October 31, 2012

Wine For Normal People Radio: Episode 61 -- Halloween Candy and Wine Pairings

This week we bring you a fun episode. It's super US centric (sorry to our international listeners) but hopefully we did a good enough job of describing thing so that you get the gist!

In this short episode, we explore the world of left over Halloween candy and which wines will be ideal matches for what may be laying around after the costumes are hung up and the trick-or-treaters are gone (or in bed and you can raid their stash!). *


*Keep in mind, we did not talk about pairings with dark chocolate or bittersweet chocolate. Why? 'Cause that's not what you get in a bag of candy for trick-or-treat! This is all about realistic scenarios.

How was this "scientific experiment" conducted?

Step 1: We got candies: The fruity kind, like gummies, Skittles, and Starburst and the chocolate kind -- everything from Kit Kat, Hershey's, and Mounds to Reeses P-nut Butter Cups and Snickers.

Step 2: We got wine, some based on recommendations that we researched in articles on the subject of Halloween candy pairing:
  • Oaked Chardonnay
  • Champagne
  • Moscato d'Asti (from Italy, light, fruity, sweet, and gently sprakling)
  • Muscat (from Australia, same grape as Moscato but dark, sweet, and rich in flavor)
  • Late Bottled Vintage Port (richer, fuller, sweeter)
  • 10 - Year Tawny Port (nuttier, less sweet)
  • A Grenache/Syrah/Mourvedre blend from Australia (for it's fruitiness, and high alcohol, which people often think seems sweet when it's on it's own or with savory food!)

We had some surprisingly good and astoundingly bad results. This is a MUST listen if you've got candy hanging around. Here's the LINK.


And don't forget to guess what my pumpkin is supposed to be (mine is on the left)! Drop a note here, on Facebook, on Twitter to let us know! 


_______________________________________________________________________
If you like the podcast, please pass it on to your friends, review it on iTunes, drop a comment below, or join the awesome conversation on Facebook (Wine For Normal People page) and Twitter @normalwine!

And if you've got a question you want us to answer, post it on any of those places and we'll include it on the show!

Thanks for listening! We can't wait to hear from you!

October 26, 2012

A Treat from Basque Country: Txakolina

Post Highlights:

1. How to pronounce this lovely white grape
2. Some background on the grape and why the name brings to mind a weird junior high memory for me
3. Info on the Basque country where the wine is made
4. Three funny things about Txakoli
5. A review of Ameztoi, the biggest exporter of this salty, delicious vino

___________________________________

I'm a sucker for a challenge: A wine that I have no idea how to pronounce definitely counts. 

So when my friend who works at a wine store pulled out one I'd had several years ago and loved, Txakolina (clearly pronounced chock-oh-LEE-nah, I mean that's what I would have called it right away...um, or not), also called Txakoli (CHOCK-oh-lee), I was on board all the way. In a tall, green bottle that looks an awful lot like Vinho Verde from Portugal, the wine actually has some stuff in common with the light, slightly fizzy juice from its far western neighbor.

But rather than a combination of Portuguese grapes Loureiro, Trajadura, and Alvarinho (known as Albariño across the border), this wine is made mostly from a local white grape called Hondarrabi Zuri (not to be confused with Hammurabi, the Babylonian king whose code included the "eye for an eye" concept. As a total tangent, I will never forget the dude or his code since my sixth grade teacher, Mrs. Diamond, accused me of plagiarizing a paper on the topic. Didn't she know that it was just that my dad wrote most of the paper in his efforts to teach me how to write by example? That's what he explained when he defended me against her accusations. Ah, the memories.)

The grapes are grown in the autonomous Basque Country, an area in northeast Spain, where people with a separate ethnicity, language, and history from the Spanish live. 

Here in the Cantabria Mountains, on steep slopes with breezes from the Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic Ocean, this local white grape grows. The area has a lot of humidity, rain, and is susceptible to frost and cold, so the Hondarrabi grows on southeast facing slopes high up on trellises to maximize sunlight and minimize wetness, which could cause rot. 

