Vergisson

Vergisson

Monday, November 14, 2011

Quinta do Vallado cracks TOP 10!

I hate to say I told you so,  but well folks... I wish I had taken my own advice and stocked up on the Quinta do Vallado 2008 Touriga Nacional when I had the chance.  #7 on the Wine Spectator's Top 100 Wines of the Year, this bottling is sold out in our market and in Portugal.

Here's the Wine Spectator presentation by Kim Marcus: 

http://www.winespectator.com/display/show?id=videos-2011&bcpid=663897729001

Here's what we had to say back in April.

http://thenativegrape.blogspot.com/2011/04/vini-portugal-2011-part-1.html

Congratulations to Quinta do Vallado on this remarkable set of wines!  And here's to Portugal for cracking the Top 10 two years in a row!

Monday, November 7, 2011

Greek wine piece by Susannah Gold

http://boutariwines.com/2010/05/07/wine-expert-susannah-gold-on-greek-wine/

Italian Wine Blogger and Sommelier Susannah Gold presents a nice (and surprisingly inclusive) overview of Greek Wines-their rich history and promising future.

Her Blog, http://avvinare.com/,  is a wonderful resource, with a weekly "Italian Indigenous Variety" post as well as coverage of Italian Wine Laws. ( And get a snapshot of all of the wonderful tastings in Susannah's hometown of NYC.)  Some people have all the fun!

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Portuguese Tasting today @ Cheesetique

This Saturday October 29 1-4 @ Cheesetique in Alexandria

Join us for a quick tour of the many regions and styles of quality, affordable wines being produced in Portugal today.  From a crisp aromatic white from the coast to a rich and luscioius red from the rugged Douro Valley-we're pouring some terrific wines today.

And if you needed another reason to come out, Cheesetique just unveiled their new dining room and full menu this week...

Hope to see you there!

http://cheesetique.com/

Friday, October 28, 2011

Great tasting opportunity in Baltimore

 Those in the Baltimore area...our friends at North Charles Wine and Spirits are hosting a wonderful tasting of Spanish and Portuguese wines tonight.  Check it out!



Wine Tasting. Friday, 10/28/11, 4-7pm 
Portuguese and Spanish wines with guest host Ms. Maria Stevens:
Brand Ambassador for Jose Maria da Fonseca and Bodegas Faustino. 
Join us this Friday evening as we welcome Ms. Maria Stevens to our store. Ms. Stevens grew up in a Portuguese family and neighborhood.  Her expertise on the subject of Portugal, Spain and their wines is impressive.  Not only is she knowledgeable, but also very passionate about her wines. 
About the wineries:
Jose Maria da Fonseca:
Established in 1834, family-owned J.M. Fonseca is one of Portugal's most prestigious and most historic wine producers.  The Soares family, owners of Jose Maria da Fonseca, has been involved in the wine business for 175 years.  Their portfolio includes brands from various wine regions of Portugal.  They have property in the Terros do Sado region, the Douro Valley, and Vinho Verde.  Truly, to sample their wines is to experience Portuguese wine in microcosm. 
Bodegas Faustino:
Faustino is one of Spain's oldest Rioja producers.  Today, Faustino is Spain's largest producer of Reserva and Gran Reserva Rioja wines. In the late 1950s, Faustino Martinez, launched the Faustino label. Source of over 25% of all Reserva and Gran Reserva Riojas sold abroad; Faustino is a proud custodian of the Rioja's reputation for world-class wines. 
The featured wines:

Serra da Estrela Albarino – Albarino sourced from vineyards are situated in the "Condado do Tea” subzone, on the northern slopes of the river MiƱo in Rias Biaxas. 

Jose Maria da Fonseca Domini – A blend of Touriga Franca, Touriga Nacional, and Tinta Roriz from the Duoro Valley in Portugal.
Jose Maria da Fonseca Domingos – Touriga Nacional and Syrah from Terras do Sado, Portugal
Jose Maria da Fonseca Periquita Reserva - 50% Castelao; 30% Touriga Nacional; 20% Touriga Franca sourced from Terras do Sado, Portugal.  Aged 8 months in oak.
Faustino VII Rioja 2009 – A blend of 50% Tempranillo and 50% Garnacha aged for 10 months in oak before bottling. 
Faustino V Rioja Reserva – 90% Tempranillo and 10% Mazuelo aged for one year in oak casks and two years in bottle prior to release.




Wednesday, August 10, 2011

"Earth Wind and Fire, Sea and Fine Wine"

Great discovery for Greek Wine lovers-New wines of Greece is a treasure trove of information and insightful tasting/pairing/travel tips...check it out!

