% alcohol, aged 11 months in cellar

    “….offers a straw yellow color with greenish highlights.  The nose is delicate and elegant with notes of bananas, pineapples, white flowers and candied fruit.  Palate is balanced and harmonious with good flavor persistence and mineral notes on the finish and aftertaste.”  “Pairs well with fish hors d’oeuvres, crustaceans and shellfish, and all types of fish, white meats, delicate red meat carpaccio and rabbit.”

       Rib Eye Steak

     with Grilled Lemons, Spinach, Kale & Broccoli Rabe

      Two Potato Gratin

    2015 Brunello di Montalcino DOCG, from Tuscany, Italy – Sangiovese Grosso grapes, 14.5% alcohol, 4 years in barriques

    “Over the years it has gradually acquired greater fragrance, more velvety flavor, greater harmony and delicately intense bouquet. Its color is deep ruby red, tending to garnet with age.  It has a strong personality with a dry, full, smooth, well balanced flavor.  Excellent with pasta dishes garnished with sauces made from wild boar and meat, with tasty noble game roasts, poultry and Fiorentina Steak.  Also exceptionally good with mature and spicy cheeses.”    

    Formaggi e Dolci

    Gorgonzola Dolce DOP Cheese with a Honey Drizzle

    Panna Cotta with Fresh Berries, Pine Nuts and Garnish of Chocolate Shavings

     Chocolate Shortbread Cookies by Mariann

    Italian Chocolate Pralines

    2008 Fattoria di Felsina Berardenga Vin Santo del Chianti Classico

     Digestivi

      Averna Amaro and Limoncello      

    And just like that, weeks and weeks of planning, preparation, cooking and serving came to an end! Dinner was a huge success. Our Torciano wines were enjoyed with our guests as were all of those food pairings. Thank goodness we were able to preserve the memories here in print!

    7.24.2022

  • 29May

    Just use a little imagination and come along with forkandcorkdivine.com and some of our wine lover foodie friends for Part 2 of our armchair adventure through the wine regions of Tre Venezie. No, sad to say we weren’t actually in Trentino or Alto Adige, but it was as close as we could get without leaving Southwest Florida.

    Trentino-Alto Adige is in the northeastern corner of Italy, and if you didn’t actually know you were in Italy, you might think you were in Austria or Germany. After all, this region was under Austro-Hungarian rule prior to becoming Italian in 1919, and many people of that heritage live here. You will hear people speaking German, see German signs, even German on the wine labels. Germans know their region as Sudtirol or South Tyrol in English. Foods like goulash and dumplings are really popular. This region is also known for their aromatic, fresh, floral, fruity, full-bodied, food friendly white wines. Two-thirds of the wine produced here is white, but you will also find some very good local reds. Most of the wine produced here is DOC quality. Our mission to accomplish for this wine dinner event —– showcasing the Austro-German-Hungarian food and culture and highlighting those white wines.

    “Benvenuto in Trentino-Alto Adige” served up a selection of really tasty wines from the region all paired up with food authentic to the area and guaranteed to compliment the wines. Dinner was lovingly prepared and served by our hosts Doug and Anita Jenkins. Anita is a world-class home cook in the kitchen, and Doug makes an excellent “sommelier”. If anyone could accomplish our mission, they could! So off to Anita’s kitchen. I can still smell that wonderful gulasch and pollo brasato cooking!!! Let the adventure begin!

    Tre Venezie

    Benvenuto in Trentino-Alto Adige

    Saturday, May 25, 2019

    Antipasti

    Anita is known for dining with a French flair. She and Doug visit relatives in France often. Her dinners always begin with appetizers or in this case “antipasti” in the living room. This is the time for guests to get comfortable, catch up on news and enjoy some light dishes paired with several appropriate wines …….just enough to get us prepared and anxious for what we know is yet to come! Anita’s Trentino-Alto Adige antipasti met our expectations and more.

    Pane Tostato Salato 

    Alta Badia Savory Bread Toasts

    Alta Badia ia a cheese made from pasteurized cow’s milk in the Alta Badia Valley of the Dolomite Mountains in Alto Adige. Alta Badia is a popular ski resort. The cheese develops light brown rind after six months and is closed texture straw color inside. It’s good as a table cheese or in this case, was excellent melted in the oven on our bread.

    “Pane Tostato Salato ” Alta Badia Savory Bread Toasts

    Involtini di Speck ad Asparagi 

    Speck and Asparagus Scrolls

    Asparagus was wrapped with smoked Mozzarella and Speck, a smoked prosciutto from Trentino-Alto Adige, then placed in the oven for about 10 minutes until that cheese was melted! This version beats serving cold wrapped asparagus hands down!!

    “Involtini di Speck ad Asparagi” Speck and Asparagus Scrolls

    Mortadella alla Griglia 

    Grilled Mortadella

    We love our Mortadella sliced from the deli on a sandwich, and we know about fried bologna sandwiches, but grilled Mortadella! YES, YES, YES. Get big thick slices, cut it in cubes, grill it off for some grill marks or pan fry, maybe drizzle some balsamic on it or not, and serve it with some aioli and horseradish sauce. So easy and we guests absolutely loved it! Delicious with a glass of Pinot Grigio from Alto Adige.

    “Mortadella alla Griglia” grilled Mortadella

    Castagne Stufate

    Wine Braised Chestnuts

    Chestnuts are not just for the Thanksgiving stuffing! They are especially oh so delicious when braised in wine and served with several other Italian Antipasti. Good with both the Pinot Grigio and the Lagrein.

    “Castagne Stufate” wine braised chestnuts

    Conte Fini Pinot Grigio 2017 Alto Adige

    The Conte Fini with its bright citrus fruit flavors, full bodied and mineral notes was a great introduction to our evening of white wines (plus two reds!). The Pinot Grigios were all unique.

    Kupelwieser Pinot Grigio 2017 Alto Adige

    Fritz Kupelwieser planted his Alto Adige vineyard in 1878. The current wines are fresh and lively with an elegant style right down to the stylish design on the bottles. The Fritz Pinot Grigio comes from vineyards on the valley floor of Alto Adige. Kupelwieser ensures the high quality of the wine by sticking to a low grape yield. The wine is straw yellow with delicate fruity aromas, subtle tones of pears, excellent acidity and a soft full dry finish. You can cellar this wine for 2-3 years. We were happy to drink now!

    Kupelwieser Lagrein 2016 Alto Adige

    Lagrein grapes are unique to Alto Adige and are also grown to a low yield for outstanding quality wine. The destemmed grapes are fermented for 8-10 days under temperature control; the must is kept in contact with the skins. 70% of the wine is aged for 12 months in large oak barrels and the rest in 2-3 year old small French oak barriques. It is then aged in bottle for 6 more months resulting in ruby to dark garnet red wine with intense, complex, spicy aroma and fresh perfume of wild berries and violets. There is a good amount of tannins, soft velvety body and a lightly spicy finish. You can cellar this for 6-8 years. It paired nicely with our Antipasti.

    La Minestra

    Tirolese Canederli al Brodo 

    Tirolese Bread Dumplings in Broth

    What a way to start our dinner! Canederli or Knodel are typical of the Tyrol especially in the cities of Trento and Bolzano. Who ever thought little balls of bread stuffing could be so absolutely delicious! These little balls of bread were stuffed with speck, seasoned with herbs, then cooked in a rich meat broth. This recipe is supposed to have come from peasant farmers using up stale leftover bread. I really want to have lots of “leftover” and stale bread to see if I can meet the standard set by Anita. Doug paired the Canderli with two outstanding wines by Tiefenbrunner. They were both great wines and we were not unanimous in our choice for this pairing. Of course, I am impartial – I loved them both equally!!!

    Tiefenbrunner “Merus” Weissburgunder Pinot Bianco 2017 Südtirol/Alto Adige

    Tiefenbrunner has the highest vineyard in Europe! The Castel Turmhof Wine Estate is in its fifth generation of family operation. Sabine and Christof Tiefenbrunner produce over 20 types of wine. They have 60 acres of vineyards mainly on the mountain slopes around the castle which is on the Wine Route of South Tyrol. Our first wine was “Merus” Pinot Bianco in Italian aka Weissburgunder in German. These 100% Pinot Bianco grapes were fermented under temperature control in stainless steel tanks then aged on the lees in concrete vats. The result is a fresh elegant wine pale yellow in color with flowery, fruity notes of apples and tropical fruits, and fresh mineral acidity on the finish. I’ve become a big fan of Pinot Bianco since drinking it from Friuli.

    Tiefenbrunner “Turmhof” Blauburgunder Pinot Nero 2017 Südtirol/Alto Adige

    Pinot Nero (Noir) is an international grape that really grows well in northeastern Italy. It likes the cool weather and soil here. This Pinot Nero by Tiefenbrunner came from 6 acres at 1470-3200 feet above sea level. The grapes were fermented on the skins in stainless steel tanks for 12 days, then aged in barriques and barrels for 8 months. The wine is ruby red with aromas of raspberries, red cherries, strawberries and violets, red berry flavors with crisp acidity and a nice soft round finish. I could drink this Pinot often!

    Primi

    Pollo Brasato al Ginepro con Patate

    Braised Chicken with Juniper Berries and Potatoes

    Here we are in the mountains – in fact mountains with very dizzying heights – so foods that are braised on the stovetop or in the oven like goulash and stew are the norm. Anita made this classic Tyrolean dish by browning chicken thighs and then cooking them in red wine with herbs, carrots and potatoes. There were a few extra special ingredients, like the bay leaves harvested from Anita’s bay tree, and the green onions that were so beautiful on top of the simmering pot. But do not omit the juniper berries! These little berries have a piney taste with citrus overtones and are often used in European and Scandinavian cooking. Juniper berries are the female seed cone produced by certain species of junipers. They have a piney taste with citrus overtones and many medicinal uses and by the way, are used to flavor GIN! So if your recipe calls for juniper berries and you just ran out of them, you can add a tiny bit of gin to your recipe! I would never recommend picking some off your juniper tree although I know some people do just that. And how was that chicken? It was tender, the meat fell off the bone, full of flavor and paired so well with both the Pinot Grigio and the Muller-Thurgau.

    Abbazia di Novacella Stiftskellerei Neustift Pinot Grigio 2015

    Valle Isaro Alto Adige    92 pts JS; 91 W & S; 90 WE

    The abbey was founded in 1142 by the Augustinian order of Canon Regular in the little town of Novacella in the Isarco or Eisack River Valley. Abbazia di Novacella is a huge complex including church, library, museum, gardens, convention center, boarding school, restaurant and…….a wine estate! In fact they are known for making world class white wines here. This particular Pinot Grigio started out in gravelly soil between 1969-2461 feet above sea level. Two-thirds of it was fermented and stored in stainless steel tanks and the other third in oak casks for 6 months. It had a straw yellow color with aromas of citrus fruits, peach and honeydew melons; orchard fruit flavors and tangy acidic full elegant finish. James Suckling gave it 92 points, and it was my favorite Pinot Grigio of the night.

    Tiefenbrunner “Feldmarschall Von Fenner” Müller Thurgau 2016

    Südtirol/Alto Adige 94 pts WE  

    I was so anxious to taste this wine which is the “flagship” wine of Tiefenbrunner. It was made from 100% Müller -Thurgau grapes grown at 3280 feet above sea level. The red soil is characterized by glacier rock, silty-loamy sand, white and red marble, granite rocks, dolomite and limestone. It is no surprise that the soil has a high salt content which really adds to the fruit and herb aromas of the 94 point Wine Enthusiast rated wine. Half of the grapes were fermented in large wooden barrels and half in stainless steel all without added yeast. The wine is light straw yellow with notes of white flowers and yellow fruits, peach and apricot and fresh acidity. You can cellar this wine for 10 years or more and the mineral notes become more prominent as it ages. It really delivered for me!

    Secondi

    Gulasch alla Tirolese con Polenta  

    Tyrolean Goulash with Polenta 

    As we said before, goulash is typical of the Tyrolean region. After smelling the aroma of it simmering on Anita’s stovetop, we were ready to taste! The diced beef was browned with onions and simmered in some more wine (of course!) until fork tender with herbs and spices and pancetta. You can serve goulash on polenta, with a side of polenta or skip the polenta and go with mashed potatoes or maybe some of our new favorite – bread dumplings. This meat was so tender and the sauce so flavorful that we were all in Tyrolean culinary heaven! And our wine pairing? This was our chance to drink wine made by one of the most famous women winemakers in the world.

    Foradori Vigneti delle Dolomiti Teroldego 2015 Trentino

    Elizabetta Foradori is a key figure in Italian winemaking who put Trentino and its native grapes on the map. She is considered to be one of the most influential female winemakers in the world. She took over the winery from her father in 1984 and in 1986 started making Granato old-vine Teroldego which later became their flagship wine. By 2002 she had converted the winery to biodynamics and became fully Demeter certified in 2009. She also makes natural wine in clay amphorae. Foradori is considered the leading producer of Teroldego wine.

    Dolci

    Bavarese alla Fragola con Budino al Latte e Cioccolato

    Strawberry Bavarian with Milk Pudding and Chocolate

    As if the light and creamy Strawberry Bavarian wasn’t enough to satisfy our sweet tooth for the dessert course, Anita added a layer of chocolate pudding topped off with strawberry fans and fresh mint leaves. The whole effect was beautiful and really tasty with a Tramin Gewürztraminer . We know that Gewürztraminer is a perfect pairing for Asian and Middle Eastern spicy foods, but it’s fruity and delicate floral notes went extremely well with the layers of Strawberry Bavarian and Chocolate Pudding.

    Cantina Tramin Kellerei Gewürztraminer 2017 Alto Adige/Sudtirol

    Cantina Tramin is a co-operative winery founded in 1898 which now represents 290 members across 620 acres in the Tramin area of Alto Adige. The town of Tramin is home to the Gewürztraminer grape which is high in natural sugar and makes off-dry wines with a big bouquet of lychees. It may also have aromas of roses, passion fruit and floral notes. It might possibly even have a tiny spritz of fine bubbles. This particular wine is 100% Gewürztraminer that came from 100 acres of vineyards 990-1485 feet above sea level. The grapes were fermented in stainless steel tanks for 10 days, then aged for 5 months. What we got in the glass was straw-yellow in color with scents of peaches and fresh cut grass over hints of white spices. Those tropical flavors of lychee certainly complimented our Strawberry Bavarian and Budino dessert. What a great finish to our dinner!

    Our Trentino-Alto Adige wines of the night.

    Mission accomplished! We set out to showcase the Austrian-German-Hungarian foods representative of the Trentino-Alto Adige wine region of Italy while pairing Anita’s delicious foods with some excellent examples of the wines from the Trentino-Alto Adige wine region. We had six wines from the “white wine heaven” of Alto Adige including Pinot Grigio, Pinot Bianco, Müller-Thurgau and Gewürztraminer plus the indigenous Lagrein red and an international Pinot Nero. Trentino was represented with Teroldego, probably the most famous red of that region.

    Even more of an accomplishment is the completion of our adventure to eat and drink our way through the entire Tre Venezie while pausing occasionally to educate ourselves along the way. Between our two wine dinners, 8 adventurous winelover foodies tasted 19 different wines including Prosecco, Classico Brut Sparkling, Bardelino Chiaretto, Bianco Super White, Gewürztraminer, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Grigio, Pinot Bianco, Friulano (a Radikon orange), Lagrein, Pinot Nero, Ripasso, Soave (Garganega), Teroldego, Amarone della Valpolicella, and Torcolato from Breganze. We visited the Veneto, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Trentino-Alto Adige. We prepared and ate 18 different menu items including everything from borlotti bean and tomato salad and spring minestrone with fava beans; to frico Friulano; to porcini gnocchi, polenta and bread dumplings, to Speck and Mortadella; smoked trout, braised chestnuts, and scallops; chicken with juniper berries; gulasch to crispy pork belly and spezzatino. We served up a number of DOP cheeses: Montasio, Asiago of 3 different ages, Fior d’Arancio Blue with Orange, and Alta Badia. Of course there were delicious dolci items of almond torte with chocolate chips and strawberry bavarian with chocolate budino. Thank goodness, we had two evenings and about ten hours to complete out mission!

    Once again these food and wine adventures could not happen without the participation of our friends. Special thanks to Doug and Anita Jenkins for hosting our dinner in Trentino-Alto Adige, preparing the foods and sharing their wines. My Tre Venezie adventure is complete after about 4 months of research, planning and presenting. Where to next? We have some great ideas……………….stay tuned to see where the food and wine takes us! Ciao for now.

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    5.27.19

  • 30Jan

    Congratulations!  Lots of extra corks should be popping now in the wine region of Champagne, France.  They have won the right to party party party!  And here’s why…………………

     The Champagne Region was selected by Wine Enthusiast Magazine as

    the “Wine Region of the Year” for 2018, and

    2018 was the best harvest in over a decade.

    Isn’t there always good reason to celebrate Champagne?  You don’t need food to drink it, and yet it is one of the most versatile wines for food pairing.  Champagne will always be compatible with food with just a few exceptions.  And don’t forget those famous bubbles.  There are supposed to be 10 million of them in a Champagne flute or 50 million in a bottle.  They dance on your tongue!!!  What is a celebration without Champagne?  In my opinion, boring! And true Champagne can only be made here in Champagne, France.  

    Photo courtesy of Marcello Palazzi

    Does Champagne really need an award?

    Yes, I think so!  Read on to find out why………..     The Wine Enthusiast Magazine has been in print since 1988 to provide information on the world of wine and spirits.  They publish hundreds of wine reviews monthly plus coverage of wine and lifestyle topics such as travel, restaurants and notable sommeliers. About 800,000 people read their magazine.  They are one of several major wine publications (Wine Spectator, Wine Advocate, etc.) that are available as resources for winelovers and consumers.  Nineteen years ago the editors of Wine Enthusiast began their “Wine Star” awards program to honor individuals and companies that make outstanding achievements in the wine and alcoholic beverage world. They have nominees in 16 categories including everything from Person of the Year, to Winery of the Year – American, European and New World, Winemaker of the Year, etc.  Yes, I know there are many opinions about the value of wine reviews, awards and points, but I personally am eager to hear someone else’s opinion, especially if they have more knowledge than me. I’ll bet none of the Wine Star winners turn down their awards!

    Photo courtesy of Marcello Palazzi

    Right now we are most excited about the “Wine Region of the Year” for 2018 award.  The Champagne Region of France is this year’s winner and was honored at a black-tie gala at the Nobu Eden Roc Hotel in Miami on Monday, January 28, 2019.    Our friend Marcello Palazzi, Regional Manager of the Winebow Group, attended the celebration and was kind enough to share some pictures of the event with us. The winners of all the categories were also announced in the Wine Enthusiast’s special “Best of Year” issue.

    It’s time to celebrate!
    Photo courtesy of Marcello Palazzi

    What does it take to be a “Wine Star” winner? According to Wine Enthusiast:  “Among other attributes, energy, courage, groundbreaking vision and business acumen.”  The Champagne region is unique and historic and leads the world in high-quality, bottle-fermented bubbles. They are creative and take stylistic latitude while still meeting all of the many regulations they are legally required to follow, more than any other appellation in the world. Their emphasis is on quality and continuous improvement. They have also grown the Champagne brand while staying true to the legacy of their properties.  We obviously think Champagne is a winner since the United States now consumes more Champagne than any other country, including the United Kingdom who was the largest export market for Champagne for many years.

    As a 2018 nominee, Champagne was in very good company with Franciacorta, Italy; Galicia, Spain; McLaren Vale, Australia and Sonoma County, California.  I would have been delighted to learn more about any of the nominees; however I truly love Champagne (along with every other kind of sparkling!) and am anxious to learn more.  Some of you winelovers may remember that last year’s “2017 Wine Region of the Year” winner was Southwest France which then became my passion for numerous months as I researched it, planned and completed a very special wine dinner for some local winelover foodie friends.  You can read all about it in previous articles on my forkandcorkdivine.com website.

    The best harvest in over a decade?

    Should we care about the details of the 2018 harvest and how great it was?  Yes, in fact each year’s harvest makes such a difference in many wine regions that forkandcorkdivine.com and our winelover foodie friends devoted an entire article and wine dinner last year to the topic of “vintages”.  You can read about it on my website. 

    The weather in Champagne is full of dangers. Winter frosts can be severe enough to kill the grapevines.  Spring frosts can destroy the buds.  Cold rainy spells in June can disrupt flowering.  Mildew often sets in.  Summer often brings violent storms and hail causing severe damage to the vines and clusters.  Champagne’s weather  is quite a lot like the weather in the US Pacific Northwest.  But in 2017 almost 300 million bottles were produced in the Champagne region with an additional 10 million bottles predicted this year.  Unfortunately Bordeaux and southern French wine regions had a tougher time as they were blighted by that nasty mildew!   

    What made this year so different?  The winter was unusually wet, setting records. This recharged water tables that the grape vines need to get them through hot dry summers. And the summer was sweltering hot!  Because of the heat, vines evolved quickly, and harvest was able to begin in August instead of the usual September. The Comité Champagne establishes the harvesting dates every day for each of the crus.  2018’s harvest began on August 20, the fifth time in fifteen years that the start was so early. Maxime Toubart, president of the Champagne Vintners Union, SGV, called the year “exceptional in quantity and quality” and “didn’t have a single grape go rotten this year”.  In years when the harvest is outstanding, producers make vintage wines which require using only grapes from that particular year.  These bottles are also 30 to 50% more expensive!  The abundant harvest also lets wine-growers and producers rebuild their very low supply of reserve wines which they need in case of poor harvests in the future.  If there are no surprises, and the champagne makers develop the wines to their full potential, this could be the vintage of the century! 


    Here is what some of the best Champagne makers had to say about the 2018 harvest: Eric Lebel, Chef de Caves of Krug, said “We have never seen such a beautiful year for as long as we can remember”.  Gilles Descȏtes, Chef de Caves of Bollinger, said “I have never seen anything like that before!  All the grapes varieties in all the sub-regions of Champagne were incredible in term of quantity, potential alcohol and sanitary conditions”.  Florent Nys, Chef de Caves of Billecart-Salmon, said “The 2018 harvest is remarkable as nature has been particularly generous with us.  The ripeness of the grapes was exceptional with very little malic acids and perfect sanitary condition”.

    Well aware that a harvest like this one may not happen next year, or the year after, French winemakers are considering how to change their practices to adapt to the weather changes that seem to be more the norm instead of exception.  Thirty years ago harvest started as late as October, but now August is becoming more usual.  Whether it is all about climate change or not in the future, the quick takeaway here is that we can now expect to look forward to some fabulous Champagne coming on the market in three years!

    Preface

    I am obviously neither a wine professional nor a professional writer, but I am a winelover foodie who just doesn’t want to stop learning about wine! There is always more to learn: The grapes – there are so many of them!!!  Where they grow – there are so many regions I want to know about. The people who grow them – they know the terroir better than anyone.  The people who make the wine – they put their whole life into that bottle! And what food should I pair with it to make the experience complete?  Whenever I research a wine region or country, I utilize as many sources as I can possibly find because my objective is to provide correct information.  I pour through every wine book that I have on hand from Jancis Robinson’s and Hugh Johnson’s “The World Atlas of Wine”, to Karen MacNeil’s “The Wine Bible” and Madeline Puckette’s “Wine Folly:Magnum Edition” and anything else at my disposal.  The internet is a major assist as I look through every topic I can think of that seems to be relative even if in some small way.  It is amazing what little tidbits of info can be found.   What really makes it interesting are the specialty books that seem to come my way just at that very moment as I’m reading about the topic.  I was reading an article by Madeline Puckette on her winefolly.com website, and she mentioned a book published in 2017, “Champagne: The Essential Guide to the Wines, Producers, and Terroirs of the Iconic Region”.  The book was written by Peter Liem, an award-winning wine writer, wine editor, tasting director for Wine and Spirits magazine and Champagne consultant just to mention part of his credits, and he has lived in the Champagne region for over a decade.  The book also comes with a complete detailed set of maps of the region.  Peter’s point of view is from the terroir of the region which he says is “as fundamental to champagne as it is to any other wine”.  I really enjoyed reading this book and highly recommend it especially if you are an avid winelover, researcher of wine regions and want to get down into the “dirt”.

    “Champage: The Essential Guide to the Wines, Producers, and Terroirs
    of the Iconic Region”

    Now is the perfect opportunity to take my wine adventure to another region and learn something new, or just brush up on current knowledge about Champagne.  We will keep it simple as we delve into where it is made, how it is made, how to serve it, how to pair it plus a few bits of trivia.

    A bit of history about the region

    The Champagne wine region AOC (Appellation d’Origine Contrȏlée)is in northern France in the province that bears its name. You can drive northeast out of Paris about 90 miles to a small range of hills carved in two by the River Marne and be right in the center of Champagne where sparkling winemaking began as early as the 1700s.  Limoux may claim to have made the first Brut sparkling wine in the 16th century; however, quality wine was produced here in the Middle Ages and continued when great Champagne houses came to be in the 17th and 18th centuries.

    There are currently 320 villages in the Champagne appellation in a total of 17 areas according to the Union de Maisons de Champagne, the UMC.  Some maps don’t include the lesser known villages which tends to complicate things a bit.  Also numbers tend to differ slightly depending upon which source is used.  The towns of Reims and Épernay are the commercial centers of Champagne. Reims is in the north and Épernay is located on the south side of the Marne. 

    There are 83,000 acres of vineyards here along the 49th parallel producing an average of 850,000 bottles of Champagne a day from some 275,000 separate vineyard plots.   

    The region, which is near the northern limit for growing grapes, is made up of chalky soil that retains the heat and allows for good water regulation for the vines.  There is a large natural cave network below the ground perfect for cellaring the wines.  