There are a few funny things about this wine:


1. Essentially no one drinks Txakolina except the people in Basque Country and people in the US!  Until the 1980s it was a local wine, mostly homemade, and served with snacks or alone as an aperitif (to drink before dinner and stimulate appetite). Then US sommeliers got their hands on it and now hundreds of thousands of cases roll in and are slurped stateside in the summer. 

From: http://www.demaisonselections.com/

2. No one knows why the wine is called Txakolina. There are theories, but it's unclear why it's not called Hondarrabi or something else.


From: http://www.demaisonselections.com/

3. The wine used to be nearly all red and made mostly from the Hondarrabi Beltza grape. But like the rest of the vineyards in Europe, this grape nearly died out with phylloxera, that killer bug that Americans exported to France on an ocean liner, which destroyed most of the vineyards in Europe before being stopped. When the Basque government encouraged a replanting initiative they focused on incentives for white grapes to avoid competition with Rioja.*

There are few other regions that make Txakolina but if you're shopping for this little gem, you're most likely going to see a Txakolina Getariako, with the second name indicating the area from which the wine hails. The largest producer is the one I'm reviewing below...so let's get to it.

The Wine: 2011 Ameztoi Getariako Txakolina

Price: $15


Alcohol: 10.5%

Grape: 100% Hondarrabi Zuri

Where it's from: Gipuzkoa, Spain

Color: Almost clear and spritzy with small bubbles because they ferment the wine under really cold temperatures and wind up with a blanket of carbon dioxide over it that makes it fizzy. 



Smell: Fresh, like flowers, unripe peaches, and light apple. It smelled like a waterfall and then had a spicy warm rock smell to it too (if you've been hiking, imagine sitting on a rock face in the sun -- that spicy rock smell is what this was like).

Taste: Like sucking on a salted lemon. It was very tart with high acid and it tasted like lemon salt water. The wine was spritzy and reminded me of a more tart version of Vinho Verde.

Drink or sink?: Drink. I really liked how fresh the wine tasted and the saltiness would have gone perfectly with fish or salty nuts like cashews or Marcona almonds. I completely respect that the Basques have it with every meal -- from fish to heavy meat to vegetables -- but for me it's not a wine for everyday. That said, for fish or seafood, I'll choose it any day. It's a great alternative to Albariño, a light style Verdejo, and Vinho Verde. Definitely worth the difficulty to pronounce it and one to put on your list for next summer.

And as a last fabulous fact about this wine, it's imported by De Maison Selections, located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina -- home of my and M.C. Ice's MBA alma mater! Go 'Heels!

October 25, 2012

Wine For Normal People Radio: Episode 60, Bordeaux Part 2

I feel like I'm writing a script for Masterpiece Theater (a Public Broadcasting show in the US with high quality yet very dorky programming usually based on literature)... 


"And in this installment, we find our hero, Bordeaux, only half explained. A general overview was given last week, but we were left hanging. Only understanding very basic things about the region..."


Ok, enough of that. Last week gave a very general overview but this week, we get TO IT! We go into good detail about what you need to know at a fundamental level to understand Bordeaux and the things that make is so unique.

I'm not doing show notes this week because I think it's important to supplement your listening with reading the Bordeaux primers, which go over similar information. Seeing it written will burn it into your brain and you'll be on your way to being a Bordeaux dork!

So here are links to the Bordeaux 101 and 102... 

__________________________________________________________________________

If you like the podcast, please pass it on to your friends, review it on iTunes, drop a comment below, or join the awesome conversation on Facebook (Wine For Normal People page) and Twitter @normalwine!

And if you've got a question you want us to answer, post it on any of those places and we'll include it on the show!

Thanks for listening! We can't wait to hear from you!

Podcast music: "Café connection" by morgantj / CC BY 3.0, ©2009 - Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) Map: Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported2.5 Generic2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license

October 19, 2012

Wine For Normal People Radio: Episode 059 Bordeaux Part 1

After catching up on shoutouts, talking about my debut on national TV (see this clip from The Weather Channel!), and doing our regular banter, this week we get started on the huge topic of Bordeaux. 