Here's a great description of the wines of Santorini and some of the wonderful things you can and should enjoy with it, especially in the peak of summer...providing the view of the Caldera is the tricky part.

http://www.newwinesofgreece.com/en/assyrtiko_santorinis_3/index.html

Friday, August 5, 2011

A great review for Assobio from Quinta dos Murcas

I have been saying this for years...what a relief to hear it echoed...you don't bury the Douro reds in oak...and the aromatics come alive!

"What I find eye-opening about it, for a Douro red, is the freshness and vibrancy of its aromas and flavors.  The wine smells of red fruits, delicate flowers, and spice; in your mouth it is likely to conjure thoughts of red and black cherry, red berries, toast and Indian spices.  These aromatics give the wine personality and liveliness that is unusual for the region, in my experience."

This is a great piece by Mary Ewing-Mulligan.

http://www.winereviewonline.com/MEM_on_Assobio.cfm

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Summer of Saint Pourcain

This summer, spearheaded by Terroir Wine Bar in Manhattan, acid hounds everywhere have declared the Summer of Riesling.  I salute them in their efforts to re-popularize and inform on this much maligned and altogether dynamic variety.  I promise to spread the word and pop a cork or two.

But I am on my own mission this year.  For me 2011 is the Summer of Saint Pourcain.  I am not expecting this to catch on, or even register, but bottle for bottle there is no denying this simple truth-I am drinking a lot of Saint Pourcain and loving it.


So what the heck is Saint Pourcain?  If you're like me, you may think you have heard of this obscure wine, even if you haven't.  There is something lovely and familiar in the ring of the words.  "Sure, Saint Pourcain...I think I love Saint Pourcain."  But it turned out I hadn't actually had a Saint Pourcain until I first tried the wines of Domaine Bellevue and Domaine Nebout with French wine brokers Peter Vezan and Elisabeth Villeminot.

Just like like the name, there is something lovely and familiar about the palate of Saint Pourcain.  With one foot in the white flowers and yellow fruit of the Macon and one foot in the flinty citrus of Sancerre, it is almost like being introduced by these familiar regions to one of their friends.  Initially, you seek out and sense only the common denominators...but the deeper you dig, the more you appreciate that there is something altogether unique and inviting about this newcomer.  Also this particular newcomer has been around since 1700.  Smack in the middle of France, this ancient region (among the oldest in France) only achieved AOC status in 2011 and is technically a part of the Loire Valley.  Known in its heyday to have graced the tables of Kings and the Popes of Avignon -the region fell victim as many did to the blight of Phylloxera and now, bloggers.

Among the altogether unique and inviting aspects of this region is the local variety known as Tressallier-"along the Allier."  Allier, if your familiar sense just went off, is the river traversing the center of France that lends its name also to the nearby Oak forest,  a la, "aged in new Allier Oak"     Believed to be related to Sacy, the last and only hectares are to be found in Saint Pourcain.  Of the 640 hectares of vines that stretch over the 19 villages that make up the appellation, only around 40 hectares are devoted to Tressalier.  Peter Vezan says, "Tressalier can have some of the hazelnut aromas of Chardonnay but...[it's] more citric and mineral than Chardonnay because of its acidity."

Chardonnay is also quite prevalent here, and the fashion is to support the Chardonnay with the bracing minerality of the Tressallier, resulting in an appealing, mouth watering style.  But in the Domaine Nebout Tressalier Gravieres the Tressalier makes up 90 to 100% of the blend, and as it happens-this is my personal favorite.    Since this is the case, I may be somewhat excused for the impression I have heretofore related, that Saint Pourcain is known only for its white wines.  Gamay and Pinot Noir are actually more prevalent than the white cultivars, and the region is known also for a young, fruity style of Gamay called Ficelle.  There is a large celebration after bottling the first Saturday in December and the wines are adorned with the colorful paintings of local artists.   Remind you of anything?  There is also an old, unverifiable oral history of an innkeeper, Gaultier, who while trying to keep his profits from being guzzled away down the throats of merrymakers,  devised a method of tracking wine consumption by plunging a knotted rope down the neck of the bottles at half pint and pint intervals.  There is a name for this rope, La Ficelle, and a gang...named after the rope, Les Compagnons de la Ficelle-a guild of experts dedicated to preserving the oral tradition and promoting the vineyards of what was once Saint PourƧain/Sioule.


So are you sure you never heard of Saint Pourcain?  Yeah, Me neither....



Domaine Nebout Tressallier des GraviĆØres 2010
Village of MonƩtay, Argilo-siliceux.

