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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Celebrate Syrah: International Syrah Day Is February 16

Bookmark and Share  Let’s spend a day tasting and talking about Syrah! Why? Syrah ROCKS.
A photo of a class of California Syrah along w...Image via Wikipedia

Hospice du Rhône is California-based organization of growers of Rhone grapes (including  Syrah, Grenache and Mourvedre a famous GSM combination). They are promoting Wednesday, February 16, as a celebration of the world of Syrah for 24 hours! Yes, 24 hours because they are serious about Syrah.

You too can become serious about Syrah by picking up a bottle (or two) of Syrah from your wine shop. Or dig into that cellar of yours or even order Syrah from one of your favorite Rhône producers. Then on Wednesday, February 16th share these wines with friends at a home soirée, at a local restaurant or join online for one big, amazing Syrah tasting!

Syrah is the most commonly recognizable Rhône variety and is grown in just about every wine region throughout the world. Due to its popularity, you can find a bottle of Syrah from France, Australia, Spain, Washington State, California, Oregon, Arizona and beyond at your local wine shop or grocer. By picking up a bottle from a few of these regions you will have the opportunity to taste the unique terroir each of these regions possess. When it comes to food, Syrah is your wine. This admired Rhône variety is extremely food friendly and will pair nicely with anything from lamb kabobs to pepperoni pizza.

What to do: On the day of the event, Tweet, Facebook and blog your thoughts, tasting notes on #Syrah. Ask questions and share facts. Even post a photo to your favorite Social Media site. If Social Media is not your bag, plan an evening in or out with friends that is all about Syrah! The goal of this day is to open a bottle of Syrah and enjoy with friends and family.

The group is encouraging wineries and restaurants to feature Syrah during the event. They even suggested a Syrah happy hour at the office!

If you are tweeting, use the following hashtags: #Syrah or #SyrahDay.

We’ll plan on sampling a nice Syrah and sharing our tasting notes.

Here are some tidbits of Syrah to dazzle your friends:

• Syrah (C-rah)

• Syrah also known as Shiraz (She-raz)

• A highly colored grape with firm structure

• Syrah commonly possesses notes of plum, raspberry, blueberry, blackcurrant, violet, roasted meats, smoke, chocolate, pepper and anise

• Syrah is the prominent grape of Northern Rhône in which the variety originates from

• A heat-loving vine that has adapted well to California’s Central Coast and Eastern Washington State

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Friday, February 11, 2011

J. Trees Cellars Wines Shine At TREO Wine Dinner

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Winemaker Jon Treloar and TREO
owner/chef Mike Fletcher
Sometimes our neighbors in Michigan don’t get the best reception when they cross over the border into Ohio – especially during football season. That was certainly not the case earlier this week as winemaker Jon Treloar of J. Trees Cellars received a warm welcome during a special wine dinner at TREO Restaurant and Bar, 5703 Main St., Sylvania (419) 882-2266.

Three JTC wines were paired with a trio of amazing dishes created by TREO chef and owner Mike Fletcher.

The three featured wines were the 2008 Dry Riesling, 2008 Chardonnay and the ‘08 Fuji Ice Cider. After a long, cold and draining day, it was a pleasure to sit down to a relaxing meal in a beautiful restaurant surrounded by new friends.


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A symphony for the mouth: Farm & Forest
 The focus of JTC is white wine and Michigan is beginning to make its mark on the national scene as a source of quality Riesling.The JTC vineyards are relatively young, and so Jon gets his Riesling grapes from the Old Mission Peninsula area of Michigan, a top wine producing region. We are fans of the JTC Dry Riesling and the wine tonight was paired with a sensational opening dish.

The Farm & Forest course was breaded flash fried Portabella mushrooms served on a bed of lettuce topped with a soft poached egg, grilled asparagus and Hollandaise sauce.

The Dry Riesling was crisp with the accent on fruit and citrus. The pairing was spot on with Chef Fletcher’s specially created dish working wonderfully with the Riesling. All three dishes were specially created for the dinner and aren’t on the regular TREO menu. You will find the three JTC wines on the TREO wine list which some at the dinner consider the best in the Toledo area.

The second course was Salmon Trocadero paired with the 2008 Chardonnay. The dish features a lightly breaded salmon fillet stuffed with Blue Fin crab, baked until golden topped with bacon-wrapped scallops and drizzled with brandy cream served with jasmine rice and vegetables. Are you hungry yet? Green Dragon is allergic to scallops, and so a special dish without the scallops was prepared. I must say, the scallops rocked!

