Aug 15 2010

coffee and wine? hell yeah.

Category: Wine tastingwinepost @ 10:23 pm

 

You know it’s going to be a good day when at 10:00 you’ve got bubble in your glass. Don’t judge me - I know you’re jealous.

While we – well, most of us – can’t start every day with a glass of bubble, I was fortunate to do just that at the Okanagan Summer Wine Festival this weekend at Silver Star. It’s the last year this event will be hosted among alpine wonderous goodness. Sad, but don’t fret: next year we’ll see a virtual explosion of events hosted throughout the valley, with Penticton shining as the predominant host city. I’ll be there, glass in hand.

Back to the mid-morning bubble. Over two days, events this year included Wine and Cheese, the decadent Cadbury’s Chocolate and wine tasting (can I hear a big ‘yum’?) and a Progressive Tasting on the Saturday afternoon to cap things off. But what really got my curiosity was something a little different: coffee and wine.

Starbucks introduced a pairing like no other. This is where we got to sip delicious BC bubble at 10am and five other BC wines – all matched with a coffee partner. Initially I was sceptical; hell, I still am. But the enthusiasm of the coffee folks have me looking at the brewed beverage in an entirely different light.

Acidity. Aroma. Floral. Earthy. Spicy. Do you think these are just reserved for wine? Not according to the people at the ‘Bucks. All are descriptors of coffee and are included in a handy little Coffee Passport – given to new partners when they start on the job. And there was no drip coffee-making done here. Oh no. These were brewed french-press style, and spoken about with such love and attention to detail that I could see the road we were headed down a bit clearer than when I signed up for the seminar.

They poured and paired while we swirled, sniffed and drank (slurped, in the case of the coffee). A good time was most definitely had by all – including those who answered skill-testing questions to be rewarded with prizes and hugs. It was that kinda crowd, and that’s alright by me.

Wine/Coffee #1: Summerhill Cipes Brut / Breakfast Blend. I’m a big fan of what Summerhill does with bubble – especially the Cipes Brut. The Breakfast Blend didn’t get the full workout or appreciation as we were in our coffee tasting infancy. All I can say is that it woke me up quite nicely.

Wine/Coffee #2: Mission Hill Reserve Chardonnay 2008 / Italian Roast. Admittedly, I hadn’t tried a chard from Mission Hill yet – there’s just too much damn good stuff around the Okanagan. And this was quite pleasant. Think brunch wine as your nibbling on a bagel and lox. The Italian Roast had that woodsy aroma going for it, complete with memories of maple syrup smokehouses.

Wine/Coffee #3: Tantalus Riesling 2009 / Kenya Blend. Tantalus makes a damn good riesling – initially crisp with bright fruit (think grapefruit on its best day) and a wee bit of oily-goodness, yet it can hang out in the bottle to develop into the kerosene/petrol beauty that I know lurks beneath the surface. Yum. The Kenya Blend is often used for iced coffees – it’s got that citrus thing going for it which I couldn’t discern but am willing to go back for another try. Or two.

Wine/Coffee #4: Ex Nihilo Night 2006 / Pike Place Roast. This was my introduction to an Ex Nihilo red, and I’m still not sure what to think. Night is a blend of equal parts cab sauv, merlot and cab franc – and supposed to be a Bordeaux-style. Whatever the reason, it wasn’t working for me. I tasted stuff at the start (fruit) and the end (tannin), but nothing in the middle. The Pike Place Roast, however, made me swear off putting anything in my coffee ever again. And if you’ve ever seen me doctor up a coffee, you’ll know just what a big deal that is.

Wine/Coffee #5: RollingdaleIverson Merlot 2008 / Organic Yukon Blend. The grapes for this merlot come from Rollingdale’s growing partners along the Golden Mile (Oliver area), and they only make 200 cases of the stuff. Hot damn, them’s good grapes. There’s a whole lotta stuff going on when you take a sip of this merlot, and it’s all in happy unison. As for the Organic Yukon Blend…think dark, bitter chocolate. Yep.

Wine/Coffee #6: Quail’s GateFortified Foch 2007 / Komodo Dragon Blend. Bring me a fortified wine, and I’m in a happy place. There’s a wee ‘but’ in here, as I haven’t been a foch fan in the past – except for their Old Vines Foch, which is gorgeous. Sweetness hides a high (but typical) alcohol content in this fortified, yet the foch varietal does something my taste buds don’t like. My fella liked it just fine. Instead, I concentrated on the Komodo Dragon. In the world of wine, there are big wines….and this is a helluva big coffee. Also my favourite of the morning, as it turns out. Yeah, that surprised me too.