    Photo by Michel Guillard; Courtesy of Comité Champagne

    Champagne was a crossroads for military and trade routes and was devastated and ravaged numerous times.  It wasn’t until the 1660s that enough peace prevailed thus allowing advances in sparkling wine production during the reign of Louis XIV.  Prior to that time “still” wines, slightly effervescent but not bubbly, were highly prized from this area.  In fact the Champagne house of Gosset was founded as a still wine producer in 1584 and is currently in operation.  Others with a similar history are Ruinart (founded 1729), Taittinger (1734), Moët et Chandon (1743) and Veuve Cliquot (1772).  There was a running feud between the region of Burgundy and Champagne over who produced the best red wine almost to the brink of a civil war, but as Champagne winemakers turned more towards making those bottles of tiny bubbles, the rivalry eventually waned.  Champagne production went from 300,000 bottles a year in 1800 to 20 million bottles in 1850 and never looked back!  Sales have quadrupled since 1950.   Sales for 2017 were over 307 million bottles.

    Should we thank Dom Perignon for Champagne?  Pierre Perignon was a cleric, who along with some other innovative clerics, provided techniques that helped the evolution of Champagne making.  Perignon was the procurer in charge of goods (the cellarmaster) at the Abbey of Hautvillers, just outside of Épernay,  which is now owned by Moët & Chandon.  He was an avid winemaker and savvy businessman, increasing the size of the abbey’s vineyards and the value of the wine produced.  Supposedly he and his fellow clerics were the first to master the art of making clear white wine from red grapes.  He was also first to keep grapes from different vineyard lots separate and to practice blending.  He also experimented with putting Champagne in glass flasks instead of wooden barrels where it oxidized.  He also started to use corks to seal the bottles.  He tried unsuccessfully to eliminate the sparkle in the wine as did all of the other winemakers at that time. We can only hope that one day he decided the sparkle was a business success! So it appears that our famous cleric did not invent Champagne, but he certainly helped to perfect it.

    Another person we should be thankful for is the Widow Clicquot.  She almost single handedly kicked off the industrialization of Champagne in the early 19th century.  There is a very interesting book all about her called “The Widow Clicquot: The Story of a Champagne Empire and The Woman Who Ruled It” by Tilar J. Mazzeo. 

    The grapes of Champagne

    There are just three grapes used in Champagne and the two most planted grapes are red: Pinot Noir and Meunier.  This is quite unique since most of the wine produced here is white sparkling wine.  The clear juice is pressed off the skins before any color can be imparted to the wine. The third grape is Chardonnay. Each of these three grapes has its own distinctive needs and assets thus determining why some are planted in certain areas of the region but not in others.  In most cases the grapes will be blended. 

    Pinot Noir provides structure, weight and power, and now dominates in acreage at about 38% according to the Comité Champagne website.

    Meunier (Pinot Meunier) aka “Miller’s Pinot” grapes have a characteristic speckled appearance.  This gives a fruitiness to the wines.  Many non-vintage Champagnes have a higher percentage of Meunier.  It’s easier to grow, is less prone to frost damage and used to dominate the vineyards now with about 32% of total acreage.  This grape is grown only in Champagne. 

    Chardonnay grapes (the remaining 30%) are usually planted in the chalkier sites and produce a more austere and elegant styles of wine.  The wines with longer life are usually based upon Chardonnay. 

    There are also some heirloom grapes in the region, but they are cultivated in very tiny quantities.  These are: Arbanne, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris (Fromenteau) and Petit Meslier which according to the Comité make up about .3% of the vineyard plantings.  These grapes are not easy to grow, and forgotten about when replanting after the phylloxerra outbreak in the late nineteenth century. There are a few growers making blended Champagne from these grapes today, one of which we will highlight later.

    The five main vineyard areas

    Since 1927 Champagne has been legally divided into 5 main wine producing areas: Montagne de Reims, Vallée de la Marne, Cȏte des Blancs, Cȏte de Sézanne and the Aube or Cȏte des Bars.  These five areas are usually not listed on the bottle. They cover 84,000 acres of planted vineyards which are further divided into 17 sub-regions collectively producing as many as 320 million bottles per year. Each sub-region has a slightly different style or focus.  Almost three-quarters of the vineyards are in the Marne Département of France, and all of them together would fit into the city limits of Denver, Colorado. 

    The 320 villages are classified as Grand Cru (17), Premier Cru (42) or just Cru.  All the vineyards of an entire village in Champagne are classified which is different than the Burgundy system of classifying a single vineyard as Premier or Grand Cru.  The most highly regarded Grand Cru villages are located in the Montagne de Reims, Vallée de la Marne and Cote des Blancs.  Each cru or village has their own specific characteristics.  There are over 15,000 growers overall who own 90% of the vineyards. Fortunately we winelovers don’t really need to be concerned about the name of the village – unless we want to be – because in most cases the Champagne is identified by the name of the maker, not the village.  Most of the grapes are sold by the grower to the Champagne Maisons (houses) or makers. 

    Montagne de Reims

    (The mountain of Reims), grows 40% Pinot Noir, 36% Pinot Meunier and 24% Chardonnay. Many tȇte de cuvée wines come from the major Champagne wine firms called “houses” of this region.  Located in the most northern part of the area between the Marne and Vesle Rivers, the region stretches east-west for 30 km and north-south for 6-10 km.  It is argued that this is the most famous of the sub-regions due to three factors: (1) Reims is located here and is oft considered the heart of Champagne, (2) There are nine Grand Cru villages here, more than any other region and (3) It produces amazing wines!  The average annual yield ranges from 15-35 hl/hectare from an area of some 2000 hectares.  There are 97 villages in the region: Grande Montagne Reims (25), Massif de St. Thierry (17), Monts de Berru (5) and Reims: Vesle & Ardre (51). Montagne de Reims is definitely Pinot country!  The wines of this region have body and strength in the blend due to the Pinot Noir, and are mostly on the south facing slope.

    Photo by John Hodder; Courtesy of
    Comité Champagne

    In Reims you will find the famous cellars of Louis Roederer, Ruinart (the longest established Champagne house founded in 1729), Veuve Clicquot (founded 1772), Krug (founded 1843), Taittinger (founded 1734) and Mumm (founded 1827).  Reims is also famous for the Cathedral of Reims, the site of coronation for French kings.  On the foodie side, look for Maison Fossier, an all pink shop famous for the pink “Biscuits Rosés de Reims”.

    Bernard Brémont: Grande Montagne Reims

    Champagne Brémont is a Récoltant Manipulant which means that their Champagne is made entirely on their property from harvesting through pressing, vinification and marketing.  Bernard and Michèle Brémont created their farm Champagne Bernard Brémont in 1965.  They have 12 hectares of Pinot Noir and 3 hectares of Chardonnay  98% which is in Ambonnay and 2% in Bouzy, both of which are 100% Grand Crus. The vines are an average age of 30, and are planted in clay limestone soil. They make Brut Grand Cru, Blanc de Noir, Rosé, Cuvée Prestige and a Coteaux Champenois.  Son Thibault and daughter Anne have now taken over the reins continuing in the same path as their parents. 

    The Bernard Brémont Brut Grand Cru NV is a medium bodied white Champagne made from a blend of 80% Pinot Noir and 20% Chardonnay with a dosage of 7-8 g/l.   According to IWC, we should expect  “Intensely spicy nose displays bright citrus, pear and mineral scents……..Clean, finely etched lemon, orchard fruit and peppery spice flavors” on the palate.

    Bernard Brémont Brut Grand Cru Millésimé “Ambonnay” 2011 is a medium bodied white made from a blend of 55% Pinot Noir and 45% Chardonnay. It shows aromas of fresh stone fruits with citrus notes, stone fruits and biscuit on the palate.  The finish should have a citrus and mineral character.  The Millésimé is always made from an exceptional year, selected from the harvest among their parcels best exposed. 

    L. Aubry Fils: Montagne de Reims

    Aubry Fils is a 30 acre primarily premier cru estate in the village of Jouy-lès-Reims.  Pierre and Philippe Aubry are twin brothers with a legacy dating back to 1790 and currently produce just 10,000 cases a year.  The Aubry brothers have plantings of 30% Pinot Noir, 40% Pinot Meunier and 30% Chardonnay, but they are known for their exciting and distinctive wines made from a blend that includes indigenous grapes seldom seen in use today: Arbanne, Petit Meslier and Fromenteau. They prefer low yields, use only “Coeur de cuvée” in their vintage wines and typically keep the dosage low.  Le Nombre d’Or is a blend of all seven Champenois grapes and the Le Nombre D’Or Sablé Blanc des Blancs is made from all of the white grapes. 

    Champagne Aubry Brut Premier Cru NV is a white blend of 55% Pinot Meunier, 25% Chardonnay, 20% Pinot Noir and 5% of Arbanne, Petit Meslier and Fromenteau.  Half of it is made from reserve wine more than half of which came from a solera going back to 1998.  We should expect lemon citrus flavors with notes of flowers, mint, crushed rocks.  Robert Parker rated it at 92 points.


    Coteaux Champenois is Champagne’s appellation for still wine, both white and red. The red is usually best.  Reds are made in one of two styles.  One is the classic style with thin and in-substantial wines except for the top estates that make elegant mineral-driven wines capable of aging for decades.  Paul Bara and Pierre Paillard make excellent Bouzy Rouge wines.  Georges Laval’s Cumières Rouge is another one to look for.   The second style is more Burgundian making powerful concentrated red wines. Benoit Lahaye’s Bouzy Rouge comes highly recommended by Peter Liem.  

    Côte des Blancs

    “The hillside of whites” produces mostly Chardonnay grapes (82%) on about 14,000 acres of chalky soils that produce higher acidic wines in an elegant racy style.  Chardonnay adds floral notes and possibly minerality, also crispness and lightness with a well-rounded fullness that lasts right down to the finish.  Vineyards are mostly east facing.  Cȏtes des Blancs runs south from Épernay and has several famous Grand Cru villages: Avize, Chouilly, Cramant, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger, Oger and Oiry.  Krug’s famous Mesnil-sur-Oger comes from here which Total Wine indicated a 97 point bottle of the 2000 vintage sold for a mere $1,799.  Oger has now been merged into the new commune of Blancs-Coteaux.

    Photo by Michel Hetier; courtesy of Comité Champagne

    Épernay is the smaller unofficial capital of Champagne and is located in the southern part of the region.  Here you will find Perrier-Jouët, Pol Roger, De Venoge, Mercier and Moët & Chandon (founded in 1743) just to drop a few big names!

    Champagne Doyard: Cȏte des Blancs can trace their family history of viticulture way back to 1677.  Today Charles Doyard is a grower producer building on what his father Yannick established since 1979.  That includes biodynamic viticulture, preservation of old vines and a judicious use of oak barrels.  Doyard has 10 hectares in Vertus, Oger, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger, Avize, Cramant and Aÿ.  They are so quality-conscious that they sell off 50% or more of their harvest each year keeping only the grapes that pass their rigorous standards of quality.  Doyard intervenes as little as possible throughout the winemaking process and says “you cannot improve upon what nature gives you”.  Doyard also bottles his wines at between 4 ½ to 5 atmospheres of pressure instead of the usual 6 and uses 19-21 grams of sugar for the liqueur de tirage rather than the standard 24.  He prefers that the bubbles are harmonious and integrated instead of attacking you on the palate.  Champagne used to be bottled at lower pressure and he wants to recreate that. Doyard makes seven different Champagnes, the most unusual being La Libertine, a doux Champagne with a light effervescence and elevated sweetness similar to the wines of the eighteenth century.   Clos de l’Abbaye is made from a vineyard just behind the estate that was planted in 1956, farmed biodynamically and plowed entirely by horse. It will be bottled as a vintage dated wine each year. 

    Doyard “Cuvée Vendémiaire ” NV Brut Premier Cru
    Blanc de Blancs

    Doyard “Cuvée Vendémiaire” NV Brut Premier Cru Blanc de Blancs (disgorged 2018) is a 100% Chardonnay white Champagne.  It’s  a blend of Vertus, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger, Oger, Avize and Cramant; 40% vinified in oak barrel, 20% malolactic fermentation, blend of 50% from three vintages and 50% reserve wines and 5 grams dosage.  It was aged on the lees for 4 years.  Robert Parker gave it 94 points, 91 points from Wine & Spirits and 90 points from Wine Spectator.  We can expect intensely citrus colored, very mineral, layered flavors of honeycrisp apple, glazed apricot, candied ginger, lemon curd and a clean spiced finish. 

    de Venoge: Cȏtes des Blancs

    Henri-Marc de Venoge set up a business in 1825, named it de Venoge Champagne in 1837 and sold his first 6000 bottles in March 1838.  Shortly after he sold to clients in Brussels, Mannheim, several other German cities, London, and Copenhagen.  Venoge was the first to illustrate his labels, a completely new concept in Champagne.  Until then labels just showed the name of the producer and vintage.  He designed an oval label with two painted bottles and the de Venoge name.  Son Joseph launched the brand internationally and it was soon being sold in New York, New Orleans, Philadelphia and even Calcutta.  The first special cuvées became brands in their own right: Cordon Bleu, Vin des Princes.  By 1898 de Venoge was selling over 1 million bottles out of the Champagne regions entire 30 million.  Today de Venoge is part of Lanson-BCC, the second largest group in Champagne after Moët Hennessy selling approximately 1,700,000 bottles annually. Their chateau is in Epernay and features a deluxe suite for rent, bar and wine shop. There are three cuvees: The “Cordon Bleu” offers Brut, Brut Rosé and Extra Brut all aged a minimum of 3 years. The “Princes of Wines” is a scale up with Blanc de Blancs, Blanc de Noirs, Extra Brut and Rosé all aged 4 years. Last but not at all least is the “Louis XV” with Brut and Rosé vintages (currently 2006 with a 93 pt rating/ no information available for the 2008) made only from grand crus and very best vintages.  The de Venoge style is characterized by vinosity with freshness.  They use only the first pressing (cuvée), age the wines for at least 3 years and use a low dosage of about 7 g/l.  Each cuvée is quite individual expressing its terroir and grape variety. 

    de Venoge Cordon Bleu Brut Demi-Sec is a blend of 50% Pinot Noir, 35% Pinot Meunier and 25% Chardonnay, the same blend as the Cordon Bleu Blanc de Blanc.  It was aged for 4 years and has a dosage of 40 g/l.  They add 45 grams (about 3.75 Tbs) of cane sugar which enables the wine to meet the sweetness of a dessert without upsetting the balance of aromas.  When left to age, it acquires delicious notes of acacia honey and makes an excellent dessert wine.

    de Venoge Demi-Sec Champagne

    Vallée de la Marne

    “Valley of the Marne River” has 81 villages and grows mostly Pinot Meunier (72%), the grape that has a fruity unctuous flavor. It is almost 22,000 acres in size primarily west of Épernay towards Paris along the Marne River which flows east to west and is known for river wines with ample body and broad generous flavor.  There is one Grand Cru vineyard here, Aÿ, which is right outside Épernay. 

    You can find these famous houses in the Vallée de la Marne: Bollinger, Billecart-Salmon, Deutz, Gosset, Laurent-Perrier, Nicolas Feuillatte and Duval-Leroy. 

    Bollinger: Grand Vallé

    The house of Bollinger was founded in 1829 by the son of a noble family who inherited an estate in Aÿ.  One of his partners was Joseph Bollinger whose family members continue to run Bollinger, one of the most prominent producers in Aÿ as well as one of the most renowned in all of Champagne.  They have 174 hectares planted with 85% Grand Cru and Premier Cru vines in seven main vineyards growing Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and Pinot Meunier.  Bollinger is one of the few Champagne Houses to produce most of their own grapes to make their base blends.  60% of the vineyards produce Pinot Noir.  They also have two plots, the Clos Saint-Jacques and Chaudes Terres, which have the unusual distinction of never having phylloxerra.  The vines there have never been grafted and are cared for in every way possible to preserve their heritage.  The exclusive Blanc de Noir Vieilles Vignes Françaises is produced from them.  Grande Année and R.D. are some of the region’s most famous prestige cuvées.  It’s most famous Aÿ vineyard is the 10 acre Cȏte aux Enfants which produces the Pinot Noir that is blended into the superb La Grande Année Rosé.  A small amount of the Pinot Noir is bottled separately as a still red Coteaux Champenois wine called La Cȏte aux Enfants.    

    The Bollingers age their non-vintage wines three years and vintage wines five to eight years.  The Grand Année and R.D. Champagnes are riddled by hand.  No machines for these precious bubbles! 

    Bollinger is also unique for its reserve wine library of more than 750,000 magnums of grand cru and premier cru wines bottled with cork under light pressure and aged for five to fifteen years.  These wines are used in the Special Cuvées. 

    Lily Bollinger managed the business until 1971 and was well-publicized in the region.  Here is a noteworthy quote about Champagne supposedly attributed to Lily which I think is a great philosophy:

    ‘I drink it when I’m happy and when I’m sad.  Sometimes I drink it when I’m alone.  When I have company I consider it obligatory.  I trifle with it if I’m not hungry and drink it when I am.  Otherwise, I never touch it—unless I’m thirsty.” 

    A great marketing ploy for “Bolly” as it is affectionately known in England, was strategically displaying Bollinger Champagne in the James Bond film series.  Mr. Bond ordered a bottle at his hotel, drank it at the top of the Eiffel Tower, sent it off in a gift basket, drank it after release from prison, asked for it in a casino, and had a bottle of it in his car.  We hope he actually got to drink it!

    Bollinger La Grande Année Rosé 2007 is a blend of 72% Pinot Noir and 28% Chardonnay from 14 crus: mainly Ay and Verzenay for the Pinot Noir; Cramant and Oger for Chardonnay – 92% Grand crus and 8% Premier. 6% red comes from the famous red wine of Cȏte aux Enfants. The 2007 has a low dosage of 7 g/l and was cellar aged for more than twice the required time.  Expect a delicate coral tint with aromas of redcurrant, dried fig, mint, blond tobacco and dried flowers followed by delicate flavors on the palate of plum, kirsch, freshly cut grass and a lasting chalky finish.  Wine Spectator rated it 94 points.

    Bollinger La Grande Annee Rose 2007

    Gosset: Vallée de la Marne

    The house of Gosset can trace its roots back to 1584 when it first produced still wine in Aÿ, making it the oldest wine house in Champagne.   Back in those days, French kings preferred the wines of Aÿ and Beaune.  Both made wine from Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. But in the 18th century, the wines of Ay got bubbly!  Gosset cuvées of today are still presented in the antique flask identical to the one used since the 18th century.  They source their grapes almost entirely from premier and grand cru vineyards in the Vallée de la Marne.  Gosset makes a non-malolactic style champagne (thus preserving the malic acid in the grapes) which has become fairly unique in this region since the 1960s. To Gosset, it is not about the acidity but more about the style of their wine. Their motto is “the wine comes first, the bubbles come later”.   Gosset prefers to utilize all that the grapes and terroir have to offer.  They also use extended lees aging: four to five years for non-vintage, up to seven for vintage champagnes and 10 years for Celebris cuvées before release.  Gosset’s style for powerful and full-bodied Champagne has changed little over the centuries.  They make a range of eight different Champagne’s from Excellence Brut to Celebris Vintage Extra Brut.

    Odilon deVarine, the Gosset chef de cave, continues with the philosophy

    “At Gosset we first create a wine. The bubbles make it sublime”.

    Gosset Grande Réserve Brut is a blend of 45% Chardonnay, 45% Pinot Noir and 10% Pinot Meunier from 3 different vintages with a 9 g/l dosage that has been cellared for up to 4 years.  The grapes come from the vineyards of Ay, Bouzy, Ambonnay, Le Mesnil-sur-Oger and Villers-Marmery.  The result is a bright and golden color in the glass; ripe red blackcurrants, wheat, dried fruits and gingerbread on the nose; and mineral notes with ripe and dried fruit on the palate.  Rated 92 points by WE, WS and W & S.

    Gosset Brut Reserve NV Champagne

    Laurent-Perrier: Montagne de Reims, Vallée de la Marne and Cȏte des Blancs

    The Champagne House of Laurent-Perrier was founded by Alphonse Pierlot in 1812 in Tours-sur-Marne and eventually came to be owned by the cellar master, Eugene Laurent, and his wife, Mathilde Perrier. Eugene bought vines in the very best terroirs of Bouzy, Tours-sur-Marne and Ambonnay; dug out 800 meters of cellars and set up a tasting laboratory – a good foundation for the business. They were located in the Montagne de Reims, the Vallée de la Marne and the Cȏte des Blancs and also part of the 17 villages in the prestigious Grand Cru area.  Unfortunately the company had an up and down history through various family members and World Wars until purchased by the de Nonancourt family in 1939.  In 1949 Bernard de Nonancourt became the owner of the company bringing it to the level of one of the largest family-owned Champagne houses. Bernard created the signature Laurent-Perrier fresh, light and elegant style that is now exported to more than 160 countries worldwide and has made Laurent-Perrier the number 5 best-selling Champagne in the world, according to data collected by the Drinks Business in 2015.   The de Nonancourt family still retains majority ownership of Laurent-Perrier. 

    In 1889 Laurent-Perrier started selling its zero dosage sugar-free Grand Vin sans Sucre which was ahead of its time and especially preferred by their British clientele.  This wine stayed on the menu of the Jules Verne restaurant at the Eiffel Tower until 1913.  The Ultra Brut Laurent-Perrier was launched in 1981 as successor to the original Grand Vin sans Sucre.  They also make La Cuvée, Brut Millésimé, Grand Siècle, Cuvée Rosé, Alexandra Rosé and Harmony.  Prices range approximately from $40 – $200. 

    The brand now controls four primary champagne brands ranging from mid-high to high to very high. The Laurent-Perrier Group (Laurent-Perrier SA) now includes the world famous house of Salon, De Castellane and Delamotte.  

    Salon is the most unique – it only produces one wine!  It is exclusively from the village of Le Mesnil-sur-Oger and even then, only in the best vintages.  Eugène-Aimé Salon began making it for his private use about 1905 and first offered it for sale in 1921.  Eventually the Laurent-Perrier Group bought it along with Delamotte, which is right next door in Le Mesnil.  Now the two houses share an office and facilities but not cellars.  According to wine-searcher.com, the average price for a bottle of Salon Cuvee ‘S’ Le Mesnil Blanc de Blancs is $582 with an aggregated critic score of 95/100.  Wine.com is offering the 2007 on sale for $580 (was $675) or if you are feeling really rich, order the 1.5 liter magnum in a gift box for $1330.  It’s rated at 99 points and is 100% Chardonnay from a 2.5 acre vineyard owned by Salon plus 22.5 other acres of vineyards in the village of Le Mesnil in the Cȏte des Blancs.  They only make 4 or 5 vintages in a decade.  According to their website, 2007 was the last vintage released and 2008 is “currently maturing in Salon’s cellar”.  The 2008, the 42nd vintage, is expected to be released in 2019 and will only be available in magnum format.   Start saving your pennies!

    Delamotte has been a part of Champagne since 1760. They are located right next door to the famous house of Salon.  In fact at one time the owners of these two Champagne houses were married to each other. They currently make three different whites plus a rosé.  A bottle of Delamotte Brut NV is rated in the low 90s and can be found for $50 – $60 with Rosé in the high $80s. 

    The Champagne House of de Castellane in Épernay was founded in 1895 and is now owned by the Laurent-Perrier Group.  They produce both vintage and non-vintage cuvée as well as a Blanc de Blanc Chardonnay priced more in the $20-$30 range.  

    Laurent-Perrier Brut Nature Ultra Brut NV is a white blend of 55% Chardonnay and 45% Pinot Noir from 15 crus or villages with an average rating of 97%.  As they say on the spec sheet, “it appears without make-up, in its natural form”.  There is Zero dosage which requires extra care in making the wine.  It is aged for at least 4 years.  We should expect a very pale and crystal-bright color; citrus, white fruit and flowers like honeysuckle on the nose; a long but delicate taste of floral, fruit and mineral notes completed by a long finish with a clean palate. Wine Enthusiast rated it 93 points.

    Laurent-Perrier Brut Nature Champagne

    Cȏte des Sézanne

    ……….is just south of the Cȏte des Blancs and has mostly Chardonnay grapes planted east-facing in soils of both chalk and marl.  There are 12 villages with 3665 acres of vineyard planted in 77% Chardonnay, 18% Pinot Noir and 5% Pinot Meunier grapes. Vinegrowing was virtually wiped out here by phylloxerra as most other regions, but it took years before anyone replanted. Today most of the grapes are used in négociant or cooperative blends. This region produces more aromatic wines with less acidity than Cȏte des Blanc.  There aren’t a lot of growers making wine right now, but we are likely to see more activity here soon.  Consider visiting Champagne Yveline Prat, Breton-Fils, Daniel Colin and Domaine Collet-Champagne.

    Cȏte des Bar

    The Aube, aka Cȏte des Bar with 63 villages, has mainly Pinot Noir grapes (86%) growing in marl soils that produce aromatic wine with less acidity.  Wines of this region also have that body and strength from the Pinot Noir grapes.  This is a lesser known region of 20,000 acres, but some wine writers have proclaimed it as “the hipster Brooklyn of the Champagne region”.  If you want to break away from your norm, give the Aube a try.  It is located over an hour southwest of the heart of Champagne and centered around the medieval city of Troyes, which was once considered the provincial capital of Champagne.  Back in 1911, the big houses of Marne wanted to exclude the Aube from the legal limits of Champagne calling it “second-class Champagne”,  but in 1927 the Aube was once again considered a full part of the region.