Because I am not exactly impartial on this wine, I called in a finer palate(my husband, Max Evans of Downey Selections, to collaborate)...here is the combined take away:

 The nose is all under ripe kiwi, grapefruit, lemon, and lime zest.  There are undercurrents of petrol, flint, salt and waxiness. 

The palate is full and penetrating with fresh squeezed lime, lemon zest, lime pulp, kiwi, nectarines, and yellow fruit accented with chalk dust. 

Pairing testimony:  Out of this world with Charcoal Grilled Octopus with lemon, olive oil and oregano, Saffron Rice and Greek salad.

Domaine Grosbot Barbara Rouge Saint Pourcain 2009
This is a 100% Pinot Noir imported by Ed Addiss of Wine Traditions.



Sour cherries, tart pie cherries, sun dried tomatoes, red licorice, and something a bit tomato leaf/stemmy-beets?  New leather, black pepper, asphalt, salt, and iron-very bloody on the palate.  Big beef steak tomato with cracked black pepper and salt.  Deliciously salty medium bodied and round-chewy tannins without food-I would put this in the soulfully ripe and rustic category.  Probably not for everyone, but I love it!

Maybe not so surprising...

Maybe not so surprising if you pay any attention to Greek wine at all, but there are some nice descriptions nonetheless in these "10 Greek Surprises" from Kim Marcus.  I particularly like the "Riesling like intensity" for Moschofilero from Mantinia, fans of aromatic varieties should check this one out!

http://www.winespectator.com/webfeature/show/id/42650

Friday, July 29, 2011

Marsellan? Assyrtico?? If you haven't tried these-now is your chance!

Marsellan?  Assyrtico??  If you haven't tried these-now is your chance!

Come out to The Vineyard Table in Herndon tonight from 4-7.  We have the Gavala Santorini that was featured in the Washington Post this week and a Marsellan from France(a totally unique French cross of Cabernet Sauvigon and Grenache..

Hope to see you there!


http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=247656025258727

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Vini Portugal 2011-Part 1

  A belated snapshot of the 7th Annual Vini Portugal Grand Tasting- April 4 2011 @ Lincoln Center NYC. 

Because it was so much fun and so informative to taste the wines of Luis Pato with the Duck himself-I'll save him for Part 2! 

The trend towards single variety wines is alive and well.  There were many fine Touriga Nacional and Tinta Roriz bottlings.   And one of these, was my #2 wine of the tasting-the Quinta do Vallado Touriga Nacional 2008.  With a 95 point rating from the Wine Spectator(the 2007 received a 94) the 2008 vintage is giving no ground to 2007, and is clearing the bases with this and other out of the park wines.  Here's Kim Marcus note in The Wine Spectator, "boasting medium-grained tannins that support the dense plum and berry flavors, which feature plenty of ferrous, minerally notes. Mocha and spice linger on the long finish. Very well-crafted, finely balanced and pure-tasting. Needs time in the cellar. Best from 2012 through 2020. 2,188 cases made. –KM"   I actually found the wine incredibly approachable for its youth and size.  Unlike previous vintages, the floral/dried red fruit/tobacco aromatics were not buried in new oak.  This was true for the Reserva as well, and a quick visit to the wineries production notes makes it clear this is quite intentional. "After malolactic fermentation took place (in the original stainless steel tanks), the wine was racked to 225 litre French Oak barriques, where it stayed for 16 months.  Fifty percent of these were new, and the remaining were used one- and two-year old barriques so that the Touriga Nacional aromas were not overcome by oak."   In the Douro, many producers seem to have taken the criticism of over-oaking to heart-and are crafting fresh, aromatic wines that don't sacrifice varietal character to make massive dark smoke and vanilla monsters.  I frequently recommend (and personally prefer) the 2'd and 3'd wines over the top Douro bottlings-precisely because they have typically had more fragrance, charm, typicity and accessibility.  If this trend in the top wines continues, we may have to start springing for the Big boys!

The Vallado Reserve Field Blend 2008(94 pts Wine Spectator) is a great example of another notable trend, the old vine field blend is being suddenly and loudly proclaimed.   From the production notes, "More than 20 grape varieties (a field blend) including Tinta Roriz, Tinta Amarela and Touriga Franca and others, with 65% from vineyards older than 80 years."  This is not so much a new practice as a new focus and approach to marketing-sort of like when Mama Rose finally throws Louise out on stage to become Gypsy Rose Lee.  These tangled old bush vines have been laboring in the background all along, and are finally getting the push they needed to claim the spotlight.   All of these developments find the Douro steaming down the track towards carving a modern identity that preserves their unique heritage in terms of both grape varieties and terroir.