Just when you think you’ve been there, done that with wine tasting, change things up a little. I’d never think to put these things together – and I’m sure there are people out there who may think these aren’t natural partners. They might not be. But the folks behind this event sure did their homework because I can honestly say it was an absolute blast – and something I’d do again in a heartbeat.

Go ahead – un*wine*d with a glass of bubble before noon…then chase it with a lively, vibrant coffee. Whatever you do, have fun. That’s what this is all about.

Cheers!

Jeannette

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,


Aug 06 2010

read this, drink that: CanLit & BC wine

Category: Wine tastingwinepost @ 12:51 am

 

Yes, I’m about to inundate you with wine-and-reading selections. But I’m not very traditional; you should know that by now, dear reader. So what does that mean when it comes to a reading and wine-ing list presented by yours truly? Allow me to explain.

I’m dragging out the hasn’t-been-published-in-ages books; ones you need to hunt down in your local used book store treasure trove or thrift store. And I’m choosing some newer releases – those published in the last ten years. Maybe there will be something in here that you’ve never heard of.

Good reads should challenge us and our expectations – kind of like good wine does. Both are sensory and seductive, and both can take you a world away.

Enjoy.

Read: Robertson Davies, Leaven of Malice. This guy shoves us into a world of academics, tenure and compound sentences. His characters drink wine. I like that. This is one dude who doesn’t lead you around by the nose: he’s got witty, layered characters that keep surprising you, and he has an expectation you’ve a decent head on your shoulders. 

Drink: This says bubble all over it. Try Blue Mountain, Sumac Ridge’s Stellar’s Jay (after sleeping for a couple of years, it’s one mighty good bottle) or Gray Monk Odyssey White Brut. Not a bubble fan? Shame. But you can play along – with a bottle of Twisted Tree Syrah, or a Pinot Noir from Meyer Family Vineyards.

Read: Margaret Atwood, The Edible Woman. Ahead of her time in so many ways. This is foodie Can-lit for foodies before there were foodies. Of course, there’s a glass or two of wine in here. I read this only recently, having put it off in a covet kind of way. I’m glad I did.

Drink: Margaret says unusual yet beautiful structure, and so must the wine. Think Mount Boucherie Ehrenfelser,  Inniskillin Dark Horse Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon, Lake Breeze Pinot Blanc or Road 13 Vineyards Jackpot Pinot Noir.

Read: Douglas Coupland, J Pod. I love him; he’s magnificent at loading a sentence with so much stuff. Plus, I want to meet Ethan’s mom. Think easy street meets the wrong side of the tracks, in a very Rice-Krispie-square kind of way.

Drink: More than meets the eye, this one. Makes me want Rollingdale’s Cabernet Sauvignon “La Gauche”, Township 7’s Chardonnay (not the reserve, but not the un-oaked for this one), Cedar Creek’s Platinum Reserve Chardonnay or Tinhorn Creek’s Oldfield Series Merlot – because there’s more going on than you would expect.

Read: Mordecai Richler, Barney’s Version. The guy writes a good story, hands down. These are characters that I not only want to drink with, but also want to go to Europe with. That’s good character development.

Drink: I recall the protagonist as a scotch drinker, but also one who enjoyed a bottle of wine. That being said – try something from Osoyoos Larose, or maybe Laughing Stock’s Portfolio. Perhaps followed by a nice fortified, like Sumac Ridge Pipe or Granite Creek Merlot.

Read: Zoe Whittall, Bottle Rocket Hearts. Maybe it’s because I met her brother in the parking lot of an Okanagan winery (true story), or maybe it’s because I had a summer of unemployed drunken fun in Montreal in the early 90’s (slightly hazy true story). It could be both, but also because this is one brilliant author. Storytelling stream-of-consciousness. I miss Eve.

Drink: Memories of misspent youth, character-building events that at the time are rip-your-heart-out experiences you don’t think you’ll ever recover from and the unmistakable sweetness of firsts. Try La Frenz Cabernet Sauvignon, Orofino Pinot Noir, Cassini Cellars Reserve Chardonnay or Desert Hills Gamay. 