    Sadly there are no grand or premier cru vineyards here.  Since this was primarily a region of farmers, the majority of the region’s wineries are considered grower-producers who now bottle and sell their own Champagne instead of selling their grapes to the big houses. These grower-producers tend to focus more on individuality with single-variety, single-vintage and single-vineyard Champagnes being quite common.  Styles differ markedly from producer to producer and vintage to vintage.  Some producers to try are Cédric Bouchard, Marie-Courtin, Jacques Lassaigne, Fleury and Vouette et Sorbée.

    Marie-Courtin: Cȏte de Bars

    Dominique Moreau started making Champagne on a single 6 acre estate in Polisot in 2006. Her grandmother, Marie Courtin, worked on the land here during the First World War.  Almost all of it is Pinot Noir and the estate has been ecocertified since 2009 and certified organic in 2010.   Moreau makes only about 1000 cases of Champagnes, and they showcase their intense mineral expression.  Her vineyards are close to Chablis and there is quite a bit of clay with limestone and marl, just like Burgundy. Her wines are excellent examples of single-variety, single-vintage, single-vineyard Champagnes with intense brininess and minerality.  “Résonance” is named for “the balancing energies of earth and sky”, sees no wood and is a non-dosage wine giving some people reason to claim the wine is too austere while others find it to be very accessible, pure, fruity and fresh Champagne.   “Efflorescence” refers to “something that evolves in perpetuity” and is also non-dosage.  Dominique recommends that we serve her wines in traditional white wine glasses in order to enjoy the increased aeration. 

    Domaine Marie-Courtin “Résonance” Extra Brut NV is a white Champagne made from Pinot Noir grapes.  It’s a wonderful example of a “grower producer, single vineyard, single vintage, single varietal and zero dosage” Champagne.  Antonio Galloni tells us to expect hints of smoke, slate, dried pears and red stone fruits in a creamy expressive well balanced Champagne.  He rated it at 94 points! 

    Marie-Courtin “Resonance” Extra Brut Champagne

    Roses de Jeanne, Cédric Bouchard: Cȏte de Bars

    Bouchard makes single-variety, single-vintage, single-vineyard Champagnes that are completely unlike any others in the Cȏte de Bars.  They are all harvested at very low yields, then fermented in stainless steel and bottled at 4.5 atmospheres of pressure instead of the usual 6.  He currently makes 7 Champagnes, 4 of them Blanc de Noirs, each from its own usually tiny parcel of vineyard.  His greatest wine is Le Creux d’Enfer, which is a rosé made from 3 rows of Pinot Noir, crushed by foot and macerated on its skins.  It’s a perfect example of Bouchard’s natural viticulture and minimalist winemaking.  Do not miss tasting Champagne from this internationally prominent tiny estate in Cȏte de Bars! 

    Roses de Jeanne Cédric Bouchard Val Vilaine Vineyard Blanc de Noirs 2016 is made from 100% Pinot Noir in a 1.5 hectare vineyard. Cȏte de Val Vilaine is a Pinot Noir vineyard in the village of Polisy.  It was farmed organically, hand harvested and crushed by foot, fermented using indigenous yeast, then bottled unfined and unfiltered.  It was aged on the less in stainless steel tanks for 16 months and bottled with zero dosage.  Only 300-500 cases are produced annually.  We are expecting to taste red fruit and richness on the palate similar to a red Burgundy, followed by floral and herbal notes of chamomile, white tea and chrysanthemums.  Bouchard recommends enjoying the first glass with its fine creamy mousse, then decanting it and serving in large Burgundy stems at 55 degrees!  CellarTracker users rate it at 92 points.

    Roses de Jeanne Cedric Bouchard
    Val Vilaine Vineyard Champagne

    How it’s made in Champagne

    The process of making Champagne sparkling wine is known as méthode champenoise.  If made the same way but anywhere else, it must be called méthode traditionelle. While there are other methods to make sparkling wine, this is the only legal method for making “Champagne” Champagne. We will talk a bit later about other sparkling wines and how they are made.  This is very basic information on the making of our beloved bottle of Champagne.  Entire books have been written about the process. 

    Méthode champenoise is basically a 9 step process.  Grapes are picked gently by hand at harvest and then (1) pressed often right in the vineyard.  Next up is the (2) first fermentation. In most cases the juice is fermented in stainless steel vats.  After fermenting, most houses will put the wine through malolactic fermentation to soften the impression of the acidity. A typical house will have several hundred base wines while Moët & Chandon, the largest house, has 800 base wines available each year. Each producer also has a stock of base wines held in reserve every year, usually the past three years.  Step (3) Blending starts in the spring after harvest until they arrive at their acceptable blended base which is call the assemblage.  Next the still base wine is bottled and capped with a small amount of liqueur de tirage, which is a mixture of wine, sugar and yeast.  This causes a (4) second fermentation in the bottle.  The carbon dioxide produced by the yeasts converting sugar to alcohol is trapped inside the bottle.  As yeasts die, they form sediment called lees inside the bottle.  Champagnes are (5) lees aged in the bottle for years.  During this time, a crown cap (like a beer cap) is used on the bottle.  To remove the yeasts and make a clear Champagne, the riddler goes to work on the (6) Rémuage – turning the bottles upside down and slightly rotated about 25 times.  Traditionally the riddling was down by hand by a réemueur. Large machines do this now especially for Non- Vintage wines.  Yeast cells collect in the neck of the wine bottles but can easily be removed in a process called (7) dégorgement .   The lees are removed from the bottle, and a small amount of (8) dosage, a liquid mixture of cane or beet sugar and wine, is often added.  Most Champagnes contain about 8-12 grams/liter.  This results in balance and sweetness.  After adding the dosage, the bottles are (9) recorked – the final cork is inserted and a protective wire cage called a muselet is placed on the bottle.  The final product is now ready for the market.

    Photo by Yvon Monet; courtesy of Comité Champagne

    The cork – how do they get it in that bottle?

    Simple!! It is made from three sections put together in a mushroom shape called an “agglomerated cork”.  It actually starts out as a cylinder and is compressed.  The bottom section that touches the Champagne is pure cork; the top two are a mixture of ground cork and glue.  Over time in the bottle, it compresses into that distinctive mushroom shape.  The longer in the bottle, the less it could ever return to the original cylinder shape.

    Sweetness

    The final level of sweetness, or Brut, is determined by the dosage.  Most styles are “brut” or dry in style. All Champagne is classified according to the amount of the dosage.  These are the ranges from driest to sweetest:

    • Brut Nature/Brut Zero (0-3 g/l RS) – Absolutely bone dry with no added dosage or no more than 3 grams.
    • Extra Brut (0-6 g/l RS) – Nearly bone dry with little to no dosage; these wines are rare; less than .6% residual sugar.
    • Brut ( 0 – 12 gm/l RS) – The driest and the most popular; ranges from bone dry to little residual sugar depending on the house style; less than 1.5% residual sugar. 
    • Extra Sec or Extra Dry (12-17 g/l RS) – One more step drier; off-dry; 1.2 – 2 %.
    • Sec/Dry (17-32 g/l RS) – Just a bit drier than demi-sec; actually off-dry to semi-sweet; 1.7-3.5%.
    • Demi-sec (32-50 g/l RS) – Half-dry; medium sweet, not as sweet as doux dessert wine, but suitable for many desserts.  Demi-sec means “half sweet”; 3.3-5%.
    • Doux (50+ g/l RS) – A rarely produced dessert- sweet Champagne style; minimum of 5%.            

    Styles of Champagne

    There are a number of styles of Champagne, but they are almost all blends. The Champagne maker may make hundreds of still wines to use as bases in the final blend (called the assemblage), but they are all made using one of Champagne’s three grapes. Blending is considered the most critical skill a winemaker can possess.  Champagne houses build their reputation on the style of their blend of their non-vintage wines, so it has to be consistent.  Champagne is also aged on the yeasts, and the legal length of time for aging varies depending on the style.

    Brut is the most common and most popular style of Champagne.  It refers to the driest of bubbles and can contain anywhere between 0 – 12 grams per liter of dosage, or final level of sweetness as previously described.  There are different levels of Brut – Brut Nature/Ultra Brut with 0 – 3 grams or Extra Brut at 0 – 6 grams.  Note that Extra Dry and Dry are actually not as dry as Brut.  If you are looking for a bubbly to serve with dessert, try the Demi-Sec or rarely produced Doux.  They can have from 32-50 grams dosage.

    Non-Vintage NV is the most traditional of the Champagne styles.  Multiple varieties and vintages of wine are blended together in hopes of producing a consistent wine every year.  Grapes come from good vineyards but not Premier or Grand Cru although some Premier Cru may be blended in.  Some houses prefer to use Pinot Meunier grapes only in Non-Vintage because they do not age as well as Chardonnay or Pinot Noir; therefore you will almost always find Pinot Meunier in Non-Vintage wines.  Non-Vintage must age on the yeasts (sur lie) for a minimum of 15 months – 1.5 years.

    Vintage or Millésimé is a traditional Champagne made only in certain years.  There have been 46 years denoted as Vintage in the last 60 years.  Eighty percent of the grapes used in a Vintage wine must come from the declared year.  These grapes come from good to great vineyards: many are ranked Premier or Grand Cru.  Pinot Meunier is sometimes included in a Vintage wine.  Vintage must age sur lie a minimum of three years prior to release.

    Prestige Cuvée is also a traditional Champagne and is the very best wine a Champagne house produces.  It is the tȇte de cuvée of “Grand Cuvée”.  These grapes come from the greatest vineyards, historically ranked Grand Cru.  Pinot Meunier is rarely included in a Prestige Cuvée by most houses.  There is no legal requirement for aging sur lie, but common practice is four to ten years. Some famous examples of Prestige Cuvées are: Louis Roederer Cristal, Laurent-Perrier Grand Siècle, Moët & Chandon Dom Perignon, Pol Roger Sir Winston Churchill, Veuve Clicquot La Grande Dame and Perrier-Jouëts Belle Epoque.

    Blanc de Blancs “white from whites”is non-traditional and made entirely of white grapes like Chardonnay.  It generally goes well with lighter foods, such as seafood and vegetables, is also good as a pre-dinner aperitif. They may be Non-Vintage or Vintage and are generally expensive.  One of the most expensive there is was   created in 1921 by the founder of the Champagne house Salon.  Blanc de Blancs are treasured for their lightness and generally come from the Cȏtes des Blanc.  Two of the most extraordinary Blanc de Blancs in the world are Krug’s Clos du Mesnil and Salon’s Le Mesnil. 

    Blanc de Noirs “white from reds”, also non-traditional, is made completely of red grapes such as Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier. It has a slightly pink tinge and deeper golden color than the Blanc de Blancs and makes a great pairing with full-flavored foods, i.e meat and cheese. These Champagnes tend to be rare and expensive.

    Rosé is traditional and typically a blend of white and red wine to create a rosé or pink wine prior to secondary fermentation.  Thank goodness the “Pink Champagne” of the 50s and 60s is no longer made!  The color comes from the addition of Pinot Noir wine at the second fermentation, the point at which still wine becomes Champagne. This type is one of the best to have with dinner, according to Ed McCarthy, author of Champagne for Dummies. These are richer and fuller-bodied and are considered the cream of the crop. They are usually more expensive than golden Champagnes because they are more difficult to produce and they are rarer.  They are made from one of two methods: (1) The Saignée Method, which is the most historical, involves letting some of the base wine sit in contact with Pinot Noir skins until the wine color is tinted pink or (2) A small amount of still Pinot Noir wine is added into each Champagne bottle before the second fermentation.  Champagne is the only wine region in Europe where it is allowed to make rosé by blending white and red wine, rosé d’assemblage.

    Single vineyard Champagne is made entirely from a single plot of vines instead of blending from many different plots.  It can be Non-vintage or Vintage.  One of the most famous is Krug’s Clos du Mesnil, first vinified in 1979 and released in 1986.Marie-Courtin and Cédric Bouchard are both grower producers currently making single vineyard Champagnes in Cȏte des Bars. Cédric Bouchard makes exclusively single vineyard, single vintage Champagnes at his Roses de Jeanne estate.

    Did you know they also make a still pink rosé wine in Champagne? Rosé des Riceys is made in Les Riceys, the southernmost village of Champagne.  Les Riceys is the largest wine growing village in Champagne at 2140 acres.  Only 865 of those are approved for rosé.

    The Grande Marques and Maisons de Champagne

    The Champagne Houses battled since the middle of the 19th century to protect the name of “Champagne” from being used by producers outside their region.  This was before the days of appellations and legal protection.  They joined forces with the Champagne Growers and drafted rules governing Champagne production, starting with demarcation of the area itself. The Champagne region was mapped out in 1927 by the Institut National des Appellations d’Origine Contrȏlé (INAO). This began the concept of the AOC.  Champagne is just one AOC unlike Burgundy with over 100 and Bordeaux with more than 50. In 1936 the region of Champagne was successfully decreed the Champagne AOC.  This decree also ratified all of the other laws and decrees of 1919, 1927 and 1935.  The name Champagne is protected even from use by other regions in France. 

     In 1941 the Comité Interprofessionnel du Vin de Champagne (CIVC) was formed for the purpose of protecting Champagne’s name, reputation and monitoring regulations for vineyard production and vinification.  The CIVC has established the classification system by grading the land based on suitability for growing white or red grapes.  The 17 Grand Cru villages are graded at 100%; Premier Cru from 90-99%.  The rest range from 80- 89%.  The producers set the price of their raw materials used upon the percentage rating of their grapes. The price a grower gets for his grapes is also determined by this system. 

    The rules regarding the labeling of a sparkling outside of Champagne, France are strictly enforced by French national laws, European Union regulations, and international trade agreements and treaties.  When the laws are broken, lawsuits are quickly filed.


    What about California, you may ask?  Korbel, a California winery, actually labels their sparkling as “California Champagne”.  Their website says they use méthode champenoise to make it.  It is definitely not made in Champagne, France.  It seems that the United States had a grandfather clause written into those agreements which said that “wineries who were operating and producing sparkling wine before the agreement was signed in 2005 are legally (according to US law) able to use the term “Champagne” on their label”.  But most don’t.  Korbel does but has been the subject of much controversy. 

    There are nearly 350 Champagne Houses. Most of the major houses are members of the Union de Maison de Champagne (UMC) and are sometimes referred to as Grandes Marques.  The Champagne Houses themselves have additional specific criteria that must be met to meet the AOC regulations.  Three are general criteria and seven are specific to each Marque.

    General criteria basically refer to production, marketing, communication and research.  Specifics refer to their production contracts, quality control procedures, reserve stock, base wine selection and blending, aging procedures, disgorgement and procedures for foil wrapping and release. 

    Most Champagne Houses are known for their brand promise with an unchanging taste profile.  Each Cellar Master is responsible year after year for that taste in the bottle – quite a responsibility!

    Négociants, Co-ops and Grower Champagnes

    Historically the business model for Champagne has been that “growers” provide the grapes and Champagne houses or Maisons, also known as négociants, buy the grapes from the growers, produce the Champagne, and send it off to market.  However this model has changed some since as early as the late nineteenth century.

    The type of producer marketing the Champagne can be identified by a two letter abbreviation followed by the producer’s official identification number on each and every bottle.  These codes have nothing to do with its quality. 

    • NM   Négociant manipulant:  These companies, including most large brands, buy grapes from growers and make the wine.  A Négociant can also own wine, too.
    • CM   Coopérative de manipulation:  These are co-ops that make and sell wine from growers who are members.
    • RC     Récoltant coopérateur:  A co-op member sells grapes to a cooperative and then receives Champagne produced by the co-op to sell under the members own name and label.
    • ND    Négociant distributeur: A wine merchant that buys finished bottles of Champagne and then sells under his own label and/or name (Kermit Lynch?)
    • RM   Récoltant manipulant: A producer that makes Champagne exclusively from their own vineyard.  Their Champagne is usually referred to as “ Grower Champagne

    Grower Champagnes are made by small growers who usually make artisanal style Champagnes.  They don’t buy the grapes as the large Champagne houses do – they grow their own and produce their own.  This “farmer fizz” as some wine writers call it, is their wine from start to finish.  The base blend is usually much simpler since they probably are not growing that many different grapes.  The resulting Champagne really reflects the terroir of the place where it was made.  According to Karen MacNeil in the Wine Bible, some grower-producers to know are: Pierre Peters, René Geoffroy, Pierre Gimonnet, Gatinois, Doyard, Michel Loriot, Jean Milan, Varnier-Fanniere, Chartogne-Taillet and Jean Lallement.

    • SR  Société de récoltants: A group of growers, usually family members, who make Champagne from their own vineyards.
    • MA  Marque auxiliaire: A buyer’s own brand; for example, a supermarket that buys the Champagne and then sells it under their own label.

    Organic and biodynamics

    Attitudes of the Champagne producers have been shifting remarkably during the past two decades.  They are now making an effort to improve their farming methods and have discovered the results may make better wine.  The Comité Champagne has put region-wide initiatives in place to educate the growers about sustainability.  For example: reducing the use of pesticides across the appellation by 50%, avoiding insecticides, creating recycling systems for the use of water in winery operations, initiating recycling programs for materials such as crown caps, and developing a lighter Champagne bottle which reduces carbon emissions.

    There are a few organic producers but not many due to the wet climate of the appellation.  It is cool and damp and mildew is a constant threat.  Even fewer growers are certified biodynamic although many may use some of the methods and preparations.  Marie-Courtin in the Cotes de Bars is both organic and biodynamic.  Fleury was first to become certified biodynamic and Louis Roederer is the largest biodynamic vineyard holder.  

    The hot topic among vintners for the next decade is the use of the metal copper. Copper sulphate is used by organic wine producers in lieu of pesticides to control mildew infection in the vines because copper is allowed as an agricultural practice while synthetic chemicals are not. European law has recently decreased the amount of copper that farmers can use because it degrades very slowly once washed off the vines and enough of it can lead to lifeless soils.  It has been reported that one in five organic wine producers currently use more than the new copper limit.  This leaves both the organic and biodynamic vintner with a major problem – what to use to control mildew? The biodynamic approach is to promote soil life and vineyard health. They will also have to find a satisfactory biodynamic alternative, and you could possibly see fewer organic farmers in the future.  

    Here’s the dirt………or all about the terroir     

    First of all, “terroir” is about so much more than just dirt.  It is climate (coastal or continental), precipitation, heat (moderate, tropical, arctic), sun exposure, altitude, slope, how vineyard rows are oriented, vegetation, wind, humidity (we really hate mildew), fog, severe weather (hail, frost, drought, floods and wildfires are great threats!).  And of course it is “soil” – the composition, the color on the surface, stones on the surface, drainage, and microbial beings like yeasts and bacteria.  All of these are elements of the “terroir” and when the terroir gods all align, the grape grower is off to a wonderful start.  It is up to him/her to take it from there!

    Champagne’s climate is predominantly “maritime” like most of France.  It’s influenced by the Atlantic Ocean on the west.   The annual temperature ranges about 50 F.  Summers are usually warm, winters usually cold and rain is steady throughout the year.  Sometimes unfortunately the weather is also “continental” – there can be frosts, heat waves and hail.  We have already talked about how weather affected the harvest for 2018.

    Now there is just one element missing – the white soil of Champagne is more than 75% limestone and in many places chalk.  It is those famous chalky soils that make Champagne so special! Chalk is a specific type of porous limestone. But how did it get there? The region lies in the Paris Basin, which is a massive bowl-shaped formation of many layers of sedimentary rock that cover most of northern France. More than 72 million years ago in the Cretaceous period, this area was covered by a large sea.  The sediment of tiny fossils and calcareous algae formed the chalk in a thick layer, up to 1000 feet deep in some places.  The chalk is responsible for the brisk saline character of the wines and also helps to regulate the supply of water to the vines.  Those tiny fossils exist in two principle biozones – ancient squid with a beak made of calcite are found in the belemnite or upper portion, and tiny fossilized sea urchins make up the micraster or lower portion.  Not all types of limestone are good for grape growing, but lucky for Champagne – they got the chalk! 

    Photo by Frederic Hadenque; courtesy of
    Comité Champagne

    Each village has a slightly different soil makeup which gives the resulting wines a slightly different flavor profile famous for that particular historic terroir.  Parts of the Champagne region don’t even have any chalk.  For example the Cȏte des Bar is in the southeast, accounts for almost one-quarter of Champagne’s vineyards, and is made up of the same type of soil as Chablis – Kimmeridgian limestone and marl (calcareous clay).  The new generation of winegrowers in the Cote des Bar are becoming famous for their single vineyard single variety philosophy which especially showcases the terroir. The majority of vineyards in Montagne de Reims, Grand Vallée and Cȏtes des Blancs all sit on chalk.  The chalky soil in the Cȏtes des Blancs is exceptionally white, pure, covered with minimal topsoil and is perfect for Chardonnay. This is why some of the very best Blanc de Blancs in the world come from this sub-region. 

    The grape growers and wine makers have been making incredible Champagne in this region for many years working with the terroir that they are given.  Most of their work was in the cellar blending the wine.  Hopefully the famous Champagne Houses will be making champagne in the styles they have become known for many years to come.  But the new generation has brought along with it technology and process improvement to allow making the very best use of the terroir.  Now there is increased attention paid to both the cellar and the vines.  That can only have a good outcome for consumers and serious winelovers like us! 

    Crayeres – the famous ready-made wine cellars

    Have you visited the wine cellars of Ruinart in the city of Reims?  If so you have probably experienced some of the 250 or so “crayeres” in existence.  These are deep chalk pits originally dug about 2000 years ago to quarry chalk for building material and other purposes.  They are pyramidal in shape, typically with a narrow opening that widens out as you go deeper, and they can be 100 feet deep.  It turns out that these pits make the perfect place to store wine due to their humidity and temperature. Ruinart was the first to use them for this purpose and today has cellars extending for 5 miles underground.  In the 1860s other Champagne houses began to use them, too.  Taittinger, Charles Heidsieck, Henriot and Veuve Clicquot all have lovely crayeres, but Pommery takes first place!  Madame Pommery acquired 120 crayeres in the 1870s covering more than 11 miles of rooms and tunnels.  Then she hired an artist, Gustave Navlet, to carve huge designs into the walls taking over 3 years to complete.  The crayeres are strictly Champenois and exist only on the southeastern side of Reims. 

    51Reims, Veuve Clicquot, Crayers
    Photo by Michel Guillard; courtesy of Comite Champagne

    The rules of “Champagne etiquette”

    • Serve chilled but not too cold – no colder than 6 C (42 F) and preferably around 12 C. (53F) if rosé, vintage and older wine.  Don’t over chill.  Too cold is almost worse than too warm!  The ideal serving temperature is between 42 -48 F.  Fill the ice bucket to within an inch of the top with half ice and half water; make sure the entire bottle is submerged.  Assuming room temperature of 68 F,  allow 40 minutes to chill a Champagne cellared at 52F but at least two hours for Champagne at room temperature, possibly longer.  The ice bucket brings the temperature down gradually then keeps it there.  It should stay at proper temperature for about as long as it takes ice to melt. 


    Don’t have an ice bucket? Allow 2 ½ – 3 hours in the refrigerator with the bottle laying on its side.  Then drink fast!  That Champagne will warm up quickly without ice!


    • Don’t hide the label when serving by wrapping the bottle in a towel.  That is considered a social faux pas. Always make sure guests can see the name of the producer while you are pouring.  Wipe the bottle when you take it out of the ice bucket to avoid dripping all over your guests.  If you MUST use a napkin, tuck it under the bottle leaving the label fully exposed. 
    • The right glass is essential.  Whether you are using a flute, white wine or tulip glass, crystal glasses are the best. Tulip glasses are now considered the gold standard. More about the glass selection later in this article. 
    • The proper way to open a Champagne bottle is as quietly and unobtrusively as possible.  Popping the cork is actually considered bad manners not to mention dangerous.  The bottle pressure can launch a cork at a speed of 13 meters/second which is slightly faster than the time it takes to “blink an eye”. Each bottle is under 6 atmospheres of pressure which is about the same as a truck tire.  Here is how to do it:
    • Take bottle out of ice and wipe dry with a napkin.
    • Carefully turn bottle upside-down once or twice without shaking to ensure proper temperature throughout.
    • Present the bottle to your guests – please show them the label!
    • Hold the bottle in one hand at 30-45 degree angle pointing bottle away from everyone.
    • Break and remove the foil, but not the wire cage from around the cork.
    • Place your thumb firmly on top of the cork to keep it from flying.
    • With your other hand, carefully unscrew the wire about 6 turns and loosen the cage.   
    • Holding the cork firmly, twist in one direction until the cork quietly eases out making that small sigh of escaping gas meaning it is released.  Be sure to turn the bottle, not the cork.
    • Wipe the bottleneck keeping bottle at an angle and give it a slight twist.
    • Fill the glass only one-third full by holding the bottle directly above the glass to encourage bubbles but prevent excessive foaming. Avoid filling more than half or two-thirds full to allow for bubbles dancing in the glass.
    • The sommelier or host/hostess will expect you to nose and taste the Champagne before nodding your approval.  Don’t swirl!
    • Never never place an empty bottle upside down in the ice bucket.  That shows complete disregard for your Champagne!
    • Savor it with short sips but if required to gulp it all down, the French call this sabler le Champagne.
    • If it is between meals, Champagne tastes best with some plain savory dry “biscuits” and even better with some nuts, green olives or Gruyere if its Brut and sweet biscuits with Sec or Demi-sec.  Here is where some Fossier Rose de Reims mini-biscuits would be perfect!

    How BIG is that bottle?