Here's a link to the podcast: LINK

We just scratch the surface of why Bordeaux is such a big deal, talking about:

  • Stats that will explain why the area is so significant in the wine world
  • The history of Bordeaux and how it became so important in wine
  • The basics on geography -- the differences between the left and right banks
  • A near end to Bordeaux: phylloxera and a dorky discussion of clones, grafting, and grape species 

This is just the beginning. Next week we continue on Bordeaux, discussing the four most important things you need to know to get up to speed. 




If you like the podcast, please pass it on to your friends, review it on iTunes, drop a comment below, or join the awesome conversation on Facebook (Wine For Normal People page) and Twitter @normalwine!

And if you've got a question you want us to answer, post it on any of those places and we'll include it on the show!

Thanks for listening! We can't wait to hear from you!

Podcast music: "Café connection" by morgantj / CC BY 3.0, ©2009 - Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) Map: Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported2.5 Generic2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license

October 11, 2012

Wine For Normal People On The Weather Channel Talking About Vintage!!!



If you want to know a little more about the 2012 vintage and you want to see a "normal" explanation of what vintage even IS, check out my latest video! I was featured on The Weather Channel discussing the topic and how it relates to weather!!

Thanks to Judson Jones, the amazing producer, for contacting me and putting me on!

Peju Cabernets: Outstanding Wines That Grow Better With A Little Time

Post Summary
  1. Why did it take me so long to review these wines? (AKA, you gotta know when to hold 'em)
  2. A Cool Story of the American Dream...Hopping Continents, Blind Dating, and Moving to Napa: The Pejus
  3. How the Pejus Changed Marketing In Napa for the Better
  4. The (awesome) wines



I'm sure by now Herta Peju, owner and founder of Peju Winery, thinks she wasted some fine wine by sending six bottles to me over a year ago. I know I'll prove her wrong in this post, but I do owe her an explanation and by way of it I think it will do some good for the rest of us! Let me tell you the story...

________________________________________________

Why did it take so darn long to review the wines...?

You can imagine my utter shock and delight when the owner of one of Napa's revered boutique wineries, a standout among a lot of the overly commercial and over-rated, in many cases, wineries on Napa's main road -- Route 29 -- sent me an email and said she'd be sending me some wines because someone had mentioned the blog to her! Very cool!

I'd been to Peju before. The property is beautiful and the wine-filled truffles insanely delicious. But the only thing I could really recall wine-wise was the Rosé, which I remember thinking was very tasty. I didn't have a sense for the Cab, which was what they sent, and honestly was concerned that I didn't remember it. My memory for a great wine is pretty long!

Then, I realized why I didn't recall the Cabernet.  I uncorked the first batch shortly after Mrs. Peju sent them. And they weren't that great. They were tannic, not-so-fruity, and just meh. They weren't at all what I expected. But I felt like they had some potential. So rathering than writing, I decided to withhold judgement and sit on the wines for a while. Peju very wisely sent me two bottles of the three Cabernets that I'll talk about below so I had the luxury of time.

The Kenny Rogers "Know When to Hold 'Em" strategy worked beautifully. With more time to compose, these wines were amazing. As I suspected, they were stressed out. They just needed some time to relax in the bottle and come together. Whatever happened in the year in my wine fridge, it was something good. 

Unlike a lot of Napa wines, which are best within about 5 - 7 years, these need an extra year before they really shine. It's worth the wait. Peju's Cabernets are special and after getting up to speed on their story, it's clear why...

________________________________________________

Hopping Continents, Blind Dating, and Moving to Napa: The Pejus

Peju has been around since 1982 and was established by Anthony and Herta Peju. Their story is pretty cool.

Anthony, originally from Eastern Europe/Central Asia (near the Caspian Sea), went to LA to become a film director, but like everyone else in LA trying to make it big, he wound up doing a bunch of other jobs. 

After meeting Herta, an Austrian who grew up in Venezuela, on a blind date, the course of his life changed. Like any good woman in a kind of scattered yet smart man's life, Herta got her beau to focus on his passion for plants and flowers. Anthony become a florist and flower grower. His interest in and skill with growing stuff, and frustration in finding good land outside LA for a flower farm landed him and Herta in Napa.