The point is this: wine, like literature, is highly dependent on situation. I truly believe that. Reading the same book at different points in your life will bring out different qualities of that book – just like drinking wine with different people, or in different situations, will show you something new.

Mix it up. Experiment. Un*wine*d a little. Now excuse me while I go back to Timothy Findley’s Spadework and my glass of…well, I’m not going to tell you all my secrets – read it and tell me what you’d drink with it.

Cheers!

Jeannette

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Jul 06 2010

like this? try that!

Category: Wine tastingwinepost @ 4:15 am

 

So… I recently went to a wine  conference, and got really drunk, um, well I drank a lot of wine, er… okay, I tasted a bunch of great wine. And it was easy, because there were dozens of wineries pouring their wares. I didn’t have to choose anything other than move from this bottle, to that bottle, then spit cup.

The whole experience got me thinking about travelling and buying wine. Us wine lovers have our local – and sometimes international – favourites. The tried and true. But what happens to all the wine you don’t know a damn thing about? Other than finding a local wine bar / boutique / wine-o-phile to interrogate, how are we supposed to make a relatively informed wine decision when travelling?

Simple: it’s time for a game of ‘like this? try that’, courtesy yours truly. Please don’t let my hours of wine drinking go to waste. 

The glorious Okanagan is a hop, skip and jump-through-the-border-hoops away from our US neighbours. We welcome visitors of all kinds; especially those who can haul away cases of our delicious wines in their cars / SUVs / trucks / motorhomes.  Got a favourite Washington wine? Something in California make you say naughty words? Chances are we’ve got a BC wine for you. After all, we’ve shared our soil for eons and eons. Literally.

Play along at home or take a really, really long road trip.

The Like This? Try That! wine game

Like: Parduci 2008 Sustainable White 

Light and crisp, this organic and sustainable vineyard puts out a fabulous white blend. It’s a right-after-mowing-the-lawn-on-a-hot-summer-day wine. Try: Tinhorn Creek Pinot Gris or Rollingdale Pinot Blanc.

Like: Pithy Little Wine Co. 2009 Sangiovese Rosé

My first experience with sangiovese, and a rosĂ© to boot. Hot damn. This little beauty has a surprise for you – just when you think it’s done, out comes a hint of roses. It’s a playing-hookey-from-work-on-a-sunny-day wine. Try: Le Vieux Pin Viala or Twisted Tree Marsanne Rousanne.

Like: Ortman Family Wines 2007 Chardonnay

Taste explosion of honey-nut-butter-caramel. This is dinner-party-when-you-don’t-know-who’s-going-to-be-there-but-you-want-to-make-a-good-impression wine. Try: Cassini Cellars Reserve Chardonnay or Wild Goose God’s Mountain Riesling.

Like: Long Shadows 2009 Poet’s Leap Riesling

A tarty little thing, and pleasantly so. Poet’s Leap is learning-to-whistle-by-blowing-over-a-blade-of-grass-pinned-between-your-thumbs kind of wine. Inhale. Try: Orofino Riesling or Little Straw Tapestry.

Like: Buty 2008 Semillion/Sauvignon Blanc/Muscadelle

The only way to describe this wine is as a gift that keeps on giving. And giving. Wait…it’s not done yet. Know what I mean? Try: Painted Rock Chardonnay or Orofino Malbec for a similar gift-giving experience.

Like: DeLille Cellars 2008 Chaleur Estate Blanc

Complex is an understatement. Nutmeg, almond and caramel tangled with smokey cigar – all wrapped up in fruit salad. Yeah, it’s like that. This is getting-into-your-parents-good-wine-stash wine. It’s exactly where you know you’re supposed to be. Try: La Frenz Tempranillo or Fairview Cellars Sauvignon Blanc.

To all the wines I loved over three days – and three very late nights – in Walla Walla, Washington, I’d like to say a hearty thank you. And to all the wines I don’t have room to drool over here, my deepest apologies – but know that you will forever remain in my heart, nestled beside some great wine memories.

Summer is about exploring new places – even if it’s only through the taste that a great glass of wine places you in. Because you know I’m not about “complex acidity” or “hints of gooseberry leaf on the nose”. I’ll leave that to the wine professionals. No; I’m about where-does-this-wine-take-you, and what-do-you-want-to-be-doing-when-you-drink-it. (descriptions totally PG13, of course)

Regardless your method of travel this summer, be sure to un*wine*d with a glass of somewhere great.

Cheers!

Jeannette

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,