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Salmon Trocadero with bacon-wrapped scallops

The Chard is lower in alcohol and less oaky than most California Chardonnays. Jon said he does like oak (unlike the Green Dragon) especially when done with a delicate hand. This wine had a citrus and vanilla flavor profile. The oaking is done judiciously, with no new barrels used. This is a food friendly wine.

The final wine was perhaps the most unique and, in fact, is currently labeled as an ice cider and not an icewine. The JTC Fuji Ice Cider is a rare treat. It is incredible difficult to make icewine. It can only be done when the grapes are frozen. To make the ice cider is even more dfficult because much colder temperatures are required to freeze an apple. The temperature was below zero when the apples were harvested and pressed.

The apples for the cider came from the Iott Orchard and Katrina Iott was there to join the festivities. She grows some great apples and Jon Treloar knows what to do with them.It takes 90 apples to make a half bottle of Fuji Ice Cider.

Chef Fletcher prepared a Twice-Baked Apple as the dessert. A whole baked apple is stuffed with three cheeses and served with a brown sugar glaze. Jon said that people often make the mistake of serving a very sweet accompaniment with dessert wine. He said it is often better to go with sharp cheese or “something stinky” to contrast with the sweet wine.


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Twice-Baked Apple dessert paired with Fuji Ice Cider
 The combination of apple dessert and the Fuji Ice Cider was simply awesome. The bite of the cheese softened the sweetness of the wine and the glaze was just, well, really tasty. It should be noted that we’re not big fans of sweet wines in general – but this is a real treat and highly recommended.

Interestingly, Jon mentioned that he had difficulties entering the Fuji Ice Cider into wine competitions because it was labeled “cider.” Future bottlings will be called Fuji Apple Icewine or something similar.

This year there was no apple harvest for the ice cider because of an early frost. Luckily juice from the previous harvest remains in the tank and so there won’t be a shortage of this great wine anytime soon.

Big plans are afoot for J. Trees Cellars. The wines will soon be widely available in the Toledo area. They are currently available at Joseph’s Beverage Center and scheduled to be available as soon as this weekend at Walt Churchill’s Market locations in Perrysburg and Maumee. Andersons will soon offer JTC as well.



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Private room at TREO provided intimate atmosphere
for the wine dinner
  The tasting room for J. Trees Cellars is located in Blissfield with the winery in Petersburg, Michigan. Expansion is planned at the Petersburg location to accommodate special events. Jon also plans to direct his focus on sparkling wines and adding some hard ciders.

Great wine, a cozy restaurant and superb food. That’s a great trio anyway you spell it!

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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Valentine Wines To Love: Wild Rock Cupid’s Arrow Central Otago Pinot Noir 2008 and St. Francis 2007 Red Splash

A unique New Zealand Pinot and
tasty California blend
Looking for some nice wine choices to serve your cutie on Valentine's Day? Here are a couple of bottles to consider: Wild Rock Cupid's Arrow Pinot Noir and St. Francis' Red Splash, a tasty red blend from Sonoma.

We popped the cork on Red Splash at a chilly party at a friend's house. We had a nice assortment of finger food including crab and salmon dips, veggies, hummus and more. We were playing Kinect, which involved a lot of hand waving, jumping around and competing against cartoon characters on the screen. It's a good way to work up a thirst.

The Red Spash is a blend of 40% Cabernet Sauvignon, 25% Merlot, 18% Syrah, 8% Cabernet Franc, 5% Zinfandel, and a small dash of Petite Sirah, Petite Verdot and Malbec. It opens up with a touch of spice, followed by round raspberries and then has a nice smooth finish. The wine is aged 24 months in French and American oak and is well balanced. This is an easy drinking blend that is a great value at about $10. The blend changes each year.

Try Red Splash with lasagna, sausage and peppers, pepperoni pizza, cheeseburger, grilled pork and grilled salmon.

Cupid’s Arrow is medium purplish red in color. The aroma was strong with berries and herbs. This was an interesting wine to decipher. Tart cherry flavor notes were polished with carmel accents. It has softness and a light to medium body. The wine is aged in French oak with 30% new barrels. This is a wine best enjoyed with food, particularly with strong meat dishes such as game or lamb.

Of the two, the Red Splash stands out as a great choice for a Valentine's Day wine. Cupid's Arrow was a near miss. It's worth picking up for something different (how many New Zealand Pinot Noirs have you had?) but we suggest that it accompany your meal. The cost is about $20.

