Recently
Tough Times Call for More From 'Restaurant Service'
With the economy in free fall, with millions of people on a budget, and with wine moving from an optional purchase to a luxury, a number of once-treasured lifestyle events are now hard to justify.
Dining out is one of them.
It's not that we can't …Read more.
Savvy Wine Consumers Making Most of Sour Economy
Sadly for many in the wine industry, the worldwide weakness in the economy is having a calamitous impact. Consequently, smart consumers are cashing in. Or should that be caching?
The news this past week was that prices for most expensive, and even …Read more.
What Do You Trust More, Medals or Scores?
The most widely used marketing tool for wine is the score.
In just about every wine shop you'll find tags on the shelves stating that the above wine got a score from some self-anointed wine expert that supposedly indicates its quality.
But have you …Read more.
Hess Wines are Quietly on the Move
NAPA, Calif. — The drive up Redwood Road from the center of Napa is deceptively steep because you drive many miles, and when you reach the winery, you are literally on the slopes of Mount Veeder, high above the valley floor.
At this property, …Read more.
more articles
|
Bigger: Is it Better?Back in the early 1980s, the common wisdom was that wines with 14 percent alcohol or more were considered high in alcohol. Some even thought 13.5 percent alcohol was a bit too much for a dry red wine aimed at the dinner table. I haven dozens of wines in my cellar from the 1970s that say 12.5 percent alcohol on the label and the wines are all fine to this day. Winemakers have long known that the higher the alcohol, the “richer” the wine is. That is, higher alcohols give a wine the impression of sweetness and the higher the alcohol, the greater that impression is. Recently two winemakers old enough to remember that period reminisced about that old line referring to “14 percent alcohol.” “Remember that?” asked one. “Well, today's 15 percent is the old 14 percent.” “No, it isn't,” said the second winemaker, “16 percent is.” Has the culture of wine making changed so much that we no longer have many wines aimed at the dinner table? Youngsters who think of themselves as wine savvy and love to toss around terms like “fruit bomb” could be extolling the dubious virtues of another abomination: sweet red wine. I was chatting with a winemaker the other day whose name would be mud if I were to identify him. He is old enough to recall when red wine was both actually and figuratively dry. “We got a bottle of” and he named a particularly famous Napa Valley cabernet, “and we tasted it. It was sweet. Well, the label said it was 14.8 percent alcohol, so we took it to the lab. “It tested out at nearly 16 percent! And the acid was quite low, and the pH was nearly 4.0,” an indication of a very unbalanced wine. “So they are now making wine that is sweet,” he said with a look of disdain. “And this wine gets scores in the high 90s from people who should know better.” That evening, I decided we needed a wine to go with dinner, so I descended to the cellar and rooted around for one of my last remaining bottles of 1995 Thurston Wolfe Syrah from Washington.
Late that evening we popped into a fine little cafe in San Francisco called Sauce and pulled the cork. The wine was not only astoundingly fine, but structurally similar to what I knew was there when a bought a case a decade earlier. It was perfect with our food. Our server was an eager wine novice, so I poured her a glass — but not before explaining what had happened to most West Coast red wines in the last two decades, which have moved into the sweet end of the scale, abandoning the dinner table. “Wow, that's really dry,” she said. It's made to go with food, I reiterated. “I get it,” she said. I'm not sure she did, but my one-man campaign to encourage really dry red wine took one more step in that direction. Is there a message here? For me it is simply that bigger is rarely better and that smaller can be sublime. A good friend and wine columnist some years ago swore off even trying any wine with 14 percent alcohol or more. I'm fast reaching a similar conclusion. Wine of the Week: 2005 Mossback Cabernet Sauvignon, Chalk Hill ($25) — A very stylish effort with classic herbal/black cherry aroma, and a full, crisp entry that is dry. This Sonoma County wine has only 13.7 percent alcohol and it structured to go nicely with meats now, but will age nicely for another few years. It is clearly not for those people who think red wine should be sweet. Dan Berger resides in Sonoma County, Calif. Berger publishes a weekly newsletter on wine and can be reached at danberger@VintageExperiences.com. To find out more about Dan Berger and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||