    Here are the sizes of bottles currently approved for sale within the European Union:

    • Quarter: 20 cl (or 18.7 cl on board ships)
    • Half bottle: 37.5 cl (12.7 ounces)
    • Standard bottle: 75 cl (25.4 ounces)
    • Magnum: 1.5 litres/2 bottles (50.8 ounces)
    • Jeroboam: 3 litres/4 bottles (101.6 ounces) (1);  the first king of Israel (930-910 BC)
    • Rehoboam: 4.5 litres/6 bottles (147 ounces) (2); son of Solomon and king of Judah (930 – 915 BC)
    • Methuselah: 6 litres/8 bottles (196 ounces) (3); lived for 720 or 969 years depending on source
    • Salmanasar: 9 litres/12 bottles (304.8 ounces)(4); the name given to five Assyrian kings.

    Very large sizes made only to order (5)

    • Balthasar: 12 litres/16 bottles (406.4 ounces)
    • Nebuchadnezzar: 15 litres/20 bottles (508 ounces)
    • Solomon: 18 litres/24 bottles
    • Melchizedec: 30 litres/40 bottles

    Solving the mystery of food pairings

    Nothing quite equals Champagne as a single wine to serve throughout a meal.  It is also a wine for all seasons and all events.  It’s great in the summer no matter whether dining indoors or al fresco.  It’s great in freezing winter weather of the North or the balmy winter weather of Florida.   And it should never be saved just for celebrations or major events.  It’s perfect as a toast, an aperitif, or served throughout an entire meal.  But it still deserves some thought and consideration for choosing the perfect Champagne.  The right one also pairs with your dessert course or just drink it by itself for dessert. 

    If serving Champagne with a full-course meal, serve the various styles in order of intensity: light before strong, young before old and dry before sweet.  Just remember to go from lighter to heavier flavors.  The main elements to consider are flavor intensity and structure together with the texture.  If opting for a single Champagne throughout the meal, go with the heavier weight, more intense flavors of a vintage and/or prestige cuvée.  This is a good rule of thumb to follow for serving through the courses: Brut NV for beginnings; Vintage and Prestige for the main course, and Demi-Sec for dessert.  Here are some more in-depth pairings: 

    Appetizers: This is a great time to serve Non-vintage Brut or Blanc de Blancs. A fairly young crisp tasting Blanc de Blancs will go perfectly with cheese tartlets, mini-toasts topped with smoked salmon or foie gras, and nuts, especially almonds.   No sweet appetizers or pizzas please.  Caviar also goes with youngish Blanc de Blancs. If you haven’t tried potato chips or popcorn for finger food snacks or appetizer, you may be amazed at how well it pairs.  Champagne pairs well with salty foods particularly dry styles like Brut Natures.

    Seafood: A non-vintage Blanc de Blancs is best.  Pacific oysters go best with young Champagne while Maine Belon oysters are a treat with a mature Vintage Champagne. Oysters Rockefeller, langoustine, scallops and lobster require older drier Vintage Champagne.  Escargot with a Blanc de Blanc works well as do caramelized scallops with an older vintage.  Try some grilled salmon with rosé.

    Fish: Serve a Blanc de Blancs with a freshwater fish like trout in a creamy buttery sauce.  Saltwater fish like sea bass and sole call for a Non-Vintage Brut Blanc de Noirs.  The lighter the sauce, the lighter the Champagne.  Making Bouillabaisse?  Pair it with a good Rosé.

    Charcuterie: A Pinot Noir driven Vintage Champagne is a good choice for hot foie gras. 

    Poultry: Vintage or Non-Vintage Pinot Noir driven Champagnes are good matches for chicken and capon.  Any poultry involving mushrooms calls for an older Brut or a Rosé.  Only an old really mature Champagne can match up to truffles. 

    Meat: Brut Vintage is delicious with veal, braised ham or pork (especially tenderloin).  Red meat – especially less fatty cuts of beef and lamb served rare – must have a good full-bodied rosé as do beef stew and osso bucco.  Chinese and Thai food need a Demi-Sec.

    Cheese: Coulommiers cheese with a Brut Non-Vintage is a pairing made in heaven! Camembert, Reblochon, Comté and Brie are also good choices, but never pair with Blue cheese. Fresh young goat cheese works wells with a Blanc de Blancs or light Non-Vintage Brut. 

    Looking for cheese from Champagne?  Langres AOP cheese is a soft creamy slightly crumbly washed rind cow’s milk cheese from the Langres plateau in the French region of Champagne-Ardenne.  It has had its own AOP since 1991.  Langres is famous for its cylindrical shape with a 5-mm deep well on the top called the “fontaine”.  The rind has a natural orange color.  Wine and cheese aficionados fill the well with Champagne and eat the cheese after champagne has bubbled out from the top “volcano-like”. 

    Chaource AOP cheese is another cow’s milk cheese from the Champagne region, specifically the village of Chaource, where it has been made since the Middle Ages.   It is 50% fat, creamy, crumbly and spreadable with a taste something like a Brie.  It goes really well with a Rosé Champagne.  Chaource has been AOP accepted since 1977.

    The “pudding”/dessert: If you must, try a Blanc de Blancs with a chilled peach soup or a Rosé with a strawberry tart. If you are serving anything sweeter, particularly involving chocolate, you should switch to a relatively sweet Champagne.  Bittersweet dark chocolate can also pair with an extra dry or dry style.  Fresh berries are nice with Rosé.  For a simple sweet finish fill glass bowls with fresh cherries, raspberries and blueberries, which bring out the Champagne’s hidden fruit flavors, especially with a Rosé.

    To end the evening: Here is where you pull out the rare and extravagant Prestige Cuvée to sip at leisure in comfort ………maybe with a fine cigar?

    Breakfast, brunch and supper: Non-Vintage Brut should do fine for the entire meal.  If the occasion is more special, you may want to switch from Brut to Demi-Sec for dessert.

    Between meals and anytime: A basic Brut Non-Vintage is all you need to bring people together.

    The glass is the thing!

    2016 may well have marked the death of the Champagne flute.  Many sommeliers and wine experts have given up their flutes for glasses that better showcase their bubbly beverages.  Flutes may well signify that the event is a celebration, but according to Axelle Araud, a wine expert at Dom Perignon, a white wine or burgundy glass not only “keeps the aroma in the glass, but gives the  Champagne more room to express what it has to say”.   Classic flutes are permissible for non-vintage Champagne as they “preserve the effervescence” but to pay homage to those vintages and most special cuvées of the Champagne producer, use the white wine glass. 

    Maximilian Riedel, CEO of Riedel Crystal, told Decanter.com that “his goal was to make Champagne flutes obsolete”.  Jean-Baptiste Lécaillon, cellarmaster at Champagne Louis Roederer said: “we often use white wine glasses” to aerate their Champagne.  Hugh Davies, CEO and winemaker at Schramsberg Vineyards said that a classic narrow flute can inhibit the depth of aroma and flavor in the wine. 

    Where do the bubbles come from?  Professor Gerard Liger-Belair is a chemical physicist at the University of Reims and an expert of sparkling wine bubbles. The Professor says 1) there are 10 million carbon dioxide bubbles naturally present  in a bottle, 2) the size of bubbles can vary from between .4 mm and 4 mm, 3) it is not true that the smaller the bubbles, the better the champagne and 4) 1.7 mm across seems to be the magic size for a bubble.  When the bottle is opened, those 50 million or so tiny bubbles inside are set free!  Shall we count and measure?  Scientifically they explode as they reach the surface of the wine making a tiny crater.  The crater then closes up and ejects a thread of liquid which break up into droplets that can fly up to 10 centimeters. Tiny strings of bubbles come from certain points in the glass.  Microscopic fibers left by a kitchen towel or just airborne particles stick to the side of the glass allowing the molecules of dissolved carbon dioxide to form bubbles.  So it’s possible if you drink your Champagne from a glass that has been so ultra-cleaned and dried that there is nowhere for the bubbles to form.  That is not a problem when I wash wine glasses!

    So why do we have flutes?  They showcase those tiny bubbles that look so beautiful rising to the top of your glass.  They actually have a small scratch at the base that whips the wine into a tiny tornado and encourages it to stay bubbly as you drink. It also makes it easy to measure your pours. Flutes are also harder to spill than the coupe and saucer glass popular 50 years ago.   And they look so fun and festive signifying “it’s party time”!  Sorry but it has been scientifically proven that a coupe loses CO2 at least one-third faster than a flute. 


    The coupe design was supposedly modeled on Marie Antoinette’s left breast!  But it actually came about before her time.  It was designed to allow the drinker to dip cake into its shallow bowl – after all, let them eat cake!  It came back into vogue a few years ago especially for serving our trendy cocktails.   My Florida 57 cocktail at Point 57 Restaurant in Cape Coral would not have been nearly as exciting to me if served in a different type of glass! 


    Some head sommeliers such as Philippe Jamesse, head sommelier at Les Crayères in Reims so detested the use of a flute that he took his idea to a local glass manufacturer Lehmann and they created what they consider the perfect glass – an elongated, rounded in the middle and tapering towards the top measuring 72 – 88mm at the widest point – depending upon how much money you want to spend!  Some of the great Champagne houses like Ruinart, Piper-Hiedsieck, Moët & Chandon and Krug have all collaborated with Riedel to create glasses tailored to specific wines.  Some of them even believe that each vintage requires a specific glass to best showcase their wine. 

    Riedel’s family has been making high-end glassware since 1756, so they obviously know a few things about making the “perfect” glass.  Their newest Fatto A Mano champagne glass is shaped like a white wine glass with the scratch point set in the center of the bottom of the glass, and it costs a whopping big $100 a glass!  A little too much for my Champagne taste on my Prosecco budget.  According to some taste testers using the Fatto A Mano glass the champagne smelled far more appealing due to the wider mouth, the bubbles lasted longer and the taste stayed fresher.  The essence of flowers or fruit come forward instead of the yeasty mushroomy smell from a flute.     Riedel also says the best substitute for such a champagne glass is a Pinot Noir glass because there are so many Pinot Noir grapes used to make champagne. 

    Riedel is still happy to sell flute glasses, but their recommendation for sparkling service would always be the wine glass shape, so if you order a sparkling wine, especially a vintage Champagne, don’t be shocked if your restaurant sommelier and staff presents it to you in a white wine or tulip style glass.  Or ask for service in a white wine glass (or a red wine glass if their glassware is small). They and you will be ahead of the curve! 

    Try a glassware testing at your next Champagne event

    The Champagne:

    Do two separate taste tests – one a Non-Vintage Champagne and the other a Vintage

    The Glassware:

    1. Pour Champagne in several types of glasses: flute, white wine or tulip, coupe and maybe even a Pinot Noir Burgundy glass if you are feeling really adventurous.
    2. Consider how it changes in each one:

    Is it more aromatic or less?

    Does it become longer or more complex on the finish?   Or shorter and more stunted?

    Does it show more fruit on the palate?  Or is the acidity more pronounced?

    Is the alcohol more integrated?  Or less?

    Why aren’t all sparkling wines created equal?

    If it is a “Pét-nat” or Pétillant-naturel sparkler that you seek, you had better head to the Loire Valley.  It doesn’t follow the method for making Champagne, so you will never find one in this AOC!

    We have already mentioned several times that only sparkling wine made in the French wine region of Champagne can legally be called “Champagne”.  And even then it must follow many many pages of legal regulations describing in great detail how it must be made.  So what then can possibly make a difference if you pop open a bottle of sparkling from the Loire Valley?  Or a bottle of Cava from Spain?  Or Prosecco or Franciacorta from Italy?  Here are the differences in simple terms.

    First of all, sparkling wines must be fermented twice: once to make the wine and the second time to make the bubbles.

    • “Sparkling” is a term used for wine that produces bubbles at the surface after opening.  The terms “fizzy” and “effervescent” may also be used to include these wines.  These are the different pressure levels that exist in sparkling wines:
    • Beady – less than 1 atmosphere of pressure
    • Semi-sparkling – 1 – 2.5 atmospheres of pressure (14.7 – 37 psi); includes Frizzante, Spritzig, Pétillant and Pearl wines.
    • Sparkling – above 3 atmospheres of pressure; the EU allows Champagne, Cava, French Mousseux and Crémant, Spanish Espumoso, German Sekt and Spumante all to be labeled as sparkling.
    • The higher the pressure, the finer the bubbles!

    These are the major methods for making sparkling wine all resulting in different levels of carbonation and a unique style of sparkling.  The two that we should be most familiar with are the Traditional and Tank methods.  They are also the two main methods for making French sparkling wine. 

    Traditional Method – better known as “Méthode Champenoise”, sometimes referred to as méthode traditionelle, Metodo Classico:

    • Officially allowed only in the Champagne region of France and is the most expensive method.  The process takes place completely inside the bottle.
      • The classic way to make sparkling but not the oldest way.
      • Cremant – Any sparkling made in the rest of France but using the traditional method.
      • Cava – Spanish sparkling wine made in the traditional method.
      • Franciacorta and Trento – Italian sparkling wines made in the traditional method.
      • Bottle pressure is 5 – 7 atmospheres or ~75-99 psi.

    Tank Method  – also known as  “Méthode Charmat”, Metodo Italiano:

    • Both first and second fermentation are done in stainless steel pressurized tanks instead of individual bottles.  The wines are then bottled but not aged. 
    • This process is fast, easy and not as labor intensive; bubbles are less refined; widely used in the US.
    • Prosecco, Lambrusco, Asti and Moscato d’Asti – All produced in Italy using this method.
    • Sekt – German sparkling wine made this way.
    • Bottle pressure is 2-4 atmospheres or 30-60 psi.

    Transfer Method – Process same as Traditional up to remuage:

    • Wine is transferred from bottles to a pressurized tank and processed in bulk, then rebottled.
    • This method is most commonly used for non-standard sized bottles such as splits (187 ml) and large format (3 L +).   Australia and New Zealand often use this method. 
    • Less expensive than Méthode Champenoise.
    • Bottle pressure is 5 – 7 atmospheres or ~75-99 psi

    Ancestral Method – aka Méthode Ancestrale, Méthode Rurale, Pétillant Nature or “Pet-nat”:

    • The fermentation process is stopped mid-way for some months and then bottled for the fermentation to complete in the bottle.  The bottles are chilled, riddled and disgorged just like the traditional method when the desired level of CO2 is reached. 
    • This is assumed to be one of the earliest methods for making sparkling wine preceding the Traditional Method by at least 200 years. 
    • Blanquette de Limoux is considered to be the first sparkling made and was produced by monks in the monastery of Saint-Hilaire.  (We had the opportunity to drink Saint-Hilaire Brut Blanquette de Limoux AOC sparkling wine at our Southwest France forkandcorkdivine dinner in May 2018.) 
    • Another famous region for producers of Méthode Ancestrale sparkling wines is the Clairette de Die AOC.  (We were also lucky to drink a Clairette de Die Brut Mousseux, saint Crois, Drome at our Southern Rhone Valley and Provence Dinner in April 2018.)  Méthode Diose Ancestrale is a variation of emptying the wines into a pressurized tank and filters instead of riddling and disgorging.
    • Bottle pressure is 2-4 atmospheres or 30-60 psi

    Carbonation Method – the industrial method

    • Direct injection of carbon dioxide into wine just like adding carbonization to soda.
    • The least expensive method; results in large bubbles that disappear quickly!
    • Bottle pressure is 3 atmospheres or 45 psi.

    We have just devoted many pages to the sparkling wines of Champagne, the most well-known bubbles in France……..or in the entire world!  However there are many other sparkling wines made in France using the same traditional method but sometimes using different grapes.  Many of these are known as Crémants (creamy) and are governed under their own AOP.  In fact there are eight appellations for sparkling with Crémant in their name.  Several other French sparklers include Mousseux AOPs and Vouvray AOP.

    Moving out of France, there are some other notable European sparkling wines probably most familiar to us: Cava from Spain and the Italian sparklers of Franciacorta, Trento and Prosecco. 

    Cava – can be produced from six wine regions of Spain and must be made according to the Traditional Method.  It is made with both indigenous and international grapes and is made in styles similar to Champagne; Brut, Sec, etc.

    Franciacorta DOCG and Trento DOC – are produced in the Traditional Method in their appellations in northern Italy.  They are both made from Chardonnay and several Pinot grapes and are all high quality wines.   (Also some favorites of forkandcorkdivine!)

    Prosecco is made both fully sparkling (Spumante) and lightly sparkling (Frizzante) primarily from the Glera grapes in the Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulla provinces of Italy.  It is produced by the less expensive Tank Method as well as some by Traditional Method.  Prosecco can be DOC or DOCG.

    We could go on and on, as it seems that most wineries in most countries now produce some kind of sparkling wine.  Just remember that all sparkling wine is definitely not created equal.  There is a time and place for drinking all of them.  It just depends on the occasion, your taste and your wallet!

    What will the future bring for Champagne?

    Champagne is the world’s leader in high-quality bottle-fermented sparkling wine.  It has a legacy and the long unique history of being considered “best in class”.  They have more regulations to follow than any other appellation in the world.  Champagne is a blended wine causing some people to feel that terroir has little to do with it – the wine is made in the cellar, right?  Many of the Champagne Houses depend upon their non-vintage wines to reflect their house style and provide consistent results year after year.  The twentieth century was all about perfecting cellar practices.  The twenty-first century has moved on to focusing on the region’s vines.  There are a number of new breed wine growers making “grower champagnes” who feel that the terroir must be individually expressed in their single-vineyard single-variety wines.  Luckily this change in philosophy has extended to many of the larger growers and even large Champagne Houses. They are becoming more conscientious about their viticultural techniques, and the use of organic and biodynamic processes are on the increase.  Many are becoming more creative while still staying within the legal guidelines, and quality and continuous improvement is on the rise.  All of these changes indicate that Champagne should be studied and critiqued just the same as any other wine.  It is not only the wine that makes exceptional Champagne, but it is also the vines and terroir from where they came.  We the consumer will reap the rewards as sparkling wines of Champagne only get brighter and better.  It is my opinion that Champagne is definitely worthy of being awarded “The Wine Region of the Year”, and I am really looking forward to the bottles released in three years.  I hope that you are, too.

    Accepting the Wine Region Award
    Photo courtesy of Marcello Palazzi

    This project may not have been about an “exotic” wine country or region like my previous adventures in Croatia, Turkey, or Slovenia, but it was certainly a refresher course for me.  In fact I learned more than I had ever vaguely remembered about Champagne since those days long ago of attending monthly wine classes.  For numerous years now I have “sampled widely” as Jerry Greenfield, our instructor better known as “The Wine Whisperer”, advised us to do.  I have sampled sparklings from Traditional Method Champagne, to Charmats, to Cavas and Proseccos.  I have tasted and loved sparkling wines from Hungary to Croatia to Franciacorta, Trentodoc and everywhere else in Italy.  I’ve even had a sparkling Teran from the Kras region of Slovenia!!!! I’ve enjoyed Blanquette de Limoux and Clairette di Die from France and oh yes, many many many bottles from California and even New Mexico.  But after spending the past six weeks or so reading about THE Champagne – “The Wine Region of the Year”, I cannot wait to make my way through about ten more of them at a forkandcorkdivine wine dinner with a few of our friends in the next few weeks.  We will have Champagnes representative of most of Champagne’s sub-regions, Non-vintage versus Vintage, Brut versus Brut nature, Blanc de Blancs, Blanc de Noir, Grower-Producer Champagnes, zero dosage, Rosé and Demi-sec.  And of course, they will all be paired appropriately throughout the courses.  Pictures of the sparkling Champagnes and all of our foods will be published after the dinner.

    à votre santé

    forkandcorkdivine.com

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    1.30.19

  • 19Jan

    The Silk Road was a network of trade routes beginning in China and weaving all the way through the Middle East to Europe.  The Chinese stake a claim to formally opening it back in 130 BC, but the Persians had a trade route called the Royal Road 300 years earlier.  People travelled across the Silk Road with fruits and vegetables, livestock, grain, leather, tools, artwork, precious stones, metals and religious objects.  Significant impact was made by their ideas and inventions.  The commodities of paper and gunpowder have made quite an impact on history. We foodies can also thank the Silk Road traders for bringing us the spices of the East.   Imagine how boring our food would be without them!

    Right in the center of the Silk Road is Uzbekistan, a landlocked country in central Asia about the size of Spain.   Three of the great Silk Road key stop-off cities were Samarkand, Bukhara and Khiva; all of them have been restored and are now UNESCO World Heritage Sites.  Then there is Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan.  Tashkent was completely destroyed by an earthquake in 1966 leaving over 300,000 people homeless, but the entire city was completely rebuilt by the Soviets.  Central Asia came firmly in control of Russia by the beginning of 1920 officially creating the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic in October 1924.  It was not until September 1, 1991, that Uzbekistan was able to proclaim its National Independence Day thus becoming the Republic of Uzbekistan. The ethnicity of the approximately 33 million people who live there is primarily Uzbek who practice the Muslim religion. 

    In addition to having the fourth largest deposits of gold in the world and being the world’s fifth-largest exporter of cotton, the country’s cuisine is influenced by local agriculture as are many nations.  Uzbek farms plenty of grains and has an abundance of sheep, which brings us to the country’s cuisine.  We are fortunate here in the Fort Myers area to have an authentic Uzbekistan restaurant, The Silk Road.  It is a small family owned and operated restaurant that makes you feel like you have been welcomed into their home to dine on the cuisine of Uzbek and Central Asia.  An adventurous group of nine SOFO Wine Women recently dined there, a first time experience for everyone except me.  Here is what you can expect to find on the menu should you choose to dine there, all of which would be typical in other Uzbek restaurants or family tables. 

    The signature dish of Uzbekistan is palov, a main course made with rice, grated carrots, onions and pieces of meat.  Variations of it are served all day long in Uzbek and for all types of events.  Our local Silk Road Restaurant includes chickpeas and raisins in their delicious palov topped with pieces of lamb.

    Pavlov with fresh vegetable salad

    Lagman is a noodle based dish similar to lo mein served as a soup or a main course.  Silk Road prepares it with beef, homemade noodles, green peppers, garlic, parsley, tomatoes and onions.  They offer it as a soup, but you can make a meal of their lagman.

    Lagman

    Other typical Uzbek soups available on the Silk Road menu are chuchvara, meat dumplings in a clear broth; borsch, beef soup with beets, carrots, cabbage and potatoes; and a lamb shank soup with vegetables.

    Chuchvara

    You can make a meal just sharing all of the tasty Uzbek appetizers, but be sure to have at least one or maybe two orders of Uzbek bread called non.  It’s a significant part of Uzbek cuisine typically made in a tandoor clay oven.  Non is shaped into a circular flat loaf with a thin depression in the center and a thicker rim around it.   It is best right out of the oven.  Just pull off a piece and enjoy.

    Non bread

    Samsa is a pastry stuffed with seasoned beef and chopped onions baked in the tandoor oven, and chebureki pastries are stuffed with beef and onion then deep fried.  We passed on the zakuska beef tongue platter (although it is probably delicious) and moved on to my personal favorites – the baked eggplant platter which I really love with the homemade tomato sauce and garlic topped with cilantro, or for the non-cilantro lovers  they will make it without that  green stuff on the top.  And my other favorite – blinchik, a tender little Uzbek crepe stuffed with ground beef and potatoes and served with chatni, a creamy yogurt sauce mixed with cilantro and garlic.

    Blinchik
    Baked eggplant platter with cilantro

    Next up are those amazing salads!!!!  Uzbek is known for vegetables and the salads at Silk Road are fresh, fabulous and made of thin ribbon sliced veggies.  The traditional Uzbek salad is called achichuk and it consists of thinly sliced tomatoes, onions, basil and cucumbers.  The eggplant salad is a mixture of green peppers, cucumbers, carrots and eggplant and, just like its name on the menu, is delicious.  The fresh beet salad has little ribbons of beets, carrots and cucumbers.  If you love fresh beets like I do, you have to order this salad.

    Achichuk – traditional Uzbek salad
    Eggplant salad
    Fresh beet salad

    Be sure to save room after all those tasty appetizers and salads for the typical Uzbek entrees.  In addition to the palov, there are kebab platters featuring your choice of lamb, beef, chicken, shrimp or lulya which is made from minced meat typically lamb and all are accompanied by Uzbek fried rice and chatni sauce.

    Lamb kebab skewer

    The beef shawarma was also popular at our table.  Really flavorful shredded beef with tomatoes, onions and yogurt sauce is wrapped in a tender flat bread.  It comes in a paper wrapper and you can eat it out of your hand, but I eventually gave in to my knife and fork.

    Beef shawarma

    Somehow we did not order the homemade dolma but I am sure those grape leaves and cabbage stuffed with ground beef are quite delicious.

    Last but not least are the beef manti.  None of these beautiful little dumpling packages made it to our table that night, but I enjoyed them on a previous visit.  Manti are dumplings filled with a mixture of beef and onion, wrapped up like little purses then steamed.  I am even happier to say that I have made them at home and was really pleased to see that Silk Road mantis looked and tasted just like mine!  That’s a good thing in case there was any doubt.   

    Manti

    There was no room left for dessert that night – in fact, I saw a number of boxes going home with adequate food for another meal.  Sadly I have yet to have the crème brulee, but I have previously eaten, and can give rave reviews for, the homemade baklava.  Silk Road makes their baklava with pecans, walnuts, lemon, rose water and pistachios.  It is truly delicious.

    Since the name of our group is SOFO Wine Women, we were there to sample wine from Central Asia.  Having had wine from Central Asia and right here at Silk Road before myself, I knew it was going to be an interesting experience for the rest of our group.  Silk Road has some “traditional” wines on their wine list, but we were there for the whole experience.  Not everyone is adventurous enough to try food and wine from unfamiliar or “exotic” countries, but we all jumped right in for the Central Asian red and white!  Here is a bit of history about wine in Uzbek and the wines that we drank.