Beira Interior
Stepping in to fill the white wine vacuum created by the missing Vinho Verde producers(who held there own seminar and tasting last month) were the surprisingly wonderful whites of the little known Beira Interior.  This old region to the east of the Dao is known mostly for cooperative bottlings of the local Siria grape (Roupeiro).  Two fantastic bottlings by the Quinta dos Currais, a 100% Siria and a blend of Siria, Arinto and Fonte Cal were equally intriguing and a first rate introduction to the region.  Singled out by both Jamie Goode and Sarah Ahmed for selection in the annual 50 great wines of Portugal tasting held in England, Qta Currais is a 130 hectare property owned by third generation winemakers.    The Siria was perfumed-light bodied but relatively ripe and spicy.  The blend was an entirely different animal, with real weight and depth, and lots of green melon and ripe pear fruit. The wine sees no oak but has a smokey/flinty character which the winery asserts is due to the Fonte Cal grape variety-no aka so far... and no US importer.


Another standout white came from leading Alentejo producer Cortes de Cima.  Their lovely Chamine white blend 2010 is an interesting combo of Antao Vaz, Viognier, Verdelho and Sauvignon Blanc-  complex without seeming contrived and incredibly zingy and fresh.  The Chamine red is a treat as well-with a light and refined/ elegant feel that is the envy of many a fat and clumsy Aragonez/Castelao blend.  Chamine just makes it look easy.   The whole line is so solid, it is no wonder that this winery commands the position it does in the market.

For value, I was bowled over all over again by the top to bottom quality of the Carmim Winery.  At dizzying production levels(5 million cases in the case of the Carmim Terras del Rei) this Alentejo cooperative in Monsarraz pulls off an incredible range of styles and flavors-from the exuberantly fruity(if a tad simple) field blend Terras del Rei-to the earthier/juicier Reguengos, to the sleek Monsarraz with more black fruit and muscle.  They even have some thoroughly believable reserves, and although in the premium price range-they still outdistance the competition in the quality/value department.

Some interesting bubblies are being made in the Bairrada region, mostly from Bical.  Although my favorites were a couple of Blanc de Noir traditional method wines from the infamously tricky Baga variety.  One of these was the Caves de Solar de Sao Domingos Baga Bruto 2006.  Sao Domingos is an operation founded in 1937 and models itself on the French Champagne houses, producing a full range of styles.  At increasing levels of sweetness, the traditional Bical/Maria Gomes  blends (Bairrada Brut, Meio-Seco, and a Dolce) had  fine mousse and plenty of yeasty notes, although the Meio-Seco was plagued by an unfortunate tired/musty note.  The Baga bottlings on the other hand, were clean, complex and vibrant.  And for fans of Sparkling Shiraz, there is a sparkling Baga/Touriga Nacional "Bruto Tinto"-full bodied, dry and full of spicy red fruit and bubbles.  I never know quite what to make of these things, but I expect (and the Aussies affirm) if presented a glass at a Barbecue on a 90 degree day-it would be just the ticket!  The king of Bairrada bubbly is of course Luis Pato...so for my favorite Blanc de Noir as well as my wine of the tasting, you'll have to come back for part 2!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Great Interview with David Baverstock of Esporao

Kim Marcus, covering the Portuguese beat for the Wine Spectator, talks to winemaker David Baverstock about the style and future of Portuguese wines in the Douro and the Alentejo.  Part 2 goes a little more in depth on the Alentejo and some of the Native grape varieties and Esporao's efforts to identify and preserve these for future generations.  Good stuff!
http://www.winespectator.com/video

Friday, April 8, 2011

"7 Decades of Porto Barros"




Douro Valley


Any tasting that begins with a "very old dry white port" from circa 1934 is likely to be extraordinary.  This very special tasting was held at Arrowine in Arlington on February 9, 2011.  An incredible event co-sponsored by Arrowine, Sogevinus and Dionysos Imports, hosted by the youthful and dynamic Sandra Marques, North American Export Manager for Sogevinus Fine Wines and a member of the Port Wine Confraria.  The tasting highlighted the spectacular range of Colheitas-the hallmark of Portuguese Port wine houses-produced by Porto Barros.  This traditional Portuguese house, founded in 1913, is a relative youngster by Port wine standards, and is now part of a family of Portuguese wine houses (among them Kopke and Calem) owned by the Spanish banking conglomerate Sogevinus.