After a few years of looking for a rural property, the Pejus hit the jackpot with a 30 acre block in the Rutherford district on Napa 29, complete with a 19th century farmhouse and acres of Cabernet Sauvignon, which were being sold to prestigious, neighboring wineries. The Pejus had room to farm here and given Anthony's interest in agriculture and what seems like an unquenchable thirst for knowledge, he decided to go to UC Davis to learn how to make wine.

It didn't take the guy too long to figure out that the vines he had purchased were something unique. There was a 5.5 acre block with old Cabernet that made wine unlike anyone else's in the Valley. The vines were old (they don't know just how old), the flavor bold, and when the murderous serial killer bug, phylloxera, affected the vineyards and forced Peju to replant with new, bug-resistant roots, he decided to graft all his Cabernet vineyards with cuttings from these grapes. Peju, to this day, uses a clone of Cabernet Sauvignon that few if anyone in Napa Valley has.


________________________________________________


The Pejus Shingle: Marketing That Changed Napa

The Pejus made wine and sold it out of a converted garage on their property (you can still find places like this in Sonoma and Paso Robles in the Central Coast of CA and sort of in Napa). People went nuts for their wines.

And another thing happened. In selling this hardly under-the-radar wine (it was pretty popular) direct, it ticked some people off. Peju's makeshift "wine tasting" sign outside the garage wasn't enough, so argued Napa County. They needed a real winery to sell wine. 

After a bunch of legal challenges, the Pejus won and changed the landscape in Napa -- if you grew grapes, you could sell wine, even without a tasting room. Chalk one up for the little guy. Good for them and good for all of us who want to find those smaller producers who may still be out there in Napa.

Peju is still a family run operation -- daughters Lisa and Ariana are heavily involved in the business. The building is beautiful (with amazing gardens, as you can imagine) and the vibe more friendly than haughty, a refreshing thing on the main drag of Napa.

________________________________________________

An Apology and the Wines

So it's with apologies to the Pejus that this took so long, but with great gratitude to them for sending two bottles of each wine so I could give them their proper due:


Wine #1: 2008 Peju Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon

Price: $45

Alcohol: 14.5%

Grapes: 80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 15% Merlot, 5% Petit Verdot (remember in the US, only 75% of what's in the bottle has to be the grape that they name the wine after)

Where it's From: Napa Valley, California

Color: A rich, dark cherry or maroon color, this looked like it came from VERY ripe grapes that had lots and lots of pigment in the skins. The gloppy, thick legs were a dead giveaway of the higher alcohol content.

Smell: Black currant, dark cherry, black plum, and like a cake at Christmas -- allspice, nutmeg, and fruit combined to give it a sweet tang. This wine is aged in 40% new oak, which is very pungent, and 55% of the oak is American, also very strong-smelling, so the pine and cedar smells I sensed were easily explained.

Taste: Completely true to the color and smell, this wine was like ripe black cherries, plums, and black currants. It had a dried fruit note to it -- like prunes or dates and definite cola/Dr. Pepper taste that was pleasing (I don't like this in Pinot Noir but in Cabernet, I'm ok with it). The tannins were kind of chewy -- they stuck around my mouth -- and even though the alcohol is high, it was balanced by the fruit, so the wine didn't feel hot/burning.

Drink or sink?: Drink. This is a great medium-style Napa Cabernet. It had terrific balance of plummy flavors with oaky, spicy ones, and the tannins, acid, and alcohol all played off each other well. A great one for sipping or pairing with mushrooms or meat.



Wine #2: 2004 Peju Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Estate Bottled

Price: $40

Alcohol: 15.6% (holy snap! This is HIGH, high, high!)

Grapes: 96% Cabernet Sauvignon, 3% Cabernet Franc, 1% Merlot

Where it's From: Napa Valley, California. This one mostly comes from the Peju's Persephone vineyard(named for the Greek Goddess who is responsible for summer and winter) in northeast Napa. 

Color: A crimson color with brown around the edges and (no surprise) thick, gloppy legs from the high alcohol.