    Vineyards have existed in Uzbek at least since the Roman times.  After all, it is rumored that grape vines were introduced by Noah on Mount Ararat which is very close by in Turkey.  Many of the vineyards here were destroyed during Soviet times as they were in many other countries in Central Asia, and many of the population are Muslims, which means alcohol was not prominent in their lives.  All of this together means that there has not been a thriving wine industry in Uzbek. 

    There are currently 37 grape varieties grown here; many indigenous grape varieties did survive the Soviet era and International varieties (Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Riesling, etc.) have been planted.  Most of the vineyards are in Samarkand, Surkhandarya and Tashkent Provinces.  You probably won’t recognize many of their major grapes: Gulja, Hungarian Muscat, Muscat Rose, Aleatico, Rkatsiteli, Saperavi, Vassarga Black, May Black, Hindogni, Morastel, Tavkveri, Aligote, Bayan Shirey, Soyaki, Parkent Pink and Baktiyori except for the Riesling and Cabernet Sauvignon. There are 14 wineries with the oldest and most famous being the Khovrenko Wine Factory in Samarkand.  A Russian merchant Dmitriy Filatov founded a small wine enterprise in 1868 which later became known as Khovrenko thanks to the Russian scientist winemaker of the same name.  Khovrenko makes a lot of dessert wine which is not surprising since the sugar content of Uzbek grapes can reach 28%.  Wines of the Soviet period were generally sweet and aromatic.  Many of the “library” wines can be found in the Khovrenko 100-year-old wine cellar and museum.

    The wine industry has become a national priority since 2006.  Vineyards have evolved in the past 10 years or more with modernization of equipment, procedures and the planting of international varieties.  While Khovrenko may still produce a lot of those Soviet profile wines, they are starting to develop new European-style technology.  Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev has decreed a 60% increase in the state wine company’s wine exports by the end of 2021 from current levels.  He wants the current area under cultivation doubled and recently visited France where he ordered 60,000 French cuttings including Chardonnay and Cabernet varieties and wants more grape seedlings from Italy, Chile and the United States.  The president also ordered an informational and audit system on all alcohol producers, production and sales to be put into place and fully operating by the end of 2022. He has pledged to unshackle the economy.  Unfortunately wine industry experts have a big concern about Uzbek’s ability to make fine wines.  The climate is not as conducive for grape growing as neighboring Georgia whose wine industry is on the rise.  Not to mention that Uzbeks are more likely to drink vodka than wine and Islam has a growing role in their society.  But President Mirziyoev expects to change all of that and has directed that an annual international wine festival event be held in Uzbek.  It might be a bit too early to make your travel plans! 

    The most important wine producer is the privately owned Mehnat Group created in 1993 at Tashkent.  They make dry wines Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon, Saperavi and Hindogni for reds and Riesling, Rkatsiteli, Bayan Shirei and Kuldginskii for white wines.  In Tashkent you will also find Tashkentvino, a winery that produces luxury vodkas and aged brandies in their new plant opened in 2010.  While dining at the Silk Road, we shared a bottle of wine from Tashkentvino Orient Stone “1001 Nights”.   Searching the internet could not provide me with any technical notes on this wine.  What we do know is that it is advertised as a “dry red wine” with 12% alcohol.  There are a number of wines listed on their website, but no “1001 Nights”!  This wine marketed itself as a dry red, but we found it anything but dry and are most interested in knowing what grapes were in that bottle.  If anyone out there knows the answer, please let me know.  However, on the positive side, how many people do we know in the wine world who can say that they drank a bottle of wine from Uzbekistan?  Only 8 other people that I know!  I think it will be quite a few years before we have the opportunity to enjoy a bottle of fine Uzbek wine. 

    Orient Stone 1001 Nights Red Wine from Uzbekistan

    We may not have glowing reviews for our foray into Uzbek wine, but we did enjoy two wines from  another ex-Soviet country, the Republic of Georgia, located in the Caucasus west across the Caspian Sea.  Marani Rkatsiteli 2011 is a dry white wine made of 90 – 100% Rkatsiteli (ruh – KAT – see – TELL – ee) grapes.  The grapes were grown in the Kakheti Region of Georgia and produce a light crisp wine with a light straw color, aromas of peaches and apricots with some floral notes. It delivers yellow fruit aromas with a lively acidity and fresh finish.  This wine was a perfect pairing for all of those wonderful salads and appetizers prepared by Silk Road. 

    Marani Rkatsiteli White Dry Wine from Georgia

    The Rkatsiteli grape has been indigenous to Georgia for several millennia, and now plays a significant role in many countries of the Caucasus area.  I was introduced to this grape last year in a most enjoyable bottle of 2017 Tikves Rkatsiteli from the Republic of Macedonia.  You can also find this grape here in the northeast US mainly around the Finger Lakes and in Virginia. 

    Next up was a 50-50 blend of red dry wine Cabernet- Saperavi  2015 Kakhuri Gvinis Marani winery from the Kakheti region of Georgia.  The wine had “a dark-ruby color and aroma of red cherry, black current, plums and a hint of vanilla with a smooth and long aftertaste” just as indicated on the back label and 12.5% alcohol.  The Saperavi grape is a dark-skinned pink-fleshed variety indigenous to Georgia now grown throughout the Caucasus and the former Soviet states.  Saperavi is especially unusual because it is a Teinturier type of grape meaning that it’s a red grape with dark skin and dark or pink flesh.  (Regular red grapes have dark skins with clear flesh.)  Alicante Bouschet is also a Teinturier grape variety. Winemakers use them in their blend sometimes when they want to add color to the wine, which works well since “Teinturier” (tan-tewr-HER)  means “to dye or stain” in French.  You can also find Saperavi grapes in the Finger Lakes AVA of New York in the US and the Australian state of Victoria.   


    Cabernet-Saperavi Dry Red Blend from Georgia

    I would recommend both the Rkatsiteli and Cabernet-Saperavi blends if you have the opportunity to try them at Silk Road or anywhere else unless you are a fan of sweeter wines.  Who knows?  I may be writing about the fine wines of Uzbekistan 10 or 15 years from now!

    SOFO Wine Diva, forkandcorkdivine.com

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    1/19/2019

    Note: The Silk Road Restaurant is located at 8646 Gladiolus Drive, Fort Myers, FL 33908

  • 22Jul

    The forkandcorkdivine “Vintage 2012 Dinner” is now history!  We wined and dined our way across five continents and two hemispheres in just one evening.  Seems like we should all get frequent flyer miles for that accomplishment.

    In addition to some outstanding foods prepared by our winelover foodie friends, we had the opportunity to taste nine wonderful examples of 2012 wines from United States, France, Italy, South America and Western Australia.  Armed with some research and wine notes from the recent “What’s in a Vintage?” article, forkandcorkdivine.com , we took on the challenge.  Here is the menu and wine list from that dinner.  You can find lots of information about each winery in my previous Vintage article; therefore, this article is more geared to the actual wine and food pairings.  And of course I wouldn’t be a true “foodie” without pictures!!!!

    Vintage 2012 Dinner :  “A Tour of Two Hemispheres and Five Continents”

    Northern Hemisphere – Europe – Lombardy, Northern Italy

    Barone Pizzini Brut Rose Franciacorta (89 pt WE)

    We usually welcome our guests with a sparkling wine which makes the occasion even more festive.  In my opinion, it is hard to get more festive than with a Barone Pizzini Rose Franciacorta especially since this one was a vintage 2012!  The crisp acidity and creamy texture with notes of red berries, tangerine and spice made for a perfect aperitif.  (Naples Wine Collection $48)

    The infamous chicken dump bucket. Thank goodness it didn’t get much use!

    Northern Hemisphere – Europe – Marche, Central Italy

    Pievalto Verdicchio dei Castelli di Jesi Classico Riserva San Paolo (90 pt AG; 89 WE)

    Sweet Pea Pancakes with Crab and Red Onion Crème Fraiche 

    This Verdicchio was light and fresh with a typical sweet almond characteristic,  apples, tangerine zest and a hint of honey.  The pairing of this wine with the pea pancakes and crab topping was a marriage made in heaven.  The green peas were blanched, pureed with heavy cream, flour added and delicately fried into little pancakes.  The lump crab meat was mixed with creme fraiche, red onions and very thin slices of fresh sugar snap peas.  Drizzle with some EVOO and it is delicious!  You can find the recipe at alwaysravenous.com/verdicchio-paired-with-the-flavors-of-spring.  The wine was purchased from Naples Wine Collection $30.

     

    Southern Hemisphere – Africa – Stellenbosch, South Africa

    Tokara Director’s Reserve White Bordeaux Blend (74% Sauv Blanc/26% Semillon)(91 pt RP)

    Sauvignon Blanc Steamed Mussels with Garlic Toast 

    Chuck and I haven’t been drinking many wines from South Africa for a number of years.  It always seemed that there were so many others that we enjoyed much more.  My mission for this dinner was to prove that viewpoint wrong!  I certainly did just that – at least for me.  I so enjoyed this White Bordeaux Blend from Tokara.  The nose was quite complex with intense green fruit, passion fruit and toasted almonds.  It was oaked just right and had a long crisp finish.  It seemed to me that the perfect pairing would be fresh seafood cooked in more of the wine.  I sauteed fresh mussels in a bottle of Sauvignon Blanc (not Tokara, sorry!) and dressed them up with a buttery garlicky shallot sauce, a side of freshly grilled garlic bread and got rave reviews from the guests!  I used a basic recipe from Grace Parisi at Food and Wine Magazine, “Sauvignon Blanc-Steamed Mussels with Garlic Toasts”.  It was quick and easy and cooked while our guests finished off their first course.  I purchased the Tokara from wine.com for $40.

    Northern Hemisphere – North America – Sonoma, California

    Peay Vineyards Elanus Estate Pinot Noir Sonoma Coast (94 pt CT)

    Mushroom Goat Cheese Galette (prepared by Anita)

    The Peay Elanus was a crowd pleaser for Pinot lovers and non-Pinot lovers alike. And rightfully so – only 3 barrels were made and was just available to those of us on the mailing list at that!  I consider myself very lucky to have one more bottle tucked away.  We experienced the “smoked cherries, seared duck fat aromas, fruit floral earth flavors with herbal and pepper accents”.  Can’t leave out the dried needle and forest floor quality that you get in all of Peay’s Pinots.  Our foodie guest Anita prepared this pairing – a rustic galette filled with leeks, mushrooms, asparagus, peas and goat cheese.  It was delicious! We found the recipe on the website of www.merryedwards.com/food-wine/recipes.  Merry makes sensational Pinots herself just down the Sonoma Coast, so she really knows what food goes well with them.  Forget buying the wine!  I bought it from the winery for $86/bottle and I imagine it is long gone.

    Northern Hemisphere – Europe – Campania, Southern Italy

    Mastroberardino Radici Taurasi Aglianico (93 pt WE, WS, JS and 91 pt RP)

    Beef Braciole with Olive and Rosemary Focaccia 

    Mastroberardino – I don’t think I have ever had one of their wines that I did not like!  This 2012 Taurasi received 91 – 93 points from everybody who is anybody in the wine critic corner (that includes me).  We decanted it for several hours before serving, and it was elegant and superb.  The underbrush, red fruit, licorice, black pepper and tobacco was all there as promised.

    Chuck made beef braciole for the first time and it was another perfect pairing.  Very thin slices of beef were topped with Parmesan, garlic, golden raisins, pistachio nuts and bread crumbs plus a thin slice of Prosciutto.  Everything was then wrapped up in a neat little package, seared until brown, then cooked for several hours in a red wine tomato sauce.  Oh my, it was outstanding!  I made focaccia bread for the first time and topped it with olives and fresh rosemary.  It was perfect for sopping up that red wine tomato sauce!  I can’t recommend a recipe because unlike me, Chuck usually makes his up as he goes along.  The wine was purchased from Naples Wine Collection $60/bottle.

    (On a side note, how is it that I think my pairings are perfect?  All part of the prep work.  I research research research all of the recommendations that I can find and then make the final selection based upon all of the other courses and pairings on my menu.  The menu development and how it all works with the wines, the order of service, the difficulty of preparation and time involved all demand consideration.  It is like a work of art!)

    Southern Hemisphere – South America – Maipo Valley, Chile

    Clos Quebrada de Macul “Domus Aurea” Cabernet Sauvignon (94 pt RP and 92 pt WE)

    Chilean Beef  Empanada with Chimichurri Sauce ( prepared by Mariann)

    Domus Aurea Cabernet from Chile has been receiving scores of 90 – 96 points from wine critics around the world since the owners started making it in 1996.  We could see why!  It was dense deep dark purple with notes of cherries and black currants, spices, cigar box, hints of leather just like the winemaker told us to expect.  It was very well balanced and quite pleasant drinking.  We paired it up with some Chilean style beef empanadas made by Mariann and Al.  The filling was made from very tender beef brisket wrapped up in a flaky pastry and was  further enhanced with chimichurri sauce.  I purchased the wine from wine.com for $58/bottle.

    Southern Hemisphere – Africa – Stellenbosch, South Africa

    Rust En Vrede Stellenbosch Estate Red Bordeaux Blend

    (93 pt WE, 92 pt WS and 91 pt RP)

    Cheese Plate: Aged Cheddar, Gruyere, Asiago and Manchego

    Continuing on our whirlwind journey across the continents, we headed back to the Stellenbosch area of Southwestern South Africa to visit a winery that is “old school” there and has been making wines for over 320 years.  The Engelbrechts have been making wine at Rust en Vrede since 1977.  Their wine has landed on the Wine Spectator Top 100 list a number of times, but this 2012 Bordeaux blend was the fifth time!  This particular vintage rewarded us with a deep crimson red color, notes of cedar, cumin, cigar box, tobacco, blackberry, plum, leather, and violets.  Rounding out our menu, a cheese course consisting of cheddar and other aged cheeses seemed to be a classic Bordeaux blend pairing.  This was another wine.com purchase for $50/bottle.

    Aged cheddar, Manchego, Gruyere and Asiago. Fig paste or jam is always a great accompaniment to Manchego.

     

    Northern Hemisphere – Europe – Bordeaux, France

    Clos Cantenac Petit Cantenac St Emilion (91 pt CT & 88 pt WE)

    Black Currant Panna Cotta Verrine (prepared by Linda)

    I had this bottle of Saint-Emilion tucked away for a few years and was especially happy to discover it was a 2012.  The Petit Cantenac is a classic right bank blend of Merlot with a little Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon. We tasted the dark fruit with some leather, licorice, spice and vanilla. In need of desserts to round out my menu, I discovered this fabulous panna cotta recipe on the en.vins-saint-emilion.com/taste/pairing-wines-food website and decided they should know a thing or two about pairing up my Petit Cantenac.  This was probably the most delicious and decadent panna cotta I have ever eaten.  Aside from the fact I was so worried that my first time use of gelatin sheets was not working, it set up just right!  That is one of those very happy moments for a foodie/home chef.  The black currant coulis looked just like the picture after I ran it through a fine sieve.  I even had some cute little tasting “verrine” glasses straight from Pier 1!  Make this recipe and serve it with a Saint-Emilion wine please.  I bought the wine from the Underground Cellar on line back in 2016 for $32/bottle.

    Southern Hemisphere – Australia – Margaret River, Western Australia

    Leeuwin Estate Art Series Cabernet Sauvignon (97 pt JS and 92 pt WE)

    Dark Chocolate Cake with Cabernet Sauvignon Glaze (prepared by Debbie)

    As I already said, Australian wine was really off our radar!  But wanting to be adventurous and see how wine fared back in 2012 on five continents, I discovered that we just may be missing out on a really good thing.  I became intrigued with the story of Margeret River wine and found a bottle of 2012 Leeuwin Art Series Cabernet wine that seemed to more than meet our needs.  James Suckling scored it at 97 points (called it the Mouton-Rothschild of Australia) and Robert Parker at a lowly 91.  This 100 % Cabernet has been receiving scores like that since 1997, so I could not wait to taste it!  It was dark ruby red with lots of dark fruit, anise, cocoa, black olive and earthy flavors.  The graphite, metal shavings, tobacco and savory spices helped to round it out.  It was easy to see why the critics love Leeuwin Cabs.  The menu from the estate award-winning restaurant featured bittersweet dark chocolate paired up with their cabs plus a dark chocolate cake with a cabernet glaze.  Sounded good to me as you can’t go wrong with chocolate dessert on a wine pairing menu.  Debbie eagerly agreed to take on the cake baking challenge and used this recipe for Dark Chocolate Cake with Cabernet Sauvignon Glaze from the www.ste-michelle.com website recipe listings. (Couldn’t locate the recipe from Leeuwin.) If you don’t care for bittersweet chocolate, this is probably not the cake for you, but for the rest of the world that does, this cake with the Leeuwin cab was outstanding!  I also purchased this wine from wine.com for $64/bottle.  

    Northern Hemisphere – Europe – Veneto, North Central Italy

    Maculan Torcolato Dolce Breganze (92 pt WS) Vespaiolo 60%, Tocai 20% and Garganega 20%

    Salted Caramel Chocolates

    Sadly we were unable to cross the finish line – the  Maculan bottle still awaits opening for another day.  The chocolates won’t be around then, but luckily at least they are not a special order!!!!!  I have tasted Maculan before and know to expect honeysuckle and spice notes with rich accents of apricot and salted caramel thus making it an excellent accompaniment to salted caramel chocolates.  (Naples Wine Collection $42/bottle)

    Before pictures of the wine all ready for service.

    The after math – We persevered right up to the Maculan!

    Oh my………the behind the scenes prep work that only a fellow foodie can appreciate!  The vintage article for forkandcorkdivine.com took weeks too numerous to mention from the beginning of the vintage dinner concept to the actual event. This is all part of my “prep work” before every event of this kind.  It is truly a labor of love.  What’s the next wine dinner or tasting event?  I’m not quite sure, but there are several very intriguing ideas spinning around in my mind.  Guess you will have to check back later to see what it is!

    7.24.18

    LFRakos@gmail.com

  • 18Jun

    Doug leads the way on our French journey

    Spring is always a special time of the year for some in-depth tasting of French wines.   Two springs ago  forkandcorkdivine hosted our very own “Judgment of Paris” 40th Anniversary event which was an event I will never forget!  Forty years earlier, May 24, 1976,  Steven Spurrier gathered together a group of distinguished French wine critics and professionals and had them blind taste 12 “unknown” California wines paired with 12 highly revered French wines.  The astonishing results went down in history – the 1973 Chateau Montelena Chardonnay was the highest rated white and the 1973 Stags Leap Wine Cellar SLV beat out the French reds! Forty years later on May 22,2016 14 brave winelover foodie friends gathered together in our home with eager anticipation and some trepidation to participate in a five hour event – 12 courses and 20 bottles of California and French wine, all wineries of which were included in that infamous Paris Judgment. We survived the event and are able to tell the story for many years to come, but how do we top that?  That particular event was one for the record books in our winelover history!

    When I read that Wine Enthusiast Magazine selected the Sud Ouest, Southwest France, as their “Wine Region of the Year” for 2017, I knew that my next wine research project and adventure had arrived. Fortunately a few of our very supportive wine and foodie friends agreed to go on this adventure with Chuck and me — as long as we stopped off in one of their favorite French wine regions on the way — the Southern Rhone Valley and Provence.    Being a lover of most things French, I eagerly agreed. I am always up for a good challenge.  We quickly realized that one wine pairing dinner would not cover all of the wines that should be represented, so we agreed to make it a two-dinner event!  Now that was another first for us.  Our wine and foodie friends, Doug and Anita Jenkins, graciously agreed to host the Rhone event in April, and Chuck and I would follow up with the Southwest France event in May.  Sound like a major undertaking to you?  Yes it was, but with a lot of planning, preparation and passion for the food and wine, it was truly a labor of love.  And that is how 8 friends got to enjoy 24 fabulous French wines paired up with 10 courses of food in the spring of 2018 right here in Southwest Florida.

    After coordinating many wine and food events in my lifetime, my professional food management expertise automatically kicks in.  There has to be a carefully well thought out plan!   My first step always is to research the particular wine region and learn about their wines.  This time I knew would be studying about some old friends (Rhone Valley) and making some new ones (SudOuest).  After the research comes the article about what I have learned.  I had twice as much work to do this time – two articles!   You can read the results for yourself.  Both articles were previously posted at www.forkandcorkdivine.com:    (1) The Southern Rhone and Provence……….If “forkandcorkdivine” went to France (4.15.18) and (2) The Sud Ouest……If  “forkandcorkdivine” went to France. (5.7.18)

    The next task is to select the wines, then prepare a menu that showcases these wines, be representative of each region and use as many authentic ingredients as possible while fitting within the culinary skills of our foodie friends.   Easy to do you say?  Not a simple task.  And then there is the challenge of trying to source those wines and food ingredients.  This is where internet shopping always plays a large role.  Somehow we always manage to pull it off – and amazingly well, I must say!  As one of our guests said “Coming to one of your (forkandcorkdivine) wine dinners is like taking a trip to Disneyland.”  I took that as a major compliment.

    Here are the final versions of our French menus and the wines that paired so well with them.  The Jenkins hosted the Southern Rhone event: Doug sourced the wines while Anita planned and prepared the food items with a small amount of assistance from my culinary skills.  Chuck and I planned, prepared and hosted the Sud Ouest Southwest event with some much appreciated culinary assistance from Anita’s kitchen.   You can read more about the wines in my previous articles.

    French Culinary Conspirators Linda and Anita

    French Wines and Cuisine of the Southern Rhone Valley and Provence

    April 22, 2018

    Welcome

    Clairette de Die Brut Mousseux, Saint Crois, Drome 

                                         

    Foodie note:  The foie gras torchon and ice wine jelly made a perfect amuse bouche for dinner.  A torchon means “dish towel” in French since foie gras was traditionally wrapped in a kitchen towel for cooking.  Today plastic, vacuum seal and sous vide are used by D’Artagnan to make their torchon.

    L’Aperitif

    Domaine Pierre Gaillard “Dans la Neige”  Southern Rhone, 2015

    White blend of Viognier, Marsanne, Rousanne

    Figues Farcies aux Noix  walnut stuffed figs                    

    Olives de Provence

    Morbier Fromage semi-soft cows’ milk cheese

     

    Domaine des Carteresses Tavel Rosé, 2016 93 pts WE

    50% Grenache, 15% Mourvèdre, 13% Clairette, 12% Picpoul, 10% Syrah

    Choux aux Anchois anchovy puffs by Linda

     

    Les Entrées

    Clos St. Magdeleine Cassis Blanc, Provence, 2015

    40% Marsanne, 30% Ugni Blanc, 25% Clairette,  5% Bourboulenc

    Soupe au Pistou Seasonal vegetable soup with pesto

    Foodie note: Use fresh seasonal vegetables and top with fresh basil pesto.  A perfect light soup course.

    Provençal Olive Fougasse Provençal flat bread by Linda

    Foodie note: Fougasse is the French version of focaccia bread.  Add some herbs, make it rustic looking and it is delicious.  The traditional shape is a leaf or a stalk of wheat.

    Secret Vines La Garrigue Rosé, Côtes de Provence, 2016

    40% Grenache, 30% Cinsault, 25% Syrah, 5% Carignon

    Poivrons Farci au Thon  Piquillo peppers stuffed with tuna

     

    La Plat Principal

    Jerome Bressy Domaine Gourt de Mautens, 2011

    Southern Rhone Red, IGP Vaucluse, 96 Pts

    70% Grenache and blend of Carrignon, Mourvέdre, Syrah, Counoise,

    Cinsault, Vaccarèse and Terret Noir

                             

    Domaine Les Palliers Terrasse du Diable Gigondas, 2010

    93 Pts RP     90% Grenache, 5% Mourvèdre, 5% Clairette

    Xavier Vins Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée Anonyme,  2010

     95 pts RP     Southern Rhone Blend of Grenache, Mourvέdre and Syrah

    Famille Perrin Château de Beaucastel

    Châteauneuf-du-Pape, 2010

    96 pts WS/WE & 95 pts RP           #8 Wine Spectator Top 100 of 2013

    30% Grenache, 30% Mourvèdre, 10% Syrah, 10% Counoise, 5% Cinsault

      

                                                     Gigot de l’Agneau

    Haricots Tarbais      

    Tomates au Four            Gratin d’Aubergines           

    Roasted leg of lamb served with garlic and herb white beans,

    baked tomatoes Provence-style and eggplant custard gratin

                                                  Le Dessert

    Domaine de la Pigeade Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise, 2012

    100% Muscat Blanc à Petit Grains

    Gâteau de Beaumes-de-Venise aux Raisins

    A French grape cake popular in the Vaucluse

    Bleu d’Auvergne Fromage    

    Foodie note: This delicious one layer cake, made with grapes and Beaumes-de-Venise wine, is named after the town in the Vaucluse and the sweet fortified wine produced there.

                              

    www.forkandcorkdivine.com   4.21.18.LR

    Part of the French winelover team

                    Wines and Cuisine of Southwest France                    “Welcome to the Sud Ouest”

    May 20, 2018

    Welcome

    Saint-Hilaire Blanc de Blanc Brut Blanquette de Limoux AOP 2015,   Languedoc-Roussillon Wine Region

    Mauzac 90%, Chenin Blanc 5%, Chardonnay 5%

    Note for our winelover friends:  The Blanquette de Limoux sparkling wine was the perfect bridge from our Southern Rhone/Provence dinner to our Sud Ouest dinner.  This particular AOP is in Languedoc, a wine region we cross over traveling southwest. 

