Council of Vouvray

January 30, 2010

2006 Marc Bredif Vouvray ~$19

This Chenin Blanc from the Loire tricked a few folks tonight with a couple guesses of Riesling and one of Pinot Gris. The nose is somewhat lacking in intensity, although Eric says it’s “like walking through a garden”. While subtle, the aroma is much more pleasing than watching re-runs of Frasier. My issue with the wine is the balance between sugar and acid, which is crucial with off-dry whites such as most Vouvrays. The sweetness is just a little bit too high causing the wine to be somewhat flabby. Not flabby like Jared pre-Subway-diet, but more like Jay Leno. Still a good Chenin Blanc, a grape which is often overlooked and underrated.

Eric’s score: 91
Mike’s score: 89
Steven’s score: 89 (unblind)
Jason’s score: 87

Council of Variable Members score: 89

No witty remarks here tonight – just another solid white wine from Northern France. Why anyone would buy a California Chardonnay instead of this blows my brain. “Who let the dogs out?” – Eric.


Council of Three: Spanish Shenanigans

January 28, 2010

2008 Borsoa Red Wine – 75% Garnacha | 25% Tempranillo from Spain ~$10

The council of three met tonight, and together we were merry. Eric chose this wine and I was way off – guessing Syrah. Mike was pretty close with the guess of GSM (Grenache, Syrah, Mourvedre). Rather dark color for a Grenache based wine, and definitely a new world style. A rather buttery nose with a little bit of a stink and rich dark fruit – I’m talking blackberry cobbler rolling like Bill Gates. The wine isn’t bad by any means; the finish is somewhat reminiscent of 409 (the cleaner) sprayed onto a paper towel and rubbed on the floor. If one is into liquified blackberry cobbler made with excessive amounts of butter this wine is highly recommended. If one is not, it’s still a decent value. Eric summed it up by saying, “I wouldn’t take it to bed”.

Eric’s score: 86 (unblind)
Steve’s score: 85
Mike’s score: 85

Council of Variable Members score: 85

If we keep judging wines so closely the integrity of CoVM will be compromised. I might have to throw in a Pinot Noir to mix it up a bit next time.


Wild Fermentation: O’er the winedark sea

January 28, 2010

Many hip wineries are starting to do what we in the industry call, wild fermentations.  So, what’s the deal?  Are these wines going to be more complex?  Should you pay more for them?  Isn’t this how all wines used to be made?  The short answer, maybe, no, and yes.  The longer answer:

First, lets meet the characters in this story.  If making wine were a Homeric tale, Saccharomyces cerevisiae would be Odysseus.  Saccharo (sugar) myces (yeast) cerevisiae (cerveza, beer) are the tiny, single-celled fungi that eat sugar, and make alcohol, glycerol, acetic acid, and a host of fruity aromatic chemicals called esters.

Next, lets talk about what’s going on in the wine.  Unlike beer or fruit juice, wine is never sterilized or pasteurized.  It is a living system full of molds, yeasts, bacteria, and of course chemicals made by the grapevine.  Whenever you have a source of sugar in nature, undoubtedly someone will take advantage and eat it.  When we crush up the grapes, we introduce a lot of oxygen into our system.  Now that we have oxygen, sugar, amino acids, vitamins, the time is ripe, and it is time to party.

So just who else is invited to this party?  Just as Odysseus arrived home to Ithaca with 100 suitors ready to take his place, we see the likes of Hanseniaspora uvarum, Metschnikowia pulcherrima, Acetobacter spp., Gluconobacter spp., Kluyveromyces spp., Pichia spp., Candida spp., and Torulaspora delbrueckii, Botrytis cinerea, Penicillin spp., and Aspergillus flavus.  Huh?

Those are just a selected few.  I name them to stress a point, there’s a lot of organisms living on grapes.   How did they get there?  They cling on to the legs and hairs of small insects like leafhoppers and flies, they’re floating in the air, or they protect themselves in fungal fruiting bodies and overwinter on the vines.  The first lesson in microbiology, microbes are ubiquitous, they are everywhere.

Saccharomyces begins its journey overwintering in the soil, or as an airborne spore.  As leafhoppers emerge from their wintery shells in the soil, they carry our hero up onto the leaves and berries.  When the ripe grapes are harvested, they are taken into the winery.  If they have been damaged by birds, rain, hail, or mammals, the grapes are likely to be infected by the vinegar bacteria (aceto and gluconobacter) or the molds (Apergillus, Botrytis, and Penicillin), and may be discarded.  If they have managed to hold their form, then they will make it into the crusher/destemmer.

Now here is where the story begins to unfold.  The party begins, and a young winemaker starts to fret.  Three or four days go by, and the vat of $4000 fruit is just sitting there, rotting.  Nothing, seemingly.  However, the various yeasts have already begun.  Torulaspora, Zygosaccharomyces, Kluyveromyces are at their finest hour.  The alcohol begins to rise.  At about 5 to 7 percent, their delicate cell membranes rupture,  they die.  Saccharomyces seizes the day, and begins to spread throughout the small lot.  No other organism can operate as well as he can.  By day 4 or 5, the temperature has risen, and if we were to examine a single drop of must (the fermenting wine), we would find 100 million yeast cells.

How did this happen?  Well made wine has a wonderful property of being 1)acidic (low pH) 2) High in sugar 3) High in alcohol 4)Low in oxygen.  None of the other microbes can survive these conditions, almost none that is.

All wine used to be made in this manner.  In 1866, Louis Pasteur published the book that would give birth to the study of microbes, it was entitled Etudes sur le Vin, Studies over the wine.  He was the first person to describe Saccharomyces, and show how it turned sugar into alcohol.  Ever since then, we’ve been looking at wine in a new way.  Several decades later, we learned how to isolate the spherical shaped yeast, put it into packages, and sell it to winemaker’s across the globe.  These packaged yeasts offered consistency, insurance, reliability.