Smell: To quote my notes "Damn, that's good!" This one smelled like Christmas time also-- pine, cinnamon, nutmeg, orange peel, and vanilla. It was so savory! I got a little bit of pencil smell (from the oak. 30% of the barrels were new but the oak was French so its influence is much more subtle) hiding behind the plummy, fruitiness too.

Taste: Black currant, and the flavor of the chocolate orange thing that is sold at Christmas (I just can't get off the darn holiday, can I?). That chocolate-orange note really set this wine apart for me. There was a warm spiciness that made me want to drink it in front of a big stone fireplace on a cold night. The tannins were great, the acidity helped lighten the heaviness of the dark fruit, and the flavors were superb.

My only criticism: although it was completely dry, it gave a strong impression of sweetness because of the high alcohol. I wish it was a little lower in alcohol.

Drink or sink?: Definitely drink. For $40 this is one of the best Cabernets I've had in a long time. You normally have to pay a lot more for a wine to get this kind of quality. It's complex, rich, powerful, but still has some subtlety and is very nicely balanced. An amazing value for the money.



Wine #3: 2005 Peju Napa Valley Estate Bottled Cabernet Sauvignon, Reserve

Price: $105

Alcohol: 15.3% (Again, really high)

Grapes: 89% Cabernet Sauvignon, 6% Merlot, 4% Petit Verdot, 1% Cabernet Franc (more like a Bordeaux blend).

Where it's From: The Rutherford District of Napa Valley, California. Peju farms some of its vineyards organically and this wine is from their Rutherford Vineyard, which is certified organic. (link is to a post on organic wines if you want clarification on what that means!).

Color: Like a dried red rose -- a little ruby with brown around the rim of the wine.

Smell: Oooo this was great. Blackberry, violets, spearmint, coffee, and chocolate... all the great things a California Cab has to offer.

Taste: So much going on. Softer fruit -- ripe plums and dark cherries but not a flavor that hits you in the face. Coffee, earth (wines from the Rutherford district are always a little earthy), and a little bit of mint were balanced by medium tannins, and again -- the wine has high alcohol but you barely notice because of all the other fruit and textures.

Drink or sink?: DRINK!! This is a wonderful special occasion wine. It's soft, elegant and full of bright fruit but low, earthy smells and flavors too. I think this one was really amazing, and a standout -- it's not like everyone else's high tier wine. This is something special. 

I shared it with a friend who immediately ordered a few bottles to keep on hand for a special occasion -- it's the kind of wine that inspires you to do that (if you've got the cash : ).

Thanks again to Peju for the wines. If you've tried them, let me know what you think by dropping a comment below or on Facebook or Twitter!

October 4, 2012

Wine For Normal People Video: Wine Worlds: The Old World vs New World

New Video on Old World v. New World Wines -- the geographical and philosophical split and the important differences between them!

Enjoy it and check out the other videos on the Wine For Normal People YouTube Channel!

Click here to access it or download it below!



October 2, 2012

Wine For Normal People Radio: Episode 058 Benchmark Wines of the New World

And this week we complete the duo with the list of benchmark wines from the New World. 

Click here to download: LINK

After shout outs and a great listener question from Jason L. on Facebook about how to live as an ABC  (that's Anything But Chardonnay) guy? We discuss the alternatives to oaky Chardonnay that still have the umph with food.

True to the naming structure, and following M.C. Ice's smart advice, we've organized this one by grape...Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Riesling, Pinot Noir, Shiraz, and Cabernet Sauvignon are covered with a few more thrown in. 

Now that you know them, why should you listen? Because we talk through each and why they're benchmarks... important stuff to know!



Thanks again to Paula Kidwell for the podcast idea.



If you like the podcast, please pass it on to your friends, review it on iTunes, drop a comment below, or join the awesome conversation on Facebook (Wine For Normal People page) and Twitter @normalwine!

And if you've got a question you want us to answer, post it on any of those places and we'll include it on the show!

Thanks for listening! We can't wait to hear from you!

Podcast music: "Café connection" by morgantj / CC BY 3.0, ©2009 - Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) Map: Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported2.5 Generic2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license