    L’Apέritif

    Mont Gravet Côtes de Gascogne IGP 2016, Colombard

    Pintxos – a Duo of Mini Basque-Style Tapas

    Smoked salmon with a hard cooked egg slice and Manchego cheese with roasted cherry tomatoes on French baguette slices

     

    Foodie note: The French Basque area has a Spanish personality since it straddles the mountain border with Spain making tapas-style small plates a perfect opener.

    L’ Entrέe

    Domaine De Souch Jurançon Sec, Jurançon AOP 2012

    Gros Mansang 70%, Petite Mansang 20%, Corbu 10%

    Coquilles St. Jacques, Sauce Mandarine

    Foodie note:  Find a recipe for this and make it!  Our guests did everything but lick the sauce off the plate.  Absolutely delicious scallop dish that was perfect with the Jurancon Sec.  Tangerine juice is key.  Do not substitute!  If you prefer, contact me and I’ll send you the recipe.

     

    A Taste of Garonne & Tarn

    Seigneurs de Peyreville Côte de Millau AOP 2015

    Syrah, Gamay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Fer Servadou

    Causse Marines Gaillac Peyrouzelles, Gaillac AOP 2015

    Braucol, Syrah, Alicante, Prunelard, Jurançon Noir

    Le Roc La Folle Noire D’Ambat, Nέgrette, Fronton AOP 2015

    Salade à  la Quercy

    Gesiers confit, magret de seche fume, and torchon of foie gras on a bed of greens with walnuts, tomatoes and roasted walnut oil dressing with baguette

    Foodie note:  The ingredients in this particular Quercy salad version make it a perfect representation of the region.  Our wine pairings further confirmed that “what grows together goes together”.

     

    The Winemakers of Cahors AOP

    Three Lot River “Families of the Vine”

    Philippe Bernède  Clos La Coutale Cahors, Malbec 80%, Merlot 20%, 2015

    Jean-Luc Baldès Malbec Du Clos Triguedina, Malbec 100%, 2012

    Yves and Martine Jouffreau Clos De Gamot, Malbec 100%, 2008

    Cassoulet de Toulouse à la Linda

    Petite cassoulet with duck confit and Toulouse sausage

    Foodie note:  Paula Wolfert is a world famous cookbook author who specializes in the Mediterranean area.  Her recipes are authentic and will  bring the food of the region to your kitchen.  Several of our dishes were prepared from her “Cooking of South-West France” cookbook.

    Pyrέnέes

    Domaine Moureou Madiran AOP, 2014

    Tannat 70%, Cabernet  Sauvignon 30%

    Domaine Arretxea Irouléquy AOP, Basque, 2010

    Tannat 66%, Cabernet Franc 17%, Cabernet Sauvignon 17%

    Poulet à la Basquaise

    Chicken with red and green peppers, tomatoes, jambon de Bayonne and rice pilaf

     

    Foodie note: Piment d’Espelette is made from a pepper grown in Espelette in the Pyrenees.  It is almost considered “mandatory” to have it on your table and cook with it in that region.  It’s expensive but you won’t regret having it in your spice collection.  You definitely shouldn’t make Basque chicken without it.  The Jambon de Bayonne is the French version of prosciutto.  It’s in Paula’s recipe, too.  Keeping it authentic!!!!!

    Some of Bergerac’s Best Kept Sweet Secrets

    Domaine de la Guillonie Monbazillac AOP 2013

    Sauvignon Blanc, Sémillon, Muscadelle

    Chateau Richard Saussignac AOP 2013

    Sémillon 70%, Muscadelle 25%, Sauvignon Blanc 5%

                                             Le Fromage et Le Dessert

    Roquefort, Goat Cheese with Honey, P’tit Basque & Fig Jam

    Basque Cake de la Cuisine d’Anita

    Foodie note: Gateau Basque is traditional in the Basque region.  It is usually filled with either pastry cream or jam.  Anita filled hers with a layer of jam and it was delicious.  The top layer surface was scored in a diamond pattern.  My picture does not do it justice!   P’tit Basque cheese is 100% pure sheep’s milk cheese produced in the Basque region of the Pyrenees Mountains.  

    Your hosts Chuck and Linda

     

    www.forkandcorkdivine.com  5.12.18 LR

    Another “forkandcorkdivine” wine dinner event is now history, and this time it was a two night event!  In my opinion the wines were all spectacular. As I predicted, we were reunited with some old friends – the wines of Southern Rhone Valley and Provence – while making a lot of new acquaintances in the Sud Ouest.  It is easy to see why Wine Enthusiast Magazine selected Southwest France as the “Wine Region of 2017”.  The criteria for selection were all met as far as I am concerned – quality wines made by winemakers with vision, authenticity and commitment to sustainable excellence.

    We especially enjoyed Gigondas, Vaucluse IGP and Chateauneuf-du-Papes from Southern Rhone and Madiran Tannat and those fabulous Cahor Malbecs from the Southwest.  They never get old or boring!

    These wines all fell into the “new acquaintance” category for me:  Clairette de Die sparkling wine,  Cassis Blanc (Provence), Beaume-de-Venise dessert wine, Blanquette de Limoux sparkling wine (Languedoc), Jurancon Sec and Irouleguy (Pyrenees), Cote de Millau, Gaillac, Negrette, (all Garonne & Tarn)  and Monbazillac and Saussignac Dessert wines from Bergerac.  I will happily drink all of them again……….and hopefully soon!

    My friend Anita can already cook all things French, but I definitely expanded my culinary expertise!  I made my first fougasse, anchovy puffs, cassoulet and salad Quercy.   The fougasse and puffs were fairly simple and I’ll make them again soon, but I must confess my love for all those duck parts is not huge.  From duck confit, to gesiers confit to magret de seche fume – I prepared them all.  Just because they are not my personal favorites does not mean that I don’t prepare them for my foodie friends who do love them!  The cassoulet took three days to prepare, and I was determined to conquer it.  It was a labor of love! The results were good; however, it will be quite awhile before I give it another go.  Anita’s culinary skills shine brightly – her French dishes are always delicious.  For that matter all of her dishes are delicious!  It was a pleasure to collaborate with Anita and Doug for our trip to France.

    The French spring wine dinners are now just a memory, the pictures taken and recorded for history and my forkandcorkdivine articles complete.  So what is next?  Of course there is another adventure on the way.  Stay tuned………..it will be here soon!

    L.Rakos 6.18.18

    lfrakos@gmail.com

  • 13Feb

    What is the most unique wine dinner or tasting that you have ever participated in?  That would be hard for me to answer as there have been so many that I consider being truly unique.  But this one really earned a place on my center stage! My husband, Chuck, and I recently hosted a Croatian themed wine dinner at our home.  Neither one of us has ever been to Croatia nor are we of Croatian heritage; however that did not stop us from sharing our enthusiasm with a few winelover foodie friends who are willing to indulge us!  Or should I say “me”!  I am the one who dreams up one armchair wine adventure after another.   Luckily Chuck is there to support me.  In fact one of my winelover foodie friends once said to me that coming to a wine event at our house is like “going to Disneyland”!  I took that as a great compliment.

    We had never tasted a Croatian wine before.  In fact this time last year, I couldn’t even tell you for sure where Croatia is, let alone what grapes are grown there.  Now not only can I tell you about a number of the grapes and wines – I can even sketch out a map of Croatia!!!!  Talk about keeping up your continuing education after retirement.  I can’t think of a better way to keep learning than to study some obscure wine regions and their wines.  That has become a passion for me.  So here is how the Croatian adventure came to be.

    I purchased a most unique book that one of my winelover friends knew I would find interesting – “Cracking Croatian Wine” by Dr. Matthew Horkey and Charine Tan of “Exotic Wine Travel”.  I read the book and knew that I just had to have some of these wines to taste myself.  Matthew and Charine are a young couple who became passionate enough about wine that they decided to make wine tasting and traveling in obscure wine regions their full-time mission.  Now they provide information about the country, the culture and the food along with the wine in their books, on their website, media pages and their You Tube “Exotic Wine Travel” channel.  After all, isn’t that what makes wine so interesting for many of us winelovers?  I had already utilized their expertise for the Hungarian portion of our European Volcanic Wine Dinner event and started into their previous book, “Uncorking the Caucasus”.

    Why Croatia?

    People have been making wine in Croatia for thousands of years.    In fact the oldest continuously planted vineyard in the world is in Croatia on the island of Hvar.  Europeans have been drinking Croatian wines for centuries, but most of it stayed in Croatia.  The history of winemaking began to change there in 1991 when Croatia became an independent nation instead of a state in Yugoslavia.  What really brought about change was when our Napa Valley famed winemaker Mike Grgich, who made the winning Chateau Montelena Chardonnay wine for the 1976 Judgment of Paris, began an upscale wine project in his native country of Croatia.  This gave Croatian wines a recognizable identity on the international market.

    Speaking of the international market, it is still fairly difficult to purchase Croatian wines in the United States. You most likely will not find any at your local big-box stores or even most boutique wine shops.  At least I have not seen any.  I had discovered a good source for them when purchasing Hungarian wines and that is the Blue Danube Wine Company of Los Altos, CA.  Since then I’ve discovered a second source – www.thewineandmore.com – which is Croatia’s leading wine webshop, and it has recently made shipping wines to the US available.  I have not used them yet, but it looks like they have a good selection.

    Some tips about the grapes

    Two-thirds of the wine production in Croatia is white varietals with a grape called Graševina being the most widely planted.  Plavic Mali is the leading red and accounts for the other one-third.  My available source for wines fairly well dictated what I would be serving to our guests for my Croatian wine adventure; however here are some other grape varietals that may (and should!) be of interest to you.

    A few white grapes to know

    Debit – is a white wine grape variety grown primarily along the Northern and Central Dalmatian Coast of Croatia.  The grapes are medium-sized golden yellow in color and grown in clusters of medium or large size.  Wine made from Debit has flavors of citrus, stone fruit and flint.

    Graševina– Grahsh-ah-vee-nah – aka Welschriesling – Although it is not related to the true Riesling of Germany, this old grape variety is well suited for the continental climate of Central Europe where it’s extensively cultivated. It is one of the most popular white wine grapes in Croatia.    It makes medium-bodied aromatic dry, straw-blond white wine with a flowery aroma, with good roundness and acidity. For the most part Graševina wines are fresh and fruity with flavors of melon, white pear and grass and are best enjoyed in their youth; but the variety can also produce rich dessert wine with lasting bouquet.  This was a delightful white wine that paired well with the salad we served at dinner.

    Malvasia is a group of grape varieties grown mostly in Croatia, Italy, Slovenia, Corsica, and Spain. It most likely originated in Greece.

    Malvazija Istarska (Mal-vahz-ee-yah Ih-star-skah) is THE white wine of Croatian Istria and the north Dalmatian coast. In Slovenian Istria, it is grown in the Koper wine district. Typically, Malvasia Istarska produces deep colored, aromatic, refreshing dry whites with a spice note.  They often have aromas of white or yellow flowers and white fruits and may have a slightly bitter end palate. Malvasia Istarska wines can be made in many different styles: fresh and fruity, barrel aged complex and macerated white/orange wines.  I loved this wine and can’t wait to try some more!

    Malvasija Dubrovačka – Mal-vahz-ee-yah Duu-broh-vahtchh-kah is different from Malvazija Istarska and grows in Konavle which is near Dubrovnik in South Dalmatia.  It tends to have more intense aroma, bigger body and higher acidity than the Istrian variety.  It has flavors of stone fruit and yellow flowers.  This wine was perfect with an appetizer tray of cheese, cured meats and olives.

    Grk – gerk – Grk produces dry white wines with notes of white pepper, melon, herbs, and sliced pear; flavors similar to Chardonnay and Loire Sauvignon Blanc.  The variety is indigenous to Croatia and is only found in sandy soils close to Korčula, on an island within the Srednja-Juzna Dalmacija.  Grk is highly sought after as only a few producers make wine from Grk.

    Pošip– Poh-shhip – Pošip is a native indigenous Dalmatian variety.  Some oenologists indicate Pošip’s possible relation to Furmint, the white grape from Hungary that we tasted at our European Volcanic Wine Dinner.  It is grown throughout the coast of Dalmatia.  Pošip makes full-bodied white wines with subtle almond notes often crisp with flavors of apples, vanilla spice and citrus fruit.

    A few red grapes to know

    Plavac Mali– Plah-vahts Mah-lee – Plavac Mali is a native grape to Croatia that is grown almost exclusively in the region of Dalmatia. The name literally means “little blue” in Croatian which refers to the small, bluish grapes that the vines grow. This is the primary red grape of Croatia, and it’s rich and full of flavor. The wine is actually a hybrid that descends from Crljenak Kaštelanski and Dobričić and is a cousin to Vranac. The former wine is the Croatian version of what is known as Primitivo in Italy and Zinfandel in California. The flavors change a great deal depending on which of the main mainland areas or islands that the grapes are grown. Overall, it tends to make bold wines with deep flavors of blackberries, dark cherries, pepper, dry figs and other  spices. The alcohol can run as high as 15%, but tends to be around 12.5% – 13% in most vintages of the wine. Plavac Mali pairs very well with foods and takes very well to aging. It is also one of the few wines that are rarely blended due to its great all-around strengths.  The Plavac pairs really well with some grilled or roasted red meat.  We served it with lamb shanks.

    Sansigot/Sušćan – San-sih-goh/Suu-schhanh – Sansigot is indigenous to Croatia, specifically to Susak, the fiftieth largest island of Croatia.  Susak is a distant and remote sandy island.  The Greek name for the island, Sansego, means “oregano”.  Sansigot has also spread to several other islands on Kvarner, specifically Krk, Cres and Lošinj, but unfortunately wine making on Susak has never recovered after WWII.  The grape has a nice level of acidity, color, strength and tannin often with flavors of forest fruit and sweet spice.  If you ever come across a bottle, please please give it a try!  Our dinner guests highly rated it!

    Teran Teh-rahn – Teran or Refošk (Slovenia) is a dark-skinned grape variety from the Refosco family that primarily grows in Western Istria in Croatia, in the Slovenian Primorska wine region, and northeastern Italy where it is known as Terrano.  When grown in iron-rich terra rossa (Red Earth), Teran acquires a particularly distinctive flavor.  Believe me, you will know the terra rossa when you taste the wine! Compared to Refosco, it ripens later with a more pronounced fruit and higher iron content. Teran makes dark, earthy, full-bodied robust reds. Expect bold flavors of wild berries, violets and twigs sometimes with smoky cured meat and gamey notes.  It is usually high in tannins and should evolve over a few years.  It has a distinct aroma sometimes described as smelling like blood or rust.  Teran is highly acidic and depending on the winemaker, can be unpleasantly acidic. It is now also being used as a blending grape.  It pairs very well with grilled or roasted big meats like the lamb shanks we prepared.

    Wine regions of Croatia

    Now that you know some basic info about the grapes, there are four primary wine-growing regions in Croatia. If you happen to be planning a vacation in Croatia like many people do nowadays, you may want to keep them in mind.

    ISTRIA AND KVARNER

    ISTRIA

    Istria is in the northwest corner of Croatia, borders on Italy and is nicknamed “New Tuscany”.  It leads the country in their wine-making quality revolution.  Istrian wines are similar to those produced in Italy.  The food and cuisine of this region most closely resemble Italy. Istria is known for seafood-friendly white wines made from Malvazija Istarska.  Red wines are made from Teran.   There is enormous potential for Croatian wine here.

    KVARNER

    Kvarner is located between Istria and mainland Croatia.  It includes the islands and coast of the Kvarner Gulf. Most wine production is on the islands of Pag and Krk. The islands of Susak, Krk, Cres and Lošinj are home to the Sansigot/Sušćan indigenous variety.  Wine produced in the islands and the Dalmatian coast is of a highly individual style due to the harsh nature of the vineyards and microclimates.

    DALMATIA

    Dalmatia is the southernmost Croatian wine region and is bordered to the west by the Adriatic Sea, the east by Bosnia and Herzegovina and the south by Montenegro.  The climate is warm and sunny.  Dalmatia can be divided basically into three areas: Northern Dalmatia, Central-South Dalmatia and the Dalmatian Hinterland.  The cuisine and wine of Dalmatia is Mediterranean in style.  It’s all about seafood, olive oil and fruit-forward high alcohol red wines here.  Two white grapes to know are Pošip and Debit. Red varieties to know are Plavac Mali and Babić.

    PELJEŠAC PENINSULA

    The terrain is so steep here that ropes and pulleys are often used during harvest. Farmers used to need donkeys to take their grapes over the slopes to vinification.  Now there is a tunnel!  This is the home of Mike Grgich’s Croatian wines.  He makes Grgić Pošip and Plavac Mali in his Grgić Vina Winery.  Another newsworthy producer is Edivo who stores and ages his wines underwater in the Adriatic Sea.

    MAINLAND DALMATIA

    The mainland stretches from the city of Zadar to Montenegro on the south.  There are many microclimates here which allows for many different wine styles.  Konavle Valley is near the border of Montenegro and is one of the most prominent wine growing hills in Southern Dalmatia. Many people left the area in the 1990s due to war and many vineyards were burned.  Many vineyards have now been replanted and Malvasija Dubrovačka thrives here. Konavle has a long tradition of making wine from Malvasija Dubrovačka.

    HVAR ISLAND

    Hvar Island is located off the coast of Dalmatia and has been planted with grapevines for 24 centuries.  It was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2008. It has the oldest certified Plavac Mali vineyard in the world.

    CROATIAN UPLANDS

    The Croatian Uplands are in the center of the country bordered to the north by Slovenia and Hungary and to the south by Bosnia and Herzegovina.  The Uplands are nearest to Zagreb.  Aromatic whites like Riesling, Pinot Gris and Chardonnay are produced here, and Pinot Noir is one of the key reds.  The Uplands is often overlooked in the Croatian world of wine.  It is cooler here with very low temperatures for the vines in winter and frost in late spring and early autumn.  Once known for making cheap white wine, several winemakers are now trying to break that bad reputation.

    SLAVONIA AND THE DANUBE

    Slavonia and the Danube are located on the far eastern side of Croatia.  Cuisine in this part of continental Croatia is more Hungarian or Slavic.  Whites reign supreme here.  Graševina and Traminac are the key white varieties. Graševina is also known as Welschriesling.  This is a fabulous but often overlooked wine growing region.

    SLAVONIA

    Slavonia is located in the northeastern part of Croatia between the Danube, Sava and Drava Rivers. More than ¾ of Croatia’s Graševina comes from Slavonia, and it is not to be confused with Slovenia.  Slavonia is also famous for its oak wine barrels.

    THE DANUBE

    The Danube is the easternmost wine region.  It has a continental climate, flat plains and very fertile soil.  This is also Graševina wine growing country.

    “An Evening in Croatia” ……….The event!

    Armed with my new found knowledge about Croatian wines gained from reading “Cracking Croatian Wine” and watching every video, Instagram or Facebook post by my friends at Exotic Wine Travel, I purchased a good representative selection from Blue Danube Wine Company.  I was sure they were going to be spectacular!!!! Next up, what to serve with them?  After reading about Croatian cuisine on the internet, I started to review cookbooks and decided on “Dalmatia” Recipes from Croatia’s Mediterranean Coast by Ino Kuvačić.  (Note to anyone cooking any of these recipes:  be prepared for garlic garlic garlic!  It goes in everything – and lots of it. But no one complained.)  As in all good plans, I needed a few more ideas and recipes that eventually came together and on paper, sounded like a marriage made in heaven for my wines!

    At long last after I had lovingly watched over the wines, and Chuck and I had our food prepared, our guests assembled.  I am sure it was with great trepidation that they prepared to drink Croatian wines.  As I already said, I just knew the wines would be excellent, but no one else in the group had reason to share my expectations.  I am so happy to tell you that as each bottle of wine was emptied, everyone kept exclaiming how much they were enjoying these wines.  In fact, the consensus of opinion was that we would be happy to drink each and every one of them again!  So here are the courses of food as served and the exact wines that we paired with them on February 3, 2018.

    An Evening in Croatia

     Appetizers

    Paski Sir Pag Island Cheese, Feta & Goat Cheese, Prosciutto,
    Dalmatian Red Pepper Spread, Olives, Flatbread, Crusty Bread

    Pag is the third largest island in the Gulf of Kvarner and is very famous for its Paski sir Pag Island sheep milk cheese which is generally regarded as the most famous artisan cheese of Croatia.  I found one piece of this cheese remaining on the Igourmet website and snatched it up!  The feta and goat cheese was blended together with fresh herbs, lots of garlic and EVOO.

     

    2015 Dubrovački Podrumi Malvasija Dubrovačka, Konavle

    Dubrovačka Podrumi was devastated and burnt in the 1990s like the rest of the area, but some local entrepreneurs bought it in 2000, planted new vineyards and brought it back to life.  The winery farms 30 hectares (owned by the State) of old vine Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot.  They buy Malvasija Dubrovačka from local grape growers and make a dry crisp white wine with herbal notes.         

     

    Salad

    Lentil Apple and Pomegranate Salad on a bed of Mixed Greens
    (Salata od leće jabuke i nara)

    Lentils are eaten frequently in Croatia, in soups, stews and salads and they are very nutritious for you.  I served a scoop of the lentil salad on a bed of baby mixed greens and added some additional red wine vinaigrette dressing.  This made a colorful, memorable, tasty winning salad course.  The Graševina was a perfect wine for it.

    2015 Adžić Graševina, Graševina, Slavonia

    Antun Adžić makes some of the best Graševina in Croatia. Adžić is a family winery established in 1995 in the Kutjevo region on the southern slopes of Kamdija.  They make quality wine here using the same traditional methods of the last 800 years.  Adžić built a modern wine cellar as part of the family house in order to make his quality wines.  They have 8 hectares of their own and buy fruit from 2 more.

    Soup

    Carrot, Capsicum and Eggplant Soup
    (Fuha od markve, balancana I crvene paprika)

    This fresh vegetable soup could also be served chilled, but I served it hot garnished with fresh herbs.  Cook up those well-seasoned vegetables, don’t forget the garlic!, then puree it up right in the pan with your immersion blender.  I could eat this soup every day, I loved it so much!  Make it a day ahead to really develop the flavors.  Besides items that can be cooked a day ahead is really helpful when preparing for a dinner party!  Just heat it up in your crockpot and serve.

    2015 Coronica Gran Malvasia, Malvazija Istarska, Istria

    Coronica is a notable Istrian producer.  Malvazija and Teran are the grapes to focus on here and Moreno Coronica is the man who makes them into great wines. He established Coronica in 1992 after the fall of Communist Yugoslavia. His Gran Malvazija is a premium bottling and it gets better with every vintage. Moreno’s Gran Teran is one of the best expressions of Teran.  His goal is to make wine that reflects the region.  This was my very favorite of the whites.  Did you know that Riedel even makes a special glass for serving Istrian Malvasia?  Much to my amazement, I did find them on-line after seeing pictures of Charine enjoying her Malvasia in one and recommending it.  I love Riedel as much as the next winelover and have numerous cases of Riedel glasses of different sizes and shapes, but I just couldn’t bring myself to spend over $100 per glass.  It’s called the “Superleggero Loire” because someone found out that it is also perfect for Sauvignon Blanc. Young Istrian Malvasias are often compared to Sauvignon as they are both fresh with fruity aromas of apple and apricot. Really wanting to have the complete Malvasia experience, I did find some Italian Malvasia glasses from the “BB&B” store and got a few.  Here is a picture of one. Did they make the wine taste any more enjoyable?  I’m not really sure but I like the look of them and I gave myself an A+ for the experience!

    Meat, Fish and Vegetables

    Lamb Shanks with Tomatoes and Peas (Fanjetina s bižima)

    The lamb shanks were to be seared and then cooked on low heat in a pan with the tomatoes, potatoes and peas.  However, since Chuck had this giant pan filled with 8 very huge lamb shanks, we made the decision to cook the vegetables separately from the shanks.  In hindsight, the shanks would probably have had that desired “just to fall off the bone but not quite” characteristic, but turned out more like grilled meat which really was perfect with the red wines.  The veggies were absolutely delicious. Must have been all that garlic!

    Croatian Sausages (Ćevapčići) with Eggplant Pepper Relish (Ajvar), Sour Cream, Lemon and Flatbread

    Somewhere in my recipe research, I learned about “the sausages”.  According to good old Wikipedia, “Ćevapi or ćevapčići is a grilled dish of minced meat, a type of skinless sausage, found traditionally in the countries of southeastern Europe (the Balkans). They are considered a national dish in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and are also common in Croatia, ……………” .  I am not an experienced sausage maker but discovered a recipe used at Mike Grgich’s winery in Napa which I am happy to say I have visited and even seen Mike there, but never had “the sausage”.  The recipe sounded simple especially since the sausages are skinless, and it was a hit.  I think my guests would have been happy just to have a big platter of these little misshapen sausages which I served with the recommended accompaniments of Ajvar (Croatian eggplant and red pepper relish which I highly recommend), some sour cream, lemon wedges and flatbread.  Just be sure to prep your sausages the day before you are going to cook and serve and don’t leave out the sparkling water.  Here once again, I think it’s all in the garlic!

    Shrimp in Garlic White Wine and Tomato

    This is a popular dish throughout the Eastern Mediterranean area.  Unfortunately I did not go in search of langoustine as called for in my recipe, but the shrimp were a great option for any non-meat eating guests.

    Dalmatian Silverbeet (Swiss Chard) (Blitva na dalmatinski)

    Swiss chard is a staple dish in Dalmatian.  According to my cookbook author, other Croatians actually call Dalmatians “silverbeets” because they eat so much of it.  I cooked it with sweet potatoes instead of white and it was a perfect green vegetable.