Let me stress a point.  Most packaged yeasts are not GE, genetically engineered.  They have been isolated from wild yeasts from such far away places as France, Italy, and Germany, and they have been used to make clean wines for many decades.  In the past decade however, scientists ave begun to tamper with yeasts using techniques of genetic modification.  To date, they are illegal to use in the EU, and most winemakers do not use these GMOs.

So, to inoculate (add the package yeasts) or not to inoculate, that is the question.

Some of the wild organisms that start the party create chemicals like acetic acid (vinegar) which leads to ethyl acetate (nail polish remover).  Let me get to the crux.  When Robert Parker called the 1998 Napa Valley vintage the greatest ever, he set off a wave that is still circling the world.  The 1998 was one of the hottest on record.  The wines that resulted were high in flavor and low in acid, hot, voluptuous.  He liked them, and so did the people that only like the wines he likes.  They could be drunk young, they melted in the mouth.

The problem?  They had no acid, their pH was 4.0  When a wine has a pH between 3.0 and 3.5, none of the other organisms survive except Saccharomyces.  When the pH approaches 4.0, the wine becomes a cess pool.  Wild fermentation leads to spoilage, it is near impossible without spoling.

And so Odysseus arrives at his palace, and begins to slay the evil suitors one by one.   Some winemakers spend hundreds to thousands of dollars every crush to buy packaged yeasts.  They buy several different strains to add complexity to the wine.  Or they go wild.

Here’s the clincher.  A study several years ago showed that no matter if a winemaker used D-254, BM-45, Z-33, Pasteur Red, Prix de Mousse, a combination of all of those in different wines, or let it go wild, if you were to examine the surviving yeasts in all the different wines, it would be the same strain, most likely the strain that lives in the winery and always has.   Truly, our hero has come home.

When you buy a wine that is meant to be aged, (higher acids=lower pH), you support a more sustainable style of winemaking.  In my next story, I will take up unfiltered and unfined, and we will see more of the problems of high pH wine, and learn about winemaking’s dirty little secret, Velcorin.


Vino Paradiso: More like Vino Purgatorio

January 26, 2010

It may sound harsh but at least I didn’t go with Vino Inferno.  We have had good experiences at Vino Paradiso in the past; this was however our first chance to see it after the light leaves the sky.  The name Vino Paradiso would lead you to believe that this is going to be some sort of beatific experience, which just wasn’t the case this time.  The staff was polite and friendly but not very attentitive which was probably my main problem with Vino Paradiso this time around.

Vino Paradiso has an extensive bottle list for anybody whether your wallet is beefy or you find yourself being a little bit more pennywise.  There is sure to be something for any taste on the bottle list.  They also offer a few wine flights that rotate in and out from time to time.  I had a flight of Spanish reds that was pretty yummy.

Overall, I was not thrilled nor was I disheartened by my experience here.  If you’re in Portland (OR) and happen to walk by Vino Paradiso, stop in and give them a try.

Check out their website at www.vinoparadiso.com/


Alu Wine Bar: Heaven in Oregon?

January 25, 2010

I have a new form of depression. While I love living in Walla Walla, I know that Alu is a good four hour commute, and this is deeply saddening.

There we were, the Terroirists core crew, in Portland for one night. The night was good until our final stop at Alu, and then the night became epic (and that’s a good thing). Tucked away in a cozy aluminum house on MLK Blvd., it’s a place that could be overlooked, but it’s also the wine nerd’s fantasy.

The wine list is largely made up of earth-friendly wines; some are organically grown, others are biodynamic. There’s a nifty key in the menu to display which qualities each wine holds.

Alu's Bar

The drinking started with Jeff, the amazingly knowledgeable and charismatic owner, providing us with a sample of a Sicilian red wine made from the grape, Frappato. Never heard of this grape? Neither had we. Light in color – like a cross between Pinot Noir and Nebbiolo – the nose on this wine completely caught me off guard. I had visions of frolicking through wildflower and lavender fields in the floating mountains of a far away planet. Simply put: the nose was out of this world, and it probably still is.

Still visibly shaken from this experience, I decided to order a glass of Marzemino – yet another obscure Italian variety, and I was not disappointed. After departing the lavender fields this wine took me to a world of gigantic beasts rumbling through mountains of titanium in search of fresh meat to roast over a bonfire on the shores of a vast purple sea. Oh yeah. I wish this glass of wine could never end – this is my paradise. I learned the meaning of life, and Alu is the keeper.

Back to reality; both of these wines had a very distinctive finish with subtle saline qualities. I can count the other wines I’ve had with equally moving “minerality” on one hand. The best thing about the Marzemino is the $25 bottle price – and that’s after the bar markup, which in general seemed quite reasonable.

Atmospherically the bar is very warm and inviting. There’s a downstairs area (the cellar) full of comfy seats and couches. We spent the entire night upstairs at the small, peaceful bar, but downstairs seemed as though it would be a more social environment and a lot of fun. Something to try on the next trip to PDX. There’s also an outdoor area which isn’t exactly ideal this time of year.

From the warmth of the LED bar to the exotic wine list, Alu is an absolute must if you are at least partly interested in wine. They do offer cocktails as well, but this is a wine blog. I could have spent the entire night there trying one killer wine after another, but all good things must come to an end. Luckily, next time we venture into Portland Alu will still be there in all of its glory. One day in the near future I will return to Alu, and until that day I can only dream about it – and cry.

Visit their website here: http://www.aluwinebar.com/

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