Even if you are familiar with Port wine, you may not be so familiar with Colheita Ports.  We are not talking about Ruby or Vintage- English words for the styles of Port wine so fervently consumed, traded and popularized in the World Market.   We are talking Colheita (Kohl-YAY-tah)-a distinctly Portuguese name for a distinctly Portuguese style of Port.

Colheita-a distinctly Portuguese name for a distinctly Portuguese style of Port.

The Portuguese like their tawnies-or so I am told by Sandra who is a native of Oporto.  So it is no surprise that a style of tawny Port should be favored.  Colheita translates to harvest, and is a tawny Port that is representative of a single harvest and so bears a vintage date.  The duly revered 10, 20, and 40 year old tawny Ports which you are more likely to see gracing the shelves of wine shops and the pages of wine lists,  are more akin to a fine Champagne house's NV Brut.  They represent a house style-and each house has a team of Master blenders who are responsible for maintaining the quality and hallmark style of the brand-something you can hang your hat on.  They are also from multiple vintages-and so the 10-20-40 year designation represents an average age of the wine.   The Colheita tawny, on the other hand,  as a single harvest, reflects all of the caprice, condition (and risk) of climate variation-no two Colheitas are alike.  The Colheita must remain in wooden casks for a minimum of 7 years, only to be bottled when the market demands.  Porto Barros has Colheitas dating back to 1937.

"  when we drink Port, we are tasting history" 
-Fernando Oliveira, Master Blender for Sogevinus.

  The most remarkable aspect to me is this bit -"The Colheita remains in wooden casks for a minimum of 7 years (ok)-only to be bottled when the market demands"  Wait, what?  Back up, "only to be bottled when the market demands"  Let's think about that for a minute.   It is a common tradition to buy a bottle of vintage Port on a child's birth year.  We recognize the historical significance of this extraordinary and long lived bottle of wine.  Vintage Port, considered the highest tier of Port, declared only in the best years and among the most age worthy of wine investments, is the pride of every Port house and many a cellar.  The finest grapes, from the finest years, aged for a required two years in large barrels, and then bottled unfined and unfiltered.  Bottled, swaddled and sent out into the world a baby (a bruiser of a baby-I'll grant you) but a baby none the less-dependent upon the lucky procurer for its future development.

Bottled only when the market demands...

Colheitas on the other hand-are reared in the Port lodges that produced them.  Sometimes, as Sandra points out, even from inauspicious beginnings, a finely layered and complex wine can be produced.  Such is the case in 1979.  Considered a poor year and not a declared vintage-this "ugly duckling" has been transformed into a beautiful swan of a Colheita-and in 2009 the winery commemorated the harvest with a 30 year anniversary bottling.  In the perfect climate of Vila Nova de Gaia with its humidity thanks to the close proximity of the sea-these wines are looked after and gently coaxed into maturity by the Port wine Masters.  As they age, each bottling projects a unique snapshot of its birth and evolution-to sing a particular song marking a particular time.  We could only hope for so much for our children.  



Barros Very Old Dry White Port (1934 Solera)
Almost an essence-the finish and persistence on this wine is unbelievable.  Truly the summation of 70 years in cask-roasted nuts, caramel, toffee-on a light, airy and bone dry frame...this just goes on and on.

1995 Barros Colheita Port
Amber with orange highlights, aromas of hazelnuts and toffee mingle with creme brulee, the palate is fiery and still hinting at red fruits-pomegranate and orange zest.

1988 Barros Colheita Port
Deeper in color than the 1995-with a rosier hue-the 1988 has an expressive nose and a full, generous body.  Showing more sweetness and a touch of fire-full round and spicy-cinnamon scented nuts.

1978 Barros Colheita Port
 With a pronounced iodine note on the nose, a robust, spicy palate swims with caramel and hazelnuts on the long spicy finish.

1963 Barros Colheita Port
 Roasted pralines and coffee on the nose.  The palate is to die for with silky brandied coconut and orange caramel.  Pecan pie with freshly grated baking spices.

1957 Barros Colheita Port 
 Caramel aromas translate into a rich buttery caramel on the palate-tinged with candied orange and toasty vanilla notes.  Surprisingly fresh acids balance the richness of the flavors.

1937 Barros Colheita Port 
A deep amber hue, the sensational 1937 Colheita leaps out of the glass with aromas of sweet tobacco, pipe smoke, honey, golden raisins and chocolate gingerbread.  The orange zest tinged palate is a revelation of rich, vibrant flavors of fruitcake, hazelnuts and golden raisins.  The finish is incredibly long.  

http://www.arrowine.com/ 
http://www.porto-barros.pt/client/skins/english/site.htm 

""""