Full disclosure: We received these bottles as samples.
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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Wine Tastings & Events: February 9-12, 2011

Bonny Doon Vineyard
Image of Bonny Doon Vineyard via Snooth
Wednesday, February 9
The Andersons, Sylvania, Wine Tasting. 6-8 PM. More Closeouts: 1.Davis Bynum Chardonnay, 2. Canoe Ridge Merlot, 3. Estancia Shiraz, 4. Fools Bay “Dusty’s Desire” Shiraz. Nominal fee per sample or $7 flight.
 
Beer and Wine Cave, 4400 Heatherdowns, (419) 382-6221. 6-9 PM. Valentine’s Day Wine. $15.

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The Andersons, Maumee, Wine Tasting. 5-7 PM. Valentine Wines for your Sweetie: 1. Green Eyes – Gruner Veltliner, 2. Bosio Sweet Baby – Sweet Red Wine, 3. ChocoVine – Dutch chocolate and fine red wine, 4. Trentadue Amore. $5.50  per flight or nominal fee per sample.    

The Andersons, Talmadge Road. Wine Tasting. 6-8 PM. Australia Revisited: 1. Pikes Dry Riesling, 2. Yalumba Viognier, 3. Mollydooker The Violinist, 4. Torbreck Cuvee Juveniles, 5. Woop Woop Shiraz, 6. Peter Lehmann 8 Songs Shiraz, 7. Pikes Shiraz, 8. Dutschke 22 Year Old Tawny. Nominal fee per sample.

Beer and Wine Cave, 4400 Heatherdowns, (419) 382-6221. 6-9 PM. Valentine’s Day Wines. $15.

Corks Wine and Liquor, Promenade Plaza, 27250 Crossroads Pkwy., Rossford – (419) 872-6800. 6-9 PM. Zombie Moves & Bonny Doons. Back in 1983, an eccentric young winemaker by the name of Randall Graham started up a California winery specializing in Rhone varietals. That winery was Bonny Doon, and today it's huge, and better than ever. Bonny Doon is known for their playful and charismatic bottlings, but there is some serious stuff here. Join us as we welcome back Adam Mahler, founder of Ampelography, and pour through an awesome lineup of wines. Oh, and a zombie movie to boot! Nominal fee per sample.

Friday, February 11
Aficionado Wine and Cigars, The Shoppes at RiverPlace, 26567 N. Dixie Highway, Suite 135, Perrysburg, (419-873-4444). 5:00 – 8:30 p.m. Valentine Tasting: 1. "Green Eyes" Gruner Veltliner, 2. O'Brien "Seduction,"3. Alexander Valley "Sin Zin," 4. Trentadue Chocolate Amore. $15 tasting.

Corks Wine and Liquor, Promenade Plaza, 27250 Crossroads Pkwy., Rossford – (419) 872-6800. 6-9 PM. Zombie Moves & Bonny Doons. Back in 1983, an eccentric young winemaker by the name of Randall Graham started up a California winery specializing in Rhone varietals. That winery was Bonny Doon, and today it's huge, and better than ever. Bonny Doon is known for their playful and charismatic bottlings, but there is some serious stuff here. Join us as we pour through an awesome lineup of wines. Oh, and a zombie movie to boot! Nominal fee per sample.

* Special Event * Wine by the Glass Pavilion, Toledo Museum of Art. 7:00 – 9:30 PM. Drop-in wine tasting: Bubbles Tasting. Enjoy four wines, light snacks and a view of the Glass Pavilion Hot Shop. $15 members, $20 non-members.

Saturday, February 12
Aficionado Wine and Cigars, The Shoppes at RiverPlace, 26567 N. Dixie Highway, Suite 135, Perrysburg, (419-873-4444). 5:00 – 8:30 p.m. Valentine Tasting: 1. "Green Eyes" Gruner Veltliner, 2. O'Brien "Seduction,"3. Alexander Valley "Sin Zin," 4. Trentadue Chocolate Amore. $15 tasting.

The Andersons, Woodville Mall. 1-3 PM. 1. The Other Red blends, 2. La Crema Chardonnay, 3. Hanky Panky from Maize Valley Hartville, Ohio, 4. DSchokoladenkirschwein from the Winery at Versailles. Flight $2.50 or nominal fee per sample.

Walt Churchill’s Market, 3320 Briarfield. Maumee, (419) 794-4000. Noon to 5:00 PM. Recession Busters! Good wines under $10. Nominal fee per sample or by the flight. Normal flights average $7 to $12.

Walt Churchill's Market, 26625 Dixie Hwy, Perrysburg, (419) 872-6900. 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM. Recession Busters! Good wines under $10. Nominal fee per sample or by the flight.