    Croatian Sauerkraut

    We had recently served sauerkraut as part of the Pfalz German food and wine pairings for the infamous Volcanic Wine Dinner, but this sauerkraut was unlike any other we have cooked and eaten. First I opted to buy fresh sauerkraut at our local Publix supermarket instead of making it in a barrel from cabbage for 40 days according to my cookbook recipe, although I had seen my parents doing that when I was a child in growing up in Pennsylvania. Ours was rinsed and slowly simmered with tomato sauce, chicken base and onions.  Add some bacon at the end.  It’s delicious.

    2014 Coronica Crno, Red Blend, Istria

    Crno means “red” in Croatian and this red was an excellent example of blending reds in Croatia. We had 80% Teran, 10% Merlot and 10% Cabernet Sauvignon in the bottle and we really liked it! The blend is dominated by the Teran and that Terra Rossa soil which gives it the characteristic briny iron note.  This was our first red of the night, and it gave us a great introduction to the red wines of Croatia.  Our guests were all happy winelovers!

    2015 Šipun Sansigot, Otok Krk

    Šipun, located on the island of Otok Krk, is one of only two producer of this rustic wine from Sansigot.  Ivica Dobrinčić,   Šipun’s owner and winemaker, helped to save this grape from extinction. Krk is the largest of Croatia’s 1000+ islands.  Sansigot has also grown on the tiny island of Susak. Susak was once known as a “floating vineyard” due to the fact that 95% of the island’s area was covered with vineyards. Our friends at Exotic Wine Travel say the Šipun Sansigot is a “rustic and oddly compelling wine”.

    2015 Bibich G6, Grenache, North Dalmatia

    Debit white indigenous varietal in the wine region of Skradin. Bibić also likes Grenache and Shiraz and produces them in the Rhone style.   He ferments these wines with native yeasts and ages them in French used oak for a year giving the wine French “garrigue” with a briny Croatian touch.  Alen Bibic is a life-long native of this area and deserves a lot of the credit for putting Skradin back on the wine map. His mission today is to bring these wines to international prominence.  He hopes to sustain the indigenous grapes like Debit but since he likes Rhone-style wines, I thought it would be interesting to try one made in Croatia.  The wine was a most satisfactory 100% Grenache aged 12 months in used French oak filled with minerals and peppery Mediterranean herbs only with a briny Croatian touch. Olive trees grow among the grapevines here just like the Rhone.

    2013 Miloš Plavac, Plavac Mali, Pelješac Peninsula

    Frano Miloš (mee-loash) organically farms 100% Plavac Mali on coastal vineyards of steep 45 degree slopes covered with handmade stone terraces.   His family has been making wine here for over 500 years.  This winery allegedly produced the first Croatian cult wine but is now iconic with a differentiated distinct style. The Milos wine was rich and concentrated with very dark fruit, mineral and herbal notes.  The longer we left this wine in the glass, the better it became.  According to the tasting notes sage is the dominant herb with distinctive notes of black tea on the nose, and savory saltiness on the palate.  Get out the grilled meat as our lamb shanks and Croatian sausages paired well with it.  Milos ages it for 2 years in large used Slavonia oak barrels and it shows.  We so enjoyed this almost 14% alcohol wine!  And it’s organic.

     2013 Coronica Gran Teran, Teran, Istria

    Moreno Coronica’s Gran Teran is 100% Teran and made from vineyards just an hour south of Trieste, Italy.  The rust colored “Terra Rossa” soil is very famous and gives the wines a very unique deep mineral taste.  We decanted the wine for over an hour as recommended and were expecting something really big, tart and harsh but were quite surprised with a wine just 13% alcohol very well balanced by the winemaker.  Another winner with lamb shanks!

    Sweets

    Palačinke (pa-la-cheen-keh)
    Ricotta Pancakes with Strawberry Compote and Ice Cream

    I love to make desserts and whether you call these pancakes or crepes, this dessert is very representative of dining in Croatia and not really difficult to make.  I just use a regular small skillet to make my crepes and have fine-tuned that process to go very quickly. You can even make them in advance.  Just be sure to put a piece of waxed or parchment paper between each one.  I opted to go with the ricotta filling and fresh strawberry sauce instead of the many other options like walnut filling with chocolate sauce.  Topped it off with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and you will have very happy guests!

    Pear Brandy

    According to my Croatian recipe book, a Croatian meal with guests is not complete without brandy and liqueurs, more specifically maraschino cherry brandy, pear brandy or plum brandy.  I just happened to have a bottle of French pear brandy complete with a pear in the bottle, and it was most impressive!  Between the pear brandy and an assortment of Ben Rye, Oremus, and Madeira remaining from our Volcanic Wine dinner, we were quite prepared to set a proper Croatian table.

    Most Recipes from “Dalmatia” Recipes from Croatia’s Mediterranean Coast by Ino Kuvačić 2017

    Wines from Blue Danube Wine Company, Los Altos, CA

    Forkandcorkdivine.com 1/29/18

    When dinner was over and the wine bottles were all emptied, our guests discussed which wines they preferred the most.  We were amazed to find out that the Šipun Sansigot from the island of Krk was a major frontrunner.  The Miloš Plavac was also a frontrunner with the Coronica Crno and Coronica Gran Teran right there with them.  All of the whites were fresh, full of white fruits, and aromatic.   The barrel aged Coronica Gran Malvasia had a wonderful nuttiness and texture imparting a smoky brininess called “Freškina” in Croatia. We are all anxious to enjoy this “scent of the sea” once again.  The food was delicious and everything paired well together once again supporting the theory that “what grows together goes together”!

    What did I learn from this adventure?

    Learning about more obscure wines can be a very rewarding experience no matter what degree of wine knowledge you may have.  It doesn’t even need to be “obscure”.  It might just be a region you are not familiar with.  There is so much more to learn than just the wine!  With every new adventure, or research project as I like to call it, I learn about the wine region, history, the people, the culture, the cuisine and of course the wine. In addition to that, I usually make a number of new wine acquaintances along the way which makes life very exciting.  Now my guests and I can say that Croatian wines are no longer obscure to us and I guarantee you, we would all love to drink them again…….and again! One of our guests asked me which was my favorite and I had to reply “They are all my children and I love them all equally!  So what’s on the schedule for my future research?  I do have a few topics in mind, so stay tuned.  In the meantime, time is too short to not drink good wine.  There are so many winemakers in this world now making great wine whether they may be on the tiny remote island of Krk off the coast of Croatia, or on the hill of Somlo, Hungary, or in world-famous Napa Valley, California.  Please don’t be afraid to try something new even if you have to step outside your comfort zone.  You just may find that you really like it!   Cheers!

    lfrakos@gmail.com 2.13.18

    The forkandcorkdivine “SOFO Wine Diva” with some of my Croatian wine “children”.

    Cheers! ………from some of our winelover guests.

  • 23Jan

    Want to taste some volcanic wines from a variety of countries and wine regions of Europe?  And even better, have the wines all paired with food typical of that region?  That is exactly what a small group of wine loving foodies recently did right here in Southwest Florida without even leaving home – or at least our home, your forkandcorkdivine.com hosts, Linda and Chuck.

    There aren’t many vineyards in Southwest Florida and they certainly are not volcanic, so we had to use a little imagination.  Armed with an interesting selection of recently acquired volcanic wines, a passion to continually expand our wine knowledge and to utilize our culinary expertise, we were transported to some volcanic vineyards in Europe, many of which not many people have the opportunity to visit – let alone taste their wines.    For example, when is the last time you tasted wine from the Azores?  Or a tiny wine cave in Somlo, Hungary?  Well that is just what we did.

    My husband Chuck and I recently attended a volcanic-themed wine dinner at a local restaurant where we learned about John Szabo, MS, a Canadian Master Sommelier, and his 2016 book “Volcanic Wines: Salt, Grit and Power”.  The wines were so intriguing to me and the food pairings so enjoyable that I wanted to create my own volcanic wine dinner.  I read Mr. Szabo’s book, did a lot of additional internet research and my “DINNER IN THE VINEYARD – Volcanic wines of Europe” event was about to become official.

    Our lonely cabernet sauvignon grapevine in SWFL winter.

    It took over two months of research, sourcing appropriate wines, and deciding on geographically culturally appropriate food pairings.   You can find the results of my wine research in the December 26, 2017 http://www.forkandcorkdivine.com post “VOLCANIC WINE……why should you care about an ancient volcano?”  Luckily for me, some of my wine loving foodie friends were willing to come on another adventure with me and agreed to assist with food preparation and the cost of wine.  The date was set, the wines arrived from around the world, and foods prepared.   The family-style table was set in the Rakos vineyard (use your imagination!), wines chilled, candles lit, foods lined up in various stages of prep and the evening began.

    The end result was a five-hour wining and dining adventure that included twenty-one wines and twelve different courses of food.  We started off in the Veneto (Italy), moved to the Azores and Canary Islands, then to the mainland Europe for Alsace (France), Pfalz (Germany), Somlo and Tokaji (Hungary), Sicily, Basilicata, Campania and back to the Veneto (Italy) and ended up with dessert wines from Madeira, Pantelleria and Tokaji.

    And how did we enjoy the wines, you may be wondering?  Most of us have previously  experienced volcanic wines from different regions around the world and have always been told that soil makes a big difference in the resulting wine, but never thought about it from the point of view that most volcanic wines display similar characteristics: salty, highly acidic, full of minerality, savory, often herbal earthiness and a density (not derived from alcohol or tannins) that can be intense, gritty, hard and unmistakable.  Volcanic wines are very much in demand now and receiving attention in the wine world, so you might as well as enjoy them and savor the ash and lava!

    Welcome Sparkling and Appetizer

    Asiago and Prosciutto Toasts

    Smoked Salmon and Mascarpone Cheese Roll-Ups

    Asiago is a typical cheese of the Veneto. Both appetizers were quick and easy to prepare.  The Asiago toasts received rave reviews from our guests!

    Zardetto Z Vino Spumante Rosé NV

    The prosecco was made from 100% Raboso Veronese, had a pale pink raspberry color, with cherry aromas and was perfect with the appetizers.  The vineyards surround the historic town of Conegliano in the Veneto. This was my first rosέ prosecco and I loved this wine.  I rarely start off an event with prosecco – usually champagne, Napa sparkling or sparkling from northern Italy – but this prosecco was perfect and I’ll happily serve it again.

     The Main Event

    Azores and Canary Islands

    Rissóis de Camarão or Portuguese Shrimp Turnovers

    The Azores are Portuguese Islands about 1000 miles off the coast of Portugal and the turnovers are traditional for holidays and celebrations both in Portugal and the Azores.  They are perfect for a first course cut in 3 ½ – 4 inch diameter or make them half size as I did and serve for appetizers.

    2015 Azores Wine Company Isabella a Proibida (Portugal)

    Only 166 cases of this red wine were made and not much of it left the islands.  It is a tribute to their old field blend vines that remind the wine makers of the Isabella varietal related to American “fox grapes”. The grapes grow on wild bushy vines in almost soil-free lumps of basalt rocks.   It was loaded with minerality, black pepper, hints of tomato plant, resin and smoke.

    2014 Ignios Origenes Listan Negro Ycoden Daute Isora Seleccion (Spain)

    The Canary Islands are Spanish and located 62 miles west of Morocco. Single grapevines are planted in the volcanic black ash soil with semi-circular rock walls around them.   Not much wine leaves these islands either, so don’t expect to see wine from either island group on your local wine store shelves.  The Ignios Listan Negro is from a 30-year old iron-rich vineyard on a coastal banana plantation.  It is salty with herbal raspberry, sour cherries, red beets, pepper, and did I ever taste the ashy smoky funky earth!  Listan Negro is the most planted red grape there.

    Alsace, France

    Alsatian Tart Flambέe with Alsatian Cheese

    A tarte flambέe is a typical Alsatian flatbread topped with fromage blanc, a fresh tart spreadable cheese, thinly sliced onions and bacon.  It is rolled out very thinly and usually cooked in a wood burning oven, hence the translation to “pie baked in the flames”.  Unfortunately we had only our conventional oven so no flames!  Flaming or not, it made an absolutely delicious tart.  Our tart was made by Anita, a local foodie friend whose husband has relatives in Alsace and visits there regularly. The Alsatian cheese was even served on an “Oncle Hansi” china stork plate.  It seems that Jean-Jacques Waltz, aka “Hansi” was a French artist of Alsatian origin famous for his quaint drawings.  You can see some of his original artwork in the Village of Hansi and his Museum in the city of Colmar or on this Villeroy and Boch Hansi D’Alsace stork plate.

    Hansi Stork Plate

    2012 Zind Humbrecht Clos St. Urbain Grand Cru Rangen Pinot Gris

    Alsace is located about 300 miles due east of Paris and is a few miles from both Germany and Switzerland.  The town of Thann in southern Alsace displays the clearest evidence of volcanism and a single vineyard, the Rangen de Thann Grand Cru, has reigned supreme for a thousand years.  The 12-acre walled vineyard of Clos Saint Urbain provides wine that consistently rates in the mid to high 90s.  The 2012 Pinot Gris was rated 94 by Robert Parker and gave us honeyed ripe pears and delicate flint with a big saline finish.

    2013 Domaine Schoffit Clos St. Theobold Grand Cru Rangen Riesling

    The 16-acre Clos Saint Theobald of Domaine Schoffit produces similarly highly rated wines.  This 2013 Riesling, rated 97 points by Wine Advocate, gave us ripe white fruit notes, crushed rocks with a dry powerful flinty almost salty aftertaste.  You can expect Rieslings from the Rangen to be consistently higher in ash and minerality when compared to Rieslings of other regions.

    Pfalz, Germany

    Sauteed German Bratwurst and Weisswurst Sausages with Bacon and Apple Sauerkraut and Red Beet Salad

    These dishes are typical of the Pfalz region.   Bratwurst is a sausage made from finely minced pork and veal seasoned with onion and Weisswurst are short, greyish white sausages made from a mixture of finely minced pork and veal seasoned with parsley, onions, and fresh lemon.  Sauerkraut is often served in Germany.  I can remember my parents making homemade fermented sauerkraut in a big crock every year when I was a child.  Cooking it with apple and bacon is typical of the Pfalz. Most recipes call for juniper berries.  If you don’t have them, simply substitute a little gin!!! My research said to use one teaspoon gin for every 2 berries.  The red beet salad is commonly found as a side dish in Germany.  Chuck prepared it in true German style!

    2015 Dr. Bürklin-Wolf Wachenheimer Riesling

    The Pfalz, otherwise known as the Palatinate, lies just under Pechsteinkopf, a basaltic volcano.  It has become one of the more inventive and exciting wine regions in Germany.   Long gone are the days of Blue Nun!  Now you will get quality Rieslings like this one from the 400 year old property of Dr. Bürklin-Wolf that is one of the EUs largest biodynamic-certified wine estates.  They are located in the village of Wachenheim and make top quality Rieslings like this 2015 with fresh apple and peach aromas, flavors of mango, peach and spice all with clean minerality and elegant acidity.

    2013 Friedrich Becker Estate Pinot Noir Pfalz

    Only 24% of Pfalz vineyards are planted in Riesling.  Red wine varieties such as Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir) and Dornfelder continue to increase.  Friedrich Becker is one of the top Pinot Noir producers in Germany.  Becker is located almost in Alsace – in fact 70% of their vineyards are actually in Alsace!  The soil in this vineyard is chalky limestone and our bottle of 2013 Estate Pinot Noir was full of strawberry and bright cherry fruit with a hint of tobacco and dusty earthiness.   Our guests really enjoyed it.

    Hungary

    Tάrkonyos Gombaleves (Tarragon Mushroom Soup)

    Paprikas-Tejfolos-Csirkeporkolt (Paprika Sour Cream Chicken Stew)

    Tarragon Mushroom Soup

    Paprika Sour Cream Chicken Stew

    Hungarian food displays a melting pot of elements just like the United States.  There are German, Italian, Slavic and ancient Asiatic roots with regional differences on top of that.  People here were nomads in ancient times cooking over open fires.  Hungarians love soup; soups, stews/goulash play a big part in the Hungarian menu. The tarragon mushroom soup was typical of Hungarian cooking and was a good pairing for all of our white varietal Hungarian wines.  One ingredient that you do not cook without in Hungary is paprika, the country’s “national spice”.  It’s a red powder made from grinding dried sweet red peppers; used as a garnish and seasoning. The color varies from bright orange-red to deep red, depending on the peppers used. Commercial paprika comes from several countries, but Hungarian paprika is thought to be the finest, and will be labelled as from the Szeged region. In Hungary there are six classes or types of paprika ranging from delicate to hot.  You will find paprika in this mushroom soup we served as well as the paprika sour cream chicken stew, both made by Tom, one of our foodie winelovers who toured Hungary a few years ago and took cooking classes in Budapest.  Both dishes were tasty delights!

    Witness Mountain – Somlo

    There are 22 wine regions in Hungary but we concentrated on two of their finest volcanic regions: Tokaj-Hegyalja and Somlo.  Hungarian wines have been described as colorful and varied.  There are a number of indigenous white varieties with late ripening, distinctive, aromatic fruit and floral scents and some bold red full bodied varieties.  They are all rich in minerals due to the volcanic rocks you find almost everywhere.  Hungary was under Communist rule for 40 years and not known for their wine except one – Tokaji Aszu – which we have on our dessert menu, so more to come about this famous wine.  Our first three wines come from Somlo, nicknamed Witness Mountain, the smallest Hungarian appellation.  It is one of the smallest, most beautiful and remote regions specializing in traditional wood-aged powerful dense white wines – Furmint, Harslevelu and Juhfark.

    2011 Istvάn Spiegelberg Wedding Night, Somlo

    Tom describing his visit in Hungarian wine caves.

    The Spiegelberg Wedding Night wine is a blend of the three varietals – Furmint, Harslevelu and Juhfark.   Spiegelberg works everything by hand and ages his grapes in Hungarian oak barrels to the sounds of Gregorian chamber music.  All of his wines are heady, dense and gripping with smoky minerality and brininess.  The 2011 Wedding Night Is a blend of honeyed fruit, flowers, orange blossoms, dried herbs, salt and smoke.  Tradition says that drinking this wine on your wedding night guarantees the birth of a boy!  I’m not looking for children, let alone a boy, but I really did love this wine!  Our winelover friends, Tom and Ellen, actually visited this winery, ate a meal in the wine cellar and listened to the Gregorian chanting.  You can read about their visit at hobberdogchronicles.royhobbs.com.

    2014 Somlόi Apάtsάgi Pince Hárslevelü, Somlo

    Apάtsάgi was originally owned by the Benedictine Pannonhalma Archabbey, then expropriated and redistributed during Communism.  Zoltan Balogh, grandson of a previous winemaker, bought it and brought it back to life. The grapes are late harvested, fermented and aged in oak, then bottled unfiltered to fully express the terroir.  Hárslevelü means “linden tree leaf,” and refers to the shape of the grape leaves. According to Jancis Robinson, in The Oxford Companion to Wine, “Good Hárslevelü is typically deep green-gold, very viscous, full and powerfully flavored”.  It should have a highly aromatic fruity aroma with notes of elderflower and lime tree blossoms.  This 2014 had peachy aromas, with hints of honey, sweet notes of pineapple, pear and strawberry, was faintly spicy on the palate, and had more elegant acids than Furmint with some tartness in the finish. It’s a more oily and concentrated, bright and powerful wine. While not related, you might find it similar to Gruner Veltliner or a Chenin Blanc.

    2015 Tornai Premium Juhfark, Somlo

    Endre Tornai started out with a one-acre vineyard and now owns 56 acres of volcanic rock soil.  Wines made here all have a distinctive “Somlo” taste. Juhfark is a variety of grape, mainly found in Hungary, most prominently in this tiny wine region of Somló.  The name literally means “sheep’s tail” in Hungarian and refers to the elongated, cylindrical shape of the clusters.  It is considered a transparent grape–it takes on the characteristics of the place it is grown. In Somló, the juhfark grapes get good sun, producing a rich wine with strong minerality and hints of saltiness.  Juhfark wines often give hints of apple and pear and are floral yet herbal.  It pours a deep gold and smells like overripe white fruit and smoke. Juhfark Premium is Tornai’s flagship wine. It is age-worthy and full of minerality.  The wine is a blend of stainless steel and oak aged Juhfark. The 2015 showed overripe aromas on the nose, underlined by stony notes, very complex on the palate, a round acidity and a long finish.

    2015 Bott Csontos Furmint, Tokaji

    Furmint is a white Hungarian wine grape variety that is most widely grown in the Tokaj-Hegyalja wine region. It has been used to make the world famous Tokaji sweet dessert wines for centuries but is now also being used used to produce single-varietal dry wines as well. Furmint ranges in color from pale straw to light amber, with aromas of pineapple, lemon blossom, orange rind, ripe pear, white peach, yellow peach and apricot. The clay and volcanic soil also imparts a chalk-like texture with a mineral backbone.   Jόzsef and Judit Bodό make Bott Csontos on three acres of steeply sloping old vines.  They till the soil with horses and use a traditional wooden Hungarian press and native yeasts to ferment the wine in oak barrels.  The 2015 Csontos has a chalk-like texture with dried fruit, honey, spice, citrus notes and lots of minerality.  They have reached their goal of making true-to-place wines.

    Sicily, Italy

    Smashing Pumpkin Pasta with Ricotta Cheese

    When searching for the perfect Sicilian dish to pair with our Mount Etna wines without duplicating the foods of Basilicata and Campania, I came across a list of Sicilian recipes on “The Thinking Traveler” website.  Much to my surprise I discovered that The Thinking Traveler is a villa rental company in the Mediterranean and has won Condé Nast Traveler awards in 2016 & 2017. So if you want to rent an amazing villa in Sicily, The Thinking Traveler is the place to call!  They also have wonderful recipes on their website and I settled on this one for “smashing pumpkin pasta”.  I posted a picture of my practice dish, tagged them on Instagram, and they graciously responded to say it is one of their favorite recipes based on a dish they serve at their Villa Don Arcangelo all’Olmo.  For actual food prep, I found organic pie pumpkins at The Fresh Market, cut them up like butternut squash and sautéed them until soft enough to lightly “smash” but not puree.  Added some really creamy fresh ricotta and was rewarded with a delightful pumpkin pasta sauce.

                            

    2014 Tenuta di Fessina Etna Erse Bianco Etna DOC

    We already agree that there are many highly rated Italian wines, and we don’t really need to find a good reason to drink more of it!  However Italy is one of the world’s most volcanically active wine regions.  The only active volcanoes in mainland Europe are in Italy.  Sicily has one of those most active volcanoes and it is still growing.  Mount Etna now reaches almost 11,000 feet above the sea.  The main white grape here is Carricante and it has lots of stony flavors and salinity.  There are two lava flows that wrap around Tenuta di Fessina.  The grapes here grow in lava stones, volcanic ash and sandy loam between 2900-3300 feet up the hillside.  This 2014 Erse Bianco was made from 80% Carricante grapes with 20% Catarratto and Minnella and displayed straw-yellow with green hues, crisp aromas of pear and savory saline notes with a long textural finish that is typical of a volcanic wine.  It was delicate and paired well with the pumpkin sauce on the pasta and the ricotta cheese.

    2015 Tenuta di Fessina Etna Erse Rosso Etna DOC

    The 2015 Erse Etna Rosso was made from 80% Nerello Mascalese, the main red grape of Sicily, and 20% Nerello Cappuccio.  It was typical for an Etna Rosso with bright ruby-red color, aromas of crushed berries, plums and lots of smoky minerality.  It has a lengthy elegant finish.  I remember the Etna Rosso profile well from our “Sangiovese Grapes across Italy” wine event when we learned that Nerello Mascalese is most likely a cross between the Sangiovese grape and one other varietal.  The Fessina winemaker worked with Angelo Gaja for two decades so comes with some great credentials!

    Basilicata, Italy

    Eggplant Parmigiana

    Basilicata is mostly agricultural and very sparsely populated.  The food  here is rustic like many areas of Italy.  There are a number of theories as to where eggplant Parmigiana originated, but we opted for this pairing since it is served all over southern Italy and Mariann’s eggplant went really well with our Basilicata wine, Aglianico.

    2012 Bisceglia Aglianico del Vulture Gudarra

    The Bisceglia estate is located on the lower slopes of Mount Vulture, an extinct volcano.  Gudarra means “to be enjoyed” in the local dialect, and we did indeed.  Aglianico is the only varietal permitted here and the vines are grown in the traditional trellising method “vigna a capanno” which consists of three posts tied together like a tripod over a single vine.  Two of the posts can be moved around throughout the growing season to shade the grapes from the sun and fierce winds.  Aglianico is full-bodied and known for savory flavors of leather, white pepper, black fruits, cured meats, smoke, ash and cigar box. This 2012 Gudarra was no exception.  It was a deep ruby red with violet hues and notes of red cherries, blackberries, cassis and sweet spice.  It paired beautifully with the tomato-sauced eggplant Parmigiana.

    Campania, Italy

    Mozzarella and Tomato Caprese with Sauteed Vegetables

    Neapolitan Meatballs

    Lentils with Italian Sausage

    According to my culinary pairing research, no visit to Naples and the Campania region would be complete without a Caprese salad and Neapolitan meatballs.

    Debbie adding the EVOO.

    Lentils with Italian Sausage

    You can serve Mozzarella Tomato Caprese as a cold hors d’oeuvre, a salad, side dish or entrée.  Since the Campani eat a lot of vegetables, Carol’s addition of sautéed vegetables was perfect for our pairing.  Lentils are eaten all across Italy so seemed to be a great addition to our menu especially when searching for items easily transportable by our foodie guests.  Crockpots are a wonderful invention!   There are many variations of meatballs throughout Italy but our foodie guest Jo made hers fork tender Neapolitan style with pine nuts.  Debbie  slowly simmered our lentils with vegetables and some sweet Italian sausage.  All in all a delicious homage to Campania.

    2016 Mastroberardino Falanghina del Sannio DOC

    The soils in every area of Campania have been influenced by volcanos, and Mastroberardino has been growing grapes and making wine here dating back to 1760.  Today they are a regional leader dedicated to making wine from the ancient indigenous varietals.  One of these is Falanghina, which many believe to have been the basis for the legendary Falernian wine prized by ancient Rome due to its unique profile and fragrance.  This 2016 from the Falanghina del Sannio DOC was pale lemon-green with aromas of ripe pineapples, citrus fruits and white flowers.  It had zesty acidity with notes of honeysuckle and almonds.  Thank goodness it was not like the ancient Falernian which was about 30 proof, aged for 15-20 years and oxidized to amber dark brown.

    2016 Mastroberardino Lacryma Christi del Vesuvio Bianco DOC

    Mount Vesuvius is the most famous volcano in the region and can be seen from every area in the Bay of Naples.  This 2016 Lacryma Christ del Vesuvio Bianco DOC is made from 100% Coda di Volpe grapes grown in layers of volcanic ash.  Just as expected, we tasted dusty stones with a gritty mouth feel.  It was pale yellow with aromas of pear and other white fruit.  It’s a food friendly wine that paired especially well with the mozzarella caprese and sauteed vegetables.  According to one legend, God cried when he looked down and saw the beautiful Bay of Naples giving us this wonderful Lacryma Christi, tears of Christ.

    2014 Fattoria Galardi Terra di Lavoro Roccamonfina IGT

    Our Italian “dumpbucket”. Luckily we didn’t need it!

    The Galardi wine comes from about 1500 feet up on Roccamonfina’s volcanic slopes and is 80% Aglianico with a 20% addition of Piedirosso. The Galardi family produces just this one wine!  Terra di Lavoro means “land of work” and this grey tufo with deposits of pumice and ash adds to the challenging environment.  Piedirosso is the next most planted red grape in Campania after Aglianico and is said to be a very difficult varietal.  This 2014 bottle was typically really big and full-bodied with a deep purple color, smoke, earth, hints of tobacco, ripe black fruit, and we can’t leave out the mineral notes similar to crunchy graphite.  We paired it with our meatballs and Italian sausage but an aged piece of beef would have been perfect!

    Soave, Veneto, Italy

    Creamy Risotto with Crab and Shrimp

    Soave pairs incredibly well with rich Italian seafood like clams, scallops, crabmeat and other shellfish especially in creamy rich    dishes.  Pasta is not as popular in northern Italy as the south, and rice reigns supreme.   Arborio rice (risotto) is as essential to the Venetian cuisine as it is to the dishes of the   Piedmont and Friuli.   So considering all that, this risotto with crabmeat and shrimp made even creamier by the addition of mascarpone cheese couldn’t be beat!

    2015 Suavia Soave Classico Monte Carbonare

    The Soave DOC was created in 1968 and requires a minimum of 70% Garganega grapes in the bottle.    This 2015 Suavia is 100% Garganega grown on the Monte Carbonare Hill in black as coal soil.  We absolutely loved this wine; it was probably one of the favorites of the evening.  It was yellow-straw in color with citrus, herbs and minerals, and a creamy elegance – truly an expression of its volcanic terroir.

    Formaggi e Frutta e Dolci

                

    Broadbent Rainwater Madeira (Madeira, Portugal)

    Stilton Cheese, White Chocolate and Candied Grapefruit

    Madeira Island is the top of a massive volcano located 600 miles from mainland Portugal and 300 miles from Morocco. It is famous for Madeira, its fortified wine made there for 550 years.  The basalt bedrock has yielded extremely fertile soils.  Grapevines grow on pergolas in narrow green terraces up and down the sides of the hills.   Each terraced strip has a narrow dry stonewall to keep it from washing down to the sea.  While there are numerous types of Madeira we opted to taste “Rainwater” which is medium dry and more of a value-driven entry level Madeira for this dinner. We enjoyed a Broadbent Rainwater which received 90 points from Robert Parker.     Made from the Tinta Negra grape, it was aged for three years in oak casks, is reddish-copper in color and has scents of dried dates, figs, cumin and a finish of honey and walnuts.   I loved this as an after dinner drink and am now wondering how much more I would enjoy a 10 year old Malmsey!  I paired the dessert wines with cheese and chocolate  – specifically Stilton cheese, white chocolate and candied grapefruit for Madeira –  a delicious pairing!

    2014 Donnafugata Passito di Pantelleria Ben Ryέ (Pantelleria, Sicily)

    Blue Cheese and Chocolates

    Pantelleria is a satellite island 62 miles southwest of Sicily and is part of the same volcanic chain.  It is famous for the Moscato Passito di Pantelleria made from Zibibbo grapes.  Zibibbo grapes are the oldest continually existing unmodified grape still in vinification and are also known as Muscat of Alexandria.  Part of the Moscato is harvested when ripe, pressed and juice set aside while remaining Moscato is laid on mats and dried in the sun. This 2014 Donnafugata Ben Ryέ was neon-orange in color and a favorite of our group.  It had aromas of apricots and candied citrus zest with notes of Mediterranean scrub, honey and fresh figs.  Robert Parker gave it 95 points and so did we!  Ben Ryέ is an international icon for Italian dessert wines and the name comes from the Arabic term for “Son of the Wind”.  We enjoyed it with the Blue Cheese and chocolates.

    2006 Oremus Tokaji Aszu 5 Puttonyos (Tokaji, Hungary)

    Roquefort Cheese and Nutty Toffee Date Cake

    Tokaji Aszu is Hungary’s most famous wine and they have been making it for over 500 years.  Louis XIV called it the “Wine of Kings and King of Wines”.  It’s made from botrytized grapes that grow in   volcanic soil at the foot of the Zemplen Hills.  There are miles of underground wine cellars and centuries-old wine making traditions.  Oremus has been owned by the Alvarez family who also owns Vega-Sicilia, one of Spain’s most famous estates, since 1993.  Our 2006 Oremus Vega Sicilia Tokaji Aszu 5 Puttonyos was rated 95 points by Robert Parker. Puttonyos measure sweetness so this one had 12-15% residual sugar.  It also had aromas of white flowers, honey and dried apricots with flavors of apricot nectar and lemon curd. I paired it with a French Roquefort cheese and my homemade nutty toffee date cake with toffee sauce – a marriage made in heaven!

    Sicilian Ricotta Cheesecake

    Strazzate Basilicata Chocolate Almond Cookies

    Strawberries, Blackberries and Grapes

    My foodie friend Debbie would have made any Sicilian grandmother proud with her Sicilian Ricotta Cheesecake.  Ricotta is very popular in Sicily as we have already learned from our smashed pumpkin pasta with ricotta.  Therefore it is no surprise that our Sicilian cheesecake should be ricotta-based as well. The Strazzate are chocolate almond cookies traditionally served in Basilicata. 

    They are flavored with Strega, an herbal liqueur produced in Benevento, the capital town of Campania.  It is made from a secret recipe of the Alberti family for almost 140 years.  It certainly helped to make these cookies extremely tasty little morsels!

    Our five hour volcanic wine extravaganza is now complete!  However, these were only volcanic wines of Europe.  We have an entire other hemisphere to conquer one of these days.  Who knows when, but it will eventually happen.  In the meantime, stay tuned to forkandcorkdivine.com to find out where our next wine adventure will take us.

    Cooper, our “dinner in the vineyard” assistant who made our evening so much more enjoyable!  Thank you, Cooper.  

    Your hosts, Linda and Chuck Rakos

    I must also acknowledge the Blue Danube Wine Company (Los Altos, CA) for without them, there would have been no Hungarian wine tasting.  They are my go-to wine source for most of the obscure hard-to-find wines that have been served.  Naples Wine Collection (Naples, FL) was the source for our Italian volcanic wines  – all from Marcello Palazzi and The Winebow Group.  Other items came from 67 Wine (NY) and B-21 Wine Company (Tarpon Springs, FL). Some of my greatest inspiration for learning about, finding and tasting wines from obscure countries are the folks at Exotic Wine Travel and several regular contributors to #winelover and other on-line wine groups.  The internet and social media have proven to be an excellent source of information and inspiration for me.  If you have any questions about the wines served at our dinner, please contact me at the email address listed below.

    #volcanicwine, #bluedanubewine, #exoticwinetravel

    1.23.18  LFRakos@gmail.com

  • 01Nov

    “Let’s experience some Eastern Mediterranean food and wine flavors right here in SW Florida.”  And the challenge was on as a few well-seasoned foodie and winelover friends agreed yet once again to bring together wines from a region less familiar than our usual choice in wines – and even more challenging – to pair them with foods from that region.  Some of us have previously enjoyed a glass or two of wine from Lebanon at local wine tastings, and some of us have tried Israeli wines through the years.  And this winelover has been enjoying Greek wines for a several years now, especially the Assyrtiko varietal.  In fact that even prompted a previous article at www.forkandcorkdivine.com posted September 2016 titled “Assyrtiko”….What is it, and why you should give it a try! However most of us rarely have tasted wines from the Eastern part of the Mediterranean – if ever.

    Chuck and I had the pleasure of tasting all six wine offerings from the Massaya Winery of Lebanon when Sami Ghosn, the winery founder and general manager visited Waterside Wine Club in Cape Coral, Florida in early 2017.  We enjoyed them sufficiently enough to purchase one of each.  It seems that a Lebanese wine dinner was already taking shape somewhere in my subconscious.  That idea seemed destined to come to light one day when watching one of my favorite food TV stations, what should appear but a delightful cooking show called “Julie Taboulie’s Lebanese Kitchen”.   Julie’s food looked and sounded delicious!  I ordered her cookbook and we were officially on our way!!   In order to make it a really interesting event, it seemed logical to expand a bit, so I included wines of Israel and Greece.  “An Eastern Mediterranean Dining Adventure” was born.   Luckily for me, our foodie and winelover friends were willing to humor me and go on the adventure together.

    Next I did some research and wrote an article about wines from Lebanon, Israel and Greece.  After all learning about the wines is our first objective.  You can read about wines from these countries in a previous article at www.forkandcorkdivine.com titled “EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN WINE—rediscovered!”  We always strive to make our food pairings  as authentic as we SW Florida foodie cooks can make it, so using the cookbook from my new best TV foodie friend Julie Taboulie, a menu was planned complete with recipes.  Here is what we prepared for dinner, and the wines that we actually paired it with.

    An Eastern Mediterranean Dining Adventure

    Amuse Bouche

    Cucumber Bites with Sun Dried Tomato Spread

    Mezza “small plates”

    Hummus b Tahini (classic chickpea and sesame spread)

    Baba Ghanouj  (roasted eggplant dip)

    Assorted Cheeses:

    Arabian fresh cheese, Armenia string cheese, Halloumi Cypress cheese and Greek Isle organic feta

    Turkish Olives, Peppadew Peppers and Pickled Turnips

    Labneh b Zeit (Lebanese yogurt with oil and spices)

    Khyar b Laban (Cucumber-mint-yogurt sauce)

    Assorted Pita Breads, Pita Chips and Flatbread Crackers

    Salata “salads”

    Taboulie (chopped herb, tomato and bulgur wheat salad)

    Fattoush “Lebanese peasant bread salad”

    Asha “the main event”

    Karuuf Mishwee

    garlic studded leg of lamb marinated in olive oil and fresh herbs oven roasted and served with freekeh and steamed asparagus, carrots, onions and snap peas

    Djej b Finden

    Shawarma-spiced chicken baked with baby bellas and pearl onions in white wine sauce served with Lebanese couscous

    Santorini Shrimp with Feta

    Mahshi Silik (Swiss chard leaves stuffed with rice and chickpeas)

    Kelwayet “sweet endings”

    Knefeh (Lebanese style cheesecake)

    Baklawa (Lebanese layered phyllo pastry with walnut filling and orange water syrup)

    Turkish Delight and Other Assorted Sweet Treats

    The Wines

    Lebanese Wines

    Massaya Blanc, White blend, Bekaa Valley, 2015

    Massaya Rose, Bekaa Valley, 2015

    Massaya Le Colombier, Red blend, Bekaa Valley, 2014

    Massaya Terrasses del Baalbek, Red blend, Bekaa Valley, 2012

    Massaya Gold Reserve, Red blend, Bekaa Valley, 2010

    Chateau Musar, Red blend, Bekaa Valley, 2008

    Greek Wines

    Santo Assyrtiko, Santorini, 2015

    Argyros Assyrtiko, Santorini, 2016

    Hermes Nemea Agiorgitiko, Nemea, Peloponnese, 2014

    Israeli Wines

    Ben Ami Chardonnay, Galilee, 2014

    Tishbi Estate Cabernet Sauvignon, Judean Hills, 2010

    Your winelover hostess, the SOFO Wine Diva. Cheers!

    One of my winelover and foodie supporters.

    Service with a smile!

  • 03Jun

    Ready for the marriage of Cena e Vini

    Should wine be considered part of the MyPlate Food Groups?  After all it is made from grapes, and isn’t fruit good for you?  The Mediterranean Diet even includes a glass or two of wine each day in the diet plan.  As a Registered Dietitian I would never condone drinking wine as part of the recommended food groups and your daily diet plan.  That topic would require an entire separate discussion.  However wine is often linked with food in various parts of the wine-producing regions of the world. In fact in Italy, wine and food are “married”!  In Italy, wine IS food!  For those of us who are winelover foodies, It is definitely a marriage made in heaven.  If you enjoy wine and food as much as I do, and would like to learn more about this Italian marriage, read on……………..

    I recently reacquainted myself with some wine knowledge gained during many years of wine classes but obviously not well remembered – specifically the Sangiovese grape varietal in Italy.  A few winelover friends Sangiovese grapeseagerly “volunteered” to participate in my Sangiovese re-enlightenment by preparing foods that are known to marry well with Italian Sangiovese wines. As an added bonus, they also agreed to provide many of them and TASTE ALL of them!  But first, we needed a little guidance on Italian marriage.

     

    Suggested food pairings for Sangiovese wines

    The basic characteristics of Italian Sangioveses are high acidity, substantial tannins, fresh cherry fruit and earthy/herbal scents.  Food and Wine Magazine and WineFolly.com recommend the following classic food pairings to complement these characteristics: rare steaks, roasted game, wild boar, rich chicken or mushroom dishes, almost anything with tomato sauce, cured sausages and hard cheeses.

    Italy may be half the size of Texas, but it has many different local cooking preferences and traditions.  Just like the many regional and local food traditions here in the United States, Italy’s food preferences and cooking style have developed due to geography, history and climate. We were about to taste Sangiovese from 7 of Italy’s 20 regions in our Italian wine and food event; therefore it seemed appropriate to research the difference in their regional cuisine if we wanted to do justice to our marriage.

    More laws

    Italy has classifications and laws pertaining to food just like those that pertain to their wines.  They also fall under regulation by the European Union.  Parmigiano cheese, prosciutto and condiments like balsamic vinegar are examples of DOP Denominazione di Origine Protetta or “Protected Designation of Origin” foods or food products. DOP is a certification ensuring that products are locally grown and packaged.  It is a guarantee that the food was made by local farmers and artisans.  Only DOP products like balsamic vinegar can have the word “traditional” on their labels because they follow local traditions.  DOP labels are red and yellow and always include a serial number.

    Here is a partial list of certified Italian DOP foods and their origin which can be an entire region or just one tiny village:

    • Mozzarella di Bufala – Campania, Lazio, Puglia and Molise – It is really made from milk of water buffalos except when Italian laws are contradictory and allow cow’s milk!
    • Balsamic vinegar – Emilia Romagna
    • San Marzano tomatoes – Campania
    • Olive oil – Abruzzo, Calabria, Campania, Emilia Romagna, Lazio, Liguria, Lombardia, Puglia, Sicily, Tuscany and Veneto
    • Basil – Liguria – It’s from a small town in the province of Genoa.
    • Taleggio DOPPecorino Romano – Lazio, Tuscany and Sardinia
    • Pecorino Toscano – Tuscany
    •  Prosciutto – Emilia Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Le Marche, Tuscany, Veneto
    • Taleggio – Lombardy, Veneto and Piedmont

     

    IGP Indicazione Geografica Protetta “indication of geographical protection” is another label you may find on Italian products.  This certification is less strict than the DOP, but the food must trace back to the geographical origin in at least one phase of production, but not like all phases as in the DOP.

    On a side note, United States has some degree of protection for foods grown or produced in a specific region.  For example, Vidalia onions must be produced within a certain region around Vidalia, Georgia and “Idaho” and “Grown in Idaho” are registered trademarks for potatoes under the Idaho Potato Commission.  A comparison of USDA and FDA regulations with EU regulations would require significant research, so we will not address that topic in this article.

    SWFL Winelovers and Foodies pair it up for our “marriage made in heaven”

    Armed with DOP knowledge, our Foodies’ research of local regional Italian cuisine and the www.forkandcorkdivine.comSangiovese Grapes of Italy” article, our “Cena e Vini” took shape.  Our menu and wines transported us through 8 Italian regions, 11 DOCs, 7 DOCGs, 1 IGT and a wine from the island of Corsica.  This may sound like a monumental undertaking to the novice, but our seasoned and fearless foodies were up to the challenge once again!

    Here are the regions, DOCs and DOCGs represented and some of the suggested food pairings that we incorporated into our menu.  Keep in mind that none of our foodies are professional Italian chefs and many of the foods represented cross over a number of regional boundaries.

    Toscana

    DOCGs : Brunello di Montalcino, Carmignano, Chianti (Colli Sinese), Chianti Classico, Morellino di Scansano, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano

    DOCs : Maremma Toscana, Rosso di Montalcino, Rosso di Montepulciano, Vin Santo del Chianti Classico

    IGT: Toscana

    Sangiovese food pairings: hard cheeses such as DOP Pecorino, cured meats, anything tomato preferably made with DOP San Marzano tomatoes, legumes (chickpeas)  and vegetables

    Vin Santo food pairings: Gorgonzola, honey, biscotti, almond cookies

    Emilia Romagna : Romagna DOC

    Food pairings : DOP Parmesan cheese, prosciutto and balsamic vinegar

    Liguria : Colli di Luni DOC

    Food pairings :  Pesto alla genovese preferably made with DOP basil

    Lombardia : Franciacorta DOCG – Franciacorta is a sparkling wine from the Brescia Province of Lombardia.  Perfect for a welcome aperitif at any occasion!  Pairs perfectly with DOP Taleggio cheese, apples and honey!

    Marche : Rosso Piceno DOC

    Food pairings : Porchetta

    Molise : Molise DOC

    Food pairings : Pasta with local cheeses and often with pork sausage

    Sicilia : Etna DOC

    Food pairings : Recipes that include tomatoes, olives, capers, lemons and other citrus.

    Umbria : Montefalco DOC and  Torgiano Rosso DOC

    Food pairings : Mushrooms, truffles and pecorino cheese

    Corsica : An island in the Mediterranean just 51 miles west of Tuscany and one of the 18 regions of France.  The Nielluccio grape is genetically similar to Sangiovese.

    Did we have a happy marriage?

    I have a new appreciation for Italian Sangiovese wines and their regional differences.  Wines from Tuscany are readily available for purchase; however, wines from the other regions – not so much.  If you are willing to search out wines from different regions, especially those unfamiliar to you, you will be rewarded by a wonderful tasting experience.  The local big-box wine store has quite a large variety and good prices; however you will not always find truly unique wines that are sold in boutique wine shops. Another factor is that many wines from other countries fail to make it across the ocean.  The really adventurous winelover in this part of Southwest Florida has to be willing to travel and search out those boutique wine shops in other areas, and/or seek out some reliable internet wine sites.  I have used a number of them through the years and have been successful to find unique and interesting wines, but I don’t make recommendations.

    Hopefully my winelover foodie friends agree that we met our objectives which were to explore the different tastes of Sangiovese wines from as many Italian regions as possible and confirm our theory that “if it grows together, it goes together” just like any good marriage. I hope that my wine and food adventures encourage others to be adventurous and experiment with some unfamiliar wines.  You may be pleasantly surprised!  Ciao.

    The menu and wines as served:          “Cena e Vini”

    Welcome from our hosts

    hosts

    Sangiovese Grapes of Italy

    Aperitivo

    Taleggio DOP Crostini with Apple and Thyme Honey

    Lombardy Province of Brescia, Franciacorta DOCG

    Ca’ del Bosco Franciacorta Cuvee Prestige Brut

    Antipasti

    Charcuterie Platter

    Assorted Cured Italian Meats and Cheeses, DeRomo’s Fresh Made Mozzarella, Olives and Giardiniera

    DeRomo’s Ciabatta Bread, Rosemary Grissini  and Sesame Seed Flatbread

     Roasted Garlic Butter with Olive Oil

    Chianti DOCG Vitanza Chianti Colli Sinese 2011

    Morellino di Scansano DOCG Cecchi Val dell Rose Morellino di Scansano Reserva 2009               92 pts JS

    DeRomos  making mozzarella

    charcuterie      Eating charcuterie

    Sicilian Caponata (Roasted Eggplant, Red Peppers, Tomatoes, Capers in Sweet & Sour Sauce)

    Sicilia Etna DOC Pietradolce Archineri Rosso 2012  Nerello Mascalese    93+ pts RP/JS

    Corsica (French) Domaine Giacometti Patrimonio “Cru des Agriate” Rouge 2014

    Nielluccio (Sangiovese), Grenache and Sciaccarellu blend

    making caponata   plated caponata

    Primi

    Tuscan Ribollita (Hearty Vegetable Soup of Kale, Cabbage, Beans, Tomatoes and Potatoes)

    Chianti Classico DOCG   Felsina Berardenga Chianti Classico 2013    92 pts WS

    Maremma Toscana DOC Tua Rita Perlato del Bosco 2012     93 pts WE

    Lasagnetta di Finochhi e Spianata Calabra (Fennel and Tuscan Salami Terrine)

    Carmignano DOCG Barco Reale Capezzana di Carmignano 2014

    Brunello di Montalcino DOCG Argiano Brunello di Montalcino 2010   98 pts JS/95 RP

    plating anita     Anita

    Homemade Mushroom Filled Ravioli, Porcini Mushroom Sauce & Black Truffles

    Umbria Torgiano Rosso DOC Lungarotti Rubesco Rosso di Torgiano 2011

     Umbria Montefalco DOC Arnaldo Caprai Montefalco Rosso 2012     91 pts JS

    ravioli 1        ravioli 2

                                             plating ravioli

    ravioli 4

    Tomato Caprese Salad

    Chianti Classico DOCG La Castellina Chianti Classico 2012 Squarcialupi

    Decanter Silver World Wine Award

    Chianti Classico DOCG Tenuta di Renieri Chianti Classico Riserva 2012        92 pts JS

    tomato caprese

    Ligurian Basil Pesto with Vesuviotti Pasta

    Liguria Colli di Luni DOC Lvnae Auxo Colli di Luni DOC Rosso 2011

    Molise Molise DOC Di Majo Norante Sangiovese 2015

    basil    mario pasta  pesto pasta

     Brunello di Montalcino DOCG

    Il Poggione Brunello di Montalcino 2011     95 pts RP/ 93 JS/ 92 WE

    Toscana IGT Tenuta Sette Ponti Crognolo  2014   93 pts JS (Blend of Sangiovese, Cabernet, Merlot)

    So good they stand alone !!!!!

    Secondi

    Tuscan Sausage and Cannellini Beans with Tomatoes

    Rosso di Montalcino DOC   Vasco Sassetti Rosso di Montalcino 2014

    Rosso di Montepulciano DOC  Gattavecchi Rosso di Montepulciano 2015

    Stacy

    Porchetta Style Pork Roast Garlic and Herbed Pork Tenderloin Wrapped in Pancetta

    Emilia – Romagna   Romagna DOC  Podere La Berta Olmatello Sangiovese Riserva 2011

    Marche Rosso Piceno DOC  Cocci Grifoni Vigna Messieri Rosso Piceno Superiore 2008

    pork

    Contorni

    Tuscan Roasted Broccoli with Garlic Slivers and EVOO

    Rosso di Montepulciano DOC  Canneto Rosso di Montepulciano 2015

    Vino Nobile di Montepulciano DOCG  Vigneto Santa Pia “La Braccesca” Riserva

    Vino Nobile di Montepulciano 2008    92 pts JS/WS

    Formaggi e Frutta e Dolci

    Gorgonzola Drizzled with Honey and Sugared Rosemary Walnuts

    Fragole Seasonal Frutta strawberries, pineapple and kiwi

    Bittersweet Chocolate Budino with Fresh Whipped Cream

    Assorted Biscotti and Cookies from DeRomo’s Gourmet Market and Restaurant

    Felsina Vin Santo del Chianti Classico 2005 92 pts RP/91 WS

    Cookie DeRomos  Dessert plate

    Digestivi and Caffe

    Averna Amaro, Chuck’s Homemade Limoncello and Illy Caffe

    amaro

    The wine line up “vini”

    wine line up

    Many thanks to Chris Gross, our guest sommelier

    Chris our wine pourer

    Chianti from Gary and Debbie Corsican wine  Felsina 2  Liguria

    lungarotti  marche  molise  montefalco

    podere la berta 2  Romagna wines  tua rita  umbria

    nobile  colliwine from etnawine glasses

     

    Linda Rakos  6.2.17

    lfrakos@gmail.com

    www.forkandcorkdivine.com