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[Information on tastings can be sent to TWAV@ATT.NET.]
 

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Five Secret Tips for Choosing a Wine by Yourself

Enoteca Sileno Wholesale & Retail (03) 938...Image via Wikipedia
Bookmark and Share  Thanks to Austin Beeman, manager of the Walt Churchill's Market (Maumee) wine department, for letting us share his inside tips for selecting wine. For more of Austin's insights, check out his Understanding Wine with Austin Beeman website.

We all know that the best way to get help selecting a wine is to talk to the person that designed the retail set or wrote the wine list. But what do you do when he is taking some (much needed) vacation time? Here are my five secret tips to picking out wine by yourself.

1. Beware the Familiar
It is tempting to pick a wine that is most familiar, but unless you consider yourself a sophisticated wine shopper, don’t risk it. Major wine brands spend millions of dollars saturating the market with their name. That is time and effort not put into the wine quality. If the bottle you are looking at is widely popular – run for cover!

Instead, grab something different. Maybe pick a grape or region that you’ve never had. Often it will be not only a tasty wine, but a stunning value as well.

2. For Tonight? Buy an 89 point wine.
We associate the 100 point scale with be graded in school and we all want the high nineties or one hundred. That’s perfection, right? Well the dirty secret of wine scores is that 10 of those points are allocated for age-worthiness. That 95 or 99 point wine isn’t ready to drink for another decade. Opening it now is really a waste of your money.

Instead, wines rated 87 to 89 points are ready to drink now. You’ll pay a lot less for much more pleasure.

3. Look for Signs with Lots of Words.
When I taste something that excites me, I can get very verbose. Any wine manager is likely to be the same. Look at the signs. If it has a couple hundred words in really small font, you’ve hit the jackpot. It almost doesn’t matter what the sign says. That’s a winner.

4. The Weirdly Expensive Case-Stack.
This tip is similar to the last one. The Case-Stacks are where retailers put wines that are fast sellers and deep discounts. So what is up with those four cases of $40 wine? Well sometimes we’ll taste a wine that is just so darn good that we can’t bear to not have a massive stack of it. It is totally illogical. Completely based on raw emotion, I know, but don’t you want a wine that stirs the passions like that? I do.

5. Buy Old Wines
Don’t buy old white wines! Most of those are over the hill. Instead, look for red wines of at least fifteen dollars and at least 7 years old. I lean towards European wines for this, but California works as well. You’d be surprised by how much a little bit of bottle age can do for a good red wine.

Don’t worry about the wine being past its prime. Every good retailer will look to buy good mature wines for their selection. Even in the wine has been in the store for awhile, the ‘Wine Guy’ would have ‘bargain-binned’ it by now if he thought it was bad.
 
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Monday, February 7, 2011

Satek Winery Announces Library Wine Release and Tasting


A library tasting gives you a chance to sample rare wines.
 Bookmark and Share   A very limited number of tickets will soon go on sale for a special tasting and sale of wines from the library collection of Satek Winery, 6208 N. Van Guilder Road, Fremont, Indiana. This after-hours event for serious wine lovers is scheduled 6:00 to 8:00 PM Friday, March 18. Tickets are expected to go on sale February 15. Only 40 tickets are available, so they will go quickly.

The winery is releasing for sale a limited selection of Satek wines from their reserve library to celebrate the winery's 10th anniversary. Wineries often have "libraries" where they save samples of each wine produced. As years go by, the library is the often only place where rare vintages and premium wines from the winery can be found. A release of library wines is is very infrequent.

The evening will be comprised of a guided tasting of library wines by Cellarmaster Larry Satek and head Winemaker Shane Christ. Larry and Shane will give an expert's perspective on the wines, as well as share stories of how the wines were made, and how aging wines can make them evolve and change. The tastings will be elegantly complimented by heavy hors d'ouevres catered by Apron's Gourmet, with careful attention to foods selected to enhance the flavors of the wines. There will be time for questions, as well as socializing with fellow wine lovers.

The tasting will conclude with the exclusive, one-night-only opportunity to purchase the library wines you tasted, which will not be released to the general public. The list of wines to be tasted is still being determined, but will primarily include dry red wines from the past decade.

Tickets will sell for $40 each, and will be available for purchase beginning in mid-February. Only 40 tickets will be sold for this first-ever Satek Winery Library Tasting. The offer for tickets will be sent to Satek's mailing list, so if you want to get tickets you'll need to contact the winery